Llanrumney Hall is Grade II* listed building in the Cardiff suburb of Llanrumney in Wales. The Elizabethan mansion was built in 1450, rebuilt in 1852 and refurbished around 1900. Throughout its history it has been a stately home and more recently a pub. The building had fallen into disrepair. New plans were brought up and a local businessman has taken over the renovation and repair work. The building has now been renovated and completed in 2019.
History
The area of Llanrumney was given to the monks at Keynsham Abbey, in Somerset, England, after the Norman conquest of England. They built a small chapel on the site of what is now Llanrumney Hall. The Elizabethan Llanrumney Hall and its estate was originally built in 1450 and is thought that it passed to the Kemys family of Cefn Mably in the mid-1500s after the dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII. William Kemys left the estate to his daughter, who was married to Thomas Morgan. Llanrumney Hall has since been occupied by five generations of the Morgan family, whose ancestral home was Tredegar House in Newport. Morgan Morgan was the last in the male line and the hall and estate passed by marriage onto the Lewis family in 1726. In the mid 19th century, the hall was occupied by Edward Augustus Freeman, the Regius Professor of History at the University of Oxford. It was purchased by Charles Crofts Williams of Roath Court in 1859, who was the hall's last recorded Lord of the Manor. Around 1900 the hall was refurbished. His family lived at the hall until the development of the surrounding housing estate, when it was occupied by Llewellyn Williams. In 1952 the hall was compulsorily purchased by Cardiff Council and it became a remand centre. By 1956 it became a pub, but the hall fell into disrepair by the late 1980s. A plan has been developed by Cardiff Council and CMB Engineering to redevelop the hall into an education and sporting facility at a cost of about £1 million. The Llanrumney Hall Community Trust Limited was established in January 2015 in the development of the building.
Listing status
Many sources list Llanrumney Hall either as a Grade I or Grade II listed building. However the official listing by Cardiff Council shows Llanrumney Hall PH as Grade II*, and that it was first listed on 19 May 1975.
Myths and legends
Legend has it that the hall is haunted and many children will not go near it. It is also believed that the hall contains a masonry block with the decapitated body of Llewellyn the Last. Stories also tell of how he was beheaded at the hall and chopped into small pieces and scattered around his house. A common local belief is that Sir Henry Morgan, after whom Captain Morgan rum is named, was born in the hall in 1635, but there is little evidence to substantiate this. Morgan was born in Rhymney, near Tredegar, in the South Wales Valleys.