Gwaenynog is a small estate about 1 km (0.62 mi) to the south-west of the town of Denbigh, Wales. Its origins are mediaeval when it was built as a house for the Myddelton family. The Myddeltons claimed descent from Rhirid Flaidd, of the House of Cunedda, hereditary Kings of Gwynedd. Anglicising themselves and their name after the conquest of Wales, they thrived as prominent local landowners and politicians. Basing themselves ultimately at Chirk Castle, they served as receivers of Denbigh, governors of its castle and as members of parliament for Denbighshire and Denbigh Boroughs.
Originally the principal family house, Gwaenynog descended to a cadet branch after the purchase of Chirk. This first building was a timber-framedhall-house dating to the middle of the 16th century. Extended in the 18th century, in 1774 the then owner, Colonel John Myddleton, hosted his relative Hester Thrale and her close friend, the lexicographerSamuel Johnson, a visit Myddleton commemorated by the erection of a monument in the grounds. In the 19th century, the house passed out of Myddleton ownership and came into the possession of Fred Burton, whose wife was an aunt of Beatrix Potter. Potter stayed at the house on many occasions between 1895-1912 and the walledkitchen garden was the inspiration for The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies. Mr Macgregor's potting shed still stands.
In the 18th century, when home to Colonel John Myddleton, the estate was embellished with a Neoclassical monument erected to commemorate a visit to Gwaenynog by Hester Thrale and her friend, Samuel Johnson. While Johnson appeared to enjoy Myddleton's company, remarking that he was "the only man who in Wales has talked to me of literature",[3] he was less impressed by the monument itself suggesting, "it looks like an intention to bury me alive".[4]
In the late 19th century, the Gwaenynog estate was bought by Oliver Burton (son of James Burton), on whose death it passed to his younger brother, Fred Burton, whose wife Harriet was Beatrix Potter's aunt. Potter spent many holidays at Gwaenynog and its gardens, particularly the walled kitchen garden, provided inspiration for her story, The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies, published in 1909. Potter undertook many drawings of the gardens which formed the basis of her illustrations for the book.[5][a] Mr Macgregor's potting shed still stands and is itself a Grade II listed structure, along with the kitchen garden walls.[6]
Gwaenynog remains the private home of the Burton family although the gardens generally open in the summer.[7]