|
Pen-y-Gwryd is a pass at the head of Nantygwryd and Nant Cynnyd rivers in Gwynedd, Wales and a quarter of a mile from the boundary with Conwy in northern Snowdonia, close to the foot of Snowdon. It is located at the junction of the A4086 from Capel Curig to Llanberis and Caernarfon and the A498 from Beddgelert and Nant Gwynant about a mile from the head of the Llanberis Pass, and is the site of the ''Pen-y-Gwryd Hotel''. ==A Short History of Pen-y-Gwryd from 1810 to present== The Pen-y-Gwryd Hotel was originally a simple farmhouse dating from 1811, and would become an Inn under the auspices of a John Roberts from Llanberis, who eventually sold the Inn (c.1840) and left for America. A Mrs Hughes, who was the widow of the first landlord (a Joseph Griffith) of the Capel Curig Inn, (which became The Royal Hotel, now Plas-y-Brenin), and later the widow of Reverend Robert Hughes of Capel Curig, took over the Inn (c.1843). In 1847 Henry Owen acquired the Inn, initially combining the work with a position of Agent at a nearby copper mine, and later with farming. By 1858, the business was sufficiently successful to allow him to purchase the freehold, and during his tenure the original building was considerably extended, transforming it from a farmhouse Inn to a well-known and popular hotel. During the Owens' tenure the Inn's status for its comfort and hospitality would only be surpassed by its connection with mountaineering in North Wales. In May 1898 ''The Climbers Club'' originated at Pen-y-Gwryd, as it is recorded in its first journal "....its natural birth at Pen-y-Gwryd" and "...its congenial atmosphere...... (''The Climbers Club'') first struck its roots". The ''Climbers Club'' is now based at ''Helyg'' on the A5 between Capel Curig and Ogwen Cottage. In 1870 the ''Society of Welsh Rabbits'' (c.1865) came into being, the object of which was to explore Snowdonia in winter, and as close to Christmas as possible. Anne Owen related a story to Mr Carr (author) in 1895, that some thirty years ago that the society had written an article "praising Pen-y-Gwryd as an excellent resort at Christmas", prior to that Mrs Owen went on to say " ....we rarely, if ever, had a guest at Christmas and since then we have hardly been without guests during the period". Harry Owen was born in Beddgelert, Caernarvonshire on 2 April 1822, the son of a farmer, Owen Owen. He married Ann Pritchard, of Llanbeblig. Ann's excellent cookery was apparently to pay no small part in the success of their hotel venture. Both Harry and his wife Ann would run the Inn until 1896 when Anne Owen died, Harry Owen having died in 1891. Ten years of indifferent fortune passed before Miss Roberts from ''The Royal Hotel'', Capel Curig took over the running of the hotel. However, it was not until William Hampton, along with Arthur and Florence Lockwood, took ownership and further developed the property (and in the 1920s created Llyn Lockwood – the small trout lake opposite the hotel), that the hotel and its mountaineering traditions developed once again. During the Second World War the hotel was taken over by Lake House School from Bexhill-on-Sea. One hundred years after the Owens drove the hotel and its mountaineering connection into the public consciousness, Chris and Joe Briggs, at the same time, both improved the hotel and enhanced its mountaineering links by becoming a Mountain rescue post (the plaque is still attached to the main entrance), whilst maintaining the hotel's history. The Pen-y-Gwryd mountain rescue post was closely tied with the two other mountain rescue posts in the area, namely Ogwen Cottage Outdoor Pursuits Centre, now the Ogwen Valley Mountain Rescue Organisation, and Plas y Brenin. Each of the guest bedrooms is named after one of the thirteen peaks over 3000 feet, and the bath is one of the largest Victorian period pieces. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Pen-y-Gwryd」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|