History - This Victorian mausoleum was built in the 1870s for the Assheton-Smith family, which owned the Vaynol estate and the Dinorwig slate quarry. Thomas Assheton-Smith, who had developed the slate quarries, was buried in 1858 in Hampshire, where the family had another home, but later members of the family were buried here. They included Captain Robert George Duff, whose body was brought here from the Isle of Wight in 1890. The mausoleum sits in woodland in the grounds of the Vaynol estate, the woodland is now owned by the National Trust.
Explore - We had a mooch round this place while we were on a weekend away nearby. It's set in some nice woodland and as you approach it looks very atmospheric and gothic. The interior and the crypt are very cool and all in all it's well worth having a look.
Thanks for looking.
Explore - We had a mooch round this place while we were on a weekend away nearby. It's set in some nice woodland and as you approach it looks very atmospheric and gothic. The interior and the crypt are very cool and all in all it's well worth having a look.
Thanks for looking.