19 Nevill Street

19 Nevill Street

About the Building | Recent History | Previous Occupiers | Other Information

Address: 19 Nevill Street
Present Occupier: Get Connected
Present Owner:
Ground Floor:
Other Floors: Accommodation
Date when first used by present occupier:

 

About the Building

Listed Building Grade II No:2455

 

Grade II listed on 1 November 1974   see https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/300002455-no19-nevill-street-gwent-abergavenny

Late 18th century frontage with earlier behind. The house is deep;  as observed by C Price in 1979, the structure was:

Street – shop- composition room – living room – kitchen -scullery – back

During renovations in 1984-1985 when the building was gutted, the timber framing with wooden pins could be clearly seen on the north and south walls, with some wattle and daub in-filling still in place on the north wall. There was also an oak door frame blocked up with lath and plaster, with a simple wooden Tudor arch. It could be seen that the original steep pitch of the roof had been retained at the back of the house, while at the front the timbers had been raised to allow for a full height third storey in the 18th century. Part of the printing press remained in the basement supporting the ground floor.

 

 

Recent History

2010 March –  (still in situ 2025 April): Get Connected, (Registered Office for Oasis Communication Services Ltd) mobile phone contracts for businesses and personal use.  Was at 20 Frogmore Street but at some stage (by December 2023) it had “disappeared” from there.   Has other branches in Wales and English borders [2010 date Source: Registered change of address Companies House, filing]. Moved from 27 Nevill Street.

 

Previous Occupiers

Year Name Detail Source
2000-after 2006 Gwerin Housing Association Offices ALHS
1991 Alun Griffiths Contractors, civil engineers ALHS
1988 Sun Alliance Pensons,investment services ALHS
1978 Alun Griffiths Offices ALHS
1973-1978 Charles Price & Son Ltd. Flats & offices C. Price & deeds
1967 Yeomans Miller Travecl agents ALHS
1962-73 Mrs Irene Rees (sister-in-law of Owens) Flats & offices
(Mr Williams, celebrated diviner, lived here for a year or two)
C Price & deeds
1950 E V Owen died and the joint tenancy was severed that year
Owen John & E V Owen
Printers Kelly
1934
Owen Bros
Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
1930 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Car/Npt & Dis
1926 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
1923 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
1920 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
1914 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
1910 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
1909 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
Kelly
C Price
1906 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
1906-1914 owner: R Townsend, said to have joined the foreign legion
Kelly
1901 Owen Bros Printers & Registrar of marriages
John Owen was registrar of marriages, E V Owen deputy registrar
1871 – 1905 owner: E F Gardner
Kelly
1895
Alex Roxborough
Tailor & draper
Kelly
1891 Alex Roxborough
Tailor & draper
Kelly
1884
E F Gardner
Kelly
1879 E F Gardner Thacker
1871 E F Gardner Kelly
1865
Thomas Lloyd Morgan
1858
William Wozencraft Morgan
Husband of Mary Needle m. 1854
Deeds
1851
In Occupation:Charles Daniel, Draper
Employing 21 men & 3 assistants
Census
1850
Mary Needle
Deeds
1844
Mary Needle
Deeds
1835
Mary Jones, daughter or wife of H Jones
Deeds
1834
Hugh Jones
Attorney
1834 map
1822
Hugh Jones
Attorney Deeds
Before 1822
Mr Matthew David Maxwell
Deeds

 

 

 

Other Information

In 1741, Mrs Elizabeth James, a widow (36) resident in this house, married George Whitfield, the Gloucester Methodist preacher and friend of Charles Wesley. (The Whitfield Presbyterian Church is in Pen-y-pound.) She lived here spasmodically during the rest of her life, when her husband was on tour (see article from Abergavenny Chronicle 1982 John Williams)

The house passed from Mr Matthew David Maxwell (owner before 1822) to Hugh Jones, then Mary Jones of Abergavenny who, in 1843, left it to Mary Needle of Colwyn Bay. In 1854, Mary Needle married William Wozencroft Morgan. In an Affadavit in 1871 she states that the garden wall (on the site of the old town wall) had sheds with roofs resting on the wall. There was formerly a summerhouse there. Mr Delafield, who owned the pub garden on the other side of the wall, was said to have repaired it without permission. There was litigation (Deeds)

In 1871, Thomas Lloyd Morgan mortgaged the property for £375, to Eliza Isabella Gardiner and Edgar Frederick Gardiner and in 1897, they bought it and in 1902, mortgaged it to Iltyd Lloyd Gardiner for £200.

In 1899, It was leased to the Owen bothers who came from North Wales and started printing with Sargeants (Queen Street). Owen John Owen, the eldest was mad on cars and drove a Morgan 3 wheeler with great zest. He died in 1960. His brother Edwin Vaughan, “did all the work”. After their deaths, their widowed sister-in-law, converted it into flats. (C Price)

John Owen Y Fenni 1867 -1960. Born Dolgellau, son of Dafydd Owen, compositor and reader in the office of Y Dysgedydd and Y Dydd. He served his apprenticeship there and moved to Abergavenny in 1887 to work as a Welsh compositor in Henry Sargeant’s press. In 1897 he and his brother, Edwin Vaughan Owen, bought Minerva Press and their office in Nevill Street became a meeting place for the local Welsh-speaking community. Amongst other titles, they published Eluned Morgan’s works: Dringo’r Andes (1904),Gwymon y mór (1909) and Ar dir a mór (1913).

On 9 October 1909, John Owen married Mabel Annie Dawson and was well known as a choir conductor, elocutionist and witty public speaker. Although he refused to compère at the National Eisteddfod in Abergavenny in 1913, he did so regularly at National Eisteddfodau from 1920 to 1937 and was made a member of the Gorsedd of Bards. He was a member of the Independent Church in Castle Street and gave over 50 years service as a lay preacher. His interests included astronomy, climbing mountains, painting, local history, cycling, motoring, and playing the harp. He received the freedom of the town of Abergavenny in 1949 and an OBE the following year. At his death in 1960, a tribute was paid to him as the “Patron saint of Gwent”. (from Dr Sian Rhiannon Williams’ biography).

 

If you have any further information about this property please email alhsresearch@email.com

 

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