Plas Dinas is a Grade II listed building in Bontnewydd, Gwynedd, near Caernarfon in North Wales, between the Welsh coast and the Snowdonia mountains.[2][3] It is a large country house which retains significant features of an early 17th-century house at its core.
Since the 1990s the mansion has been a country house hotel, now called Plas Dinas Country House.
History
Plas Dinas is a large country house incorporating an early 17th-century house.[4] It had a later 17th-century addition as well as major 19th-century additions.[4] From its mid-17th century expansion it has a reset gritstone tablet dated 1653, with a coat of arms and inscribed with "T . W I . W" for Thomas and Jane Williams.[5][4] Thomas Williams was a son of Sir Thomas Williams of Vaynol, and was Sheriff of Caernarvonshire from 1647 to 1648.[4]
The house was enlarged in the Victorian era.[5] It was the home of Owen Roberts, land agent to the wealthy Thomas Assheton Smith family.[5][4] In the early 20th century his son, barrister and education pioneer Sir Owen Roberts, lived at Plas Dinas when he was not occupied in England.[6][5] Upon the death of Sir Owen Roberts in 1915, Plas Dinas passed to his daughter Margaret Elizabeth,[5] who in 1893 had married Sir Robert Armstrong-Jones, a Welsh psychiatrist.[7]
In the 20th century[8] Plas Dinas was owned by three generations of the Armstrong-Jones family, including Sir Robert Armstrong-Jones's son Ronald Armstrong-Jones, Q.C., who was the father of Lord Snowdon.[4] When the Armstrong-Jones family moved to the London area, they retained Plas Dinas as their country home.[9] Upon the death of Ronald Armstrong-Jones in 1966, the Plas Dinas estate was bequeathed to Snowdon's much younger half-brother Peregrine Armstrong-Jones.[10][11]
At the entrance to the drive is Plas Dinas lodge. During the Second World War, there was prisoner of war camp in the field across the drive from the lodge.[5] In 1946, at the age of 16, Lord Snowden was holidaying at Plas Dinas when he contracted polio.[12][13]
In the 1980s, the Armstrong-Jones family leased out the house as a nursing home, before it was converted to a hotel in the 1990s.[16] Proprietors have been running it as Plas Dinas Country House, a 5-star country house hotel, since the mid 2000s.[16] It still contains many Armstrong-Jones family portraits, memorabilia, and original furniture.[9][2] The hotel includes a restaurant, The Gunroom, which contains the original early 17th-century stone fireplace that the mansion was built around over the centuries.[19] In 2022 the restaurant was added to the Michelin Guide after inspectors were impressed with the food and its presentation.[18]
^Brown, G. H. "Sir Robert Armstrong-Jones". Inspiring Physicians Roll of the Royal College of Physicians. Vol. IV of Munk's Roll. Royal College of Physicians. p. 480. Archived from the original on 10 February 2023. Retrieved 24 May 2023. He married in 1893 Margaret Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Owen Roberts, and had a son and two daughters. He died at his home in Caernarvon.
^DiCamillo, Curt. "Plas Dinas". DiCamillo.com. Archived from the original on 24 May 2023. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
^ ab"A Historic Home". plasdinas.co.uk. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2015. In 1899 Sir Robert Jones, who subsequently altered his name to Armstrong-Jones, had a son named Ronald. The family was, at that time, living in the London area and retained Plas Dinas as their country home. Sir Ronald Jones married Anne, and the marriage produced a son, Antony, who in 1961 [sic] married HRH Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister.
^de Courcy, Anne (2012). Snowdon: The Biography. Orion. ISBN9780297856047. The year 1966 had begun badly. On 27 January Ronnie had died of cancer at Plas Dinas. ... To Tony's annoyed surprise the family property did not pass to him as Ronnie's eldest son. Instead, the Plas Dinas estate – the house, a collection of cottages, and farmland – was left to his young half-brother Peregrine, who would come into it at the age of twenty-five. The main farm, by the house, was sold to pay death duties.