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Dolserau Halt railway station

Brithdir and LlanfachrethDisused railway stations in GwyneddFormer Great Western Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1951
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1935Use British English from January 2018Wales railway station stubs
Dolserau Halt railway station (site), Gwynedd (geograph 4679440)
Dolserau Halt railway station (site), Gwynedd (geograph 4679440)

Dolserau Halt (Pron: Dol-seh-rye) in Gwynedd, Wales, was on the Ruabon to Barmouth line. The platform edge was made of timber and was situated on the north side of the line. It had a timber shelter and a name-board with the suffix "FOR THE TORRENT WALK" (a popular trail through Afon Clywedog gorge on the other side of the valley). There was no passing place or freight activity here. The halt has been demolished.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Dolserau Halt railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Dolserau Halt railway station

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Wikipedia: Dolserau Halt railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.7595 ° E -3.8467 °
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Address


LL40 2LY , Brithdir and Llanfachreth
Wales, United Kingdom
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Dolserau Halt railway station (site), Gwynedd (geograph 4679440)
Dolserau Halt railway station (site), Gwynedd (geograph 4679440)
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Nearby Places

Nannau, Wales
Nannau, Wales

Nannau (Welsh for 'the place of many streams'') is a Georgian mansion and estate near the village of Llanfachreth, Gwynedd, North Wales, UK. The mansion was initially inhabited by the Welsh Nanney (Nannau) family, who were direct descendants of the Kings of Powys. For over 900 years, the Nannau estate was in possession of the same family. The dynasty was founded by Madog ap Cadwgan, 1st Lord of Nannau as a cadet branch of the House of Mathrafal. The founder was a son of Prince Cadwgan ap Bleddyn (1051 – 1111) from the Kingdom of Powys, within what is now the Snowdonia (Eryri) National Park in North West Wales. The Lord of Nannau title continued for four centuries, until the division of the cadet branches. The estate was then passed on to a heiress, Janet, who married into the Vaughan family of Hengwrt in 1719. In 1795 their descendants, the Vaughan baronets, replaced the then 17th-century mansion with a new house co-designed by Joseph Bromfield, which still stands today.The head of the family represented the local county as Sheriff of Merionethshire and held the position 9 times in 400 years between the 16th and 20th centuries. In 1911 as recorded by Encyclopædia Britannica, the families of county rank in the neighbourhood of Dolgellau included those of Nannau, Hengwrt (the famous Hengwrt Welsh MSS), Caerynwch, Fronwnion, Bron-y-gadair, Brynygwin, Brynadda, Abergwynnant, Garthangharad.By the mid-20th century the estate was "wrecked", and a succession of short-term owners saw much of the land sold off, the demolition of some of the 18th-century mansion, and failed attempts to establish a hotel at the hall. By 2020 the lead from the roof had been stolen and the house was "deteriorating rapidly". Nannau is a Grade II* listed building and its parkland is listed, also at Grade II*, on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.