Penrhyn Castle's temporary treasures

@indexer (4852)
Leicester, England
October 10, 2018 1:56pm CST
Wales is famous for its numerous splendid castles, many of them dating from the reign of King Edward I in the 13th century. However, although Penrhyn Castle near Bangor in North Wales may look as if it is a remarkably well-preserved example of such a castle, it is far from it. It was built in 1827-40 by a man whose family fortune derived from slate quarrying, and it has been described as “a monstrously vulgar neo-Norman pile”. During World War II Penrhyn Castle was given a particularly important role to play – not as part of the defence of the realm but as a storehouse for some of the most valuable paintings in London’s National Gallery. It was decided in 1940 that leaving them in London, then subject to aerial bombardment from Germany’s Luftwaffe, was too great a risk, and Penrhyn Castle looked to be a much safer place for some the world’s greatest artistic masterpieces to be stored. It was not a case of the National Gallery moving to North Wales, because the paintings were not on display but simply stored in the castle, many of them stacked against the walls in the Great Dining Room. This arrangement would have been fine had it not been that the then owner of the castle, the elderly 4th Baron Penrhyn, was not the most trustworthy guardian of treasures such as “The Rokeby Venus” by Velasquez or “The Hay Wain” by John Constable. For one thing, he had a tendency to get very drunk and stumble around the paintings, thus risking the possibility that he might thrust a boot through Van Eyck’s “The Arnolfini Marriage” or some other priceless masterpiece. He then came up with the idea of opening a girl’s boarding school at the castle, which alarmed the trustees of the National Gallery even more as they envisaged a load of unruly schoolgirls being let loose in the Great Dining Room. Baron Penrhyn agreed to drop the plan in return for charging annual rent for the paintings of £250. The question of the safety of the artworks eventually reached the ears of Winston Churchill, who urged the National Gallery to find another home for them. A place that was safe both from German bombs and a highly unstable aristocrat was found in caves at Manod, near Mount Snowdon, where they saw out the rest of the War until their return to London. When the 4th Baron died in 1951 the castle became the property of the National Trust in lieu of death duties. (The photo is taken from a copyright-free source)
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2 responses
@MALUSE (69409)
• Germany
10 Oct 18
Many years ago my husband and I went on a coach tour through Wales. Yes, castles abound there - as in the whole of Great Britain. But how many are there altogether? I bet that there are not as many as in Germany. Up to now 25.000 have been counted and the counting process is still going on.
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@indexer (4852)
• Leicester, England
10 Oct 18
I suppose that is down to Germany's history as a patchwork of tiny principalities, each ruler of which would have had a castle or two to call his own. I also imagine that many of these are not really castles at all - by which I mean buildings erected for the purpose of withstanding an armed attack or siege - but country houses with battlements and towers. We've got a few of those in the UK as well (Penrhyn Castle is a good example), but the custom of the landed gentry in more peaceable times was to build a grand mansion surrounded by a park. Also in the UK there are many castles that do not look like castles because there is nothing to be seen apart from a few earthworks. In some cases this was because the castle was built in defiance of a king who demanded that it be pulled down. As to relative numbers, I have no idea - I haven't counted them!
@indexer (4852)
• Leicester, England
11 Oct 18
@MALUSE I think that must depend on what you mean by a country house. I was thinking of places like hunting lodges - of which many were built in Germany - that were made to look like castles but were never intended to have the function of a defensive bastion. I reckon that it would be hard to tell the difference between such a place and a genuine castle. I have visited one such castle in Germany, this being Schloss Lichtenstein in the Swabian Alps. It has a similar history to Penrhyn Castle in that the two date from the same period and were built by wealthy men who wanted something that looked like a castle but was in fact a dwelling first and foremost.
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@garymarsh6 (23393)
• United Kingdom
11 Oct 18
@MALUSE There were only around 4000+ castles in the UK
@xander6464 (40915)
• Wapello, Iowa
10 Oct 18
It's too bad that Churchhill wasn't involved from the start because it sounds like the paintings were in just as much danger as they had been in London while at the castle. Sorry about your lack of castles compared to Germany (At least until an official UK count is done). That must keep you up at night.
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@xander6464 (40915)
• Wapello, Iowa
10 Oct 18
@indexer I suppose you're right. Churchhill did seem to be busy at the time.
@indexer (4852)
• Leicester, England
10 Oct 18
I think Churchill had more things to worry about at the time than the character of an eccentric Welsh baron. This is something that would have been decided by a senior civil servant following instructions to find somewhere safe for the National Gallery collection - which is huge anyway.
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