Lymore, Montgomery

Lymore Hall and Park
Lymore Hall in 1909
Coordinates52°33′31″N 3°08′04″W / 52.558660°N 3.134393°W / 52.558660; -3.134393
Builtc.1675
Demolished1931
Architectural style(s)Timber Framed
Governing bodyPowis Estates
Location of Lymore Hall and Park in Powys

Lymore, or Lymore House or Lodge was demolished in 1931. It stood in Lymore Park, one mile ESE of Montgomery, Powys, Wales. The house was a large half-timbered house built by Edward Herbert, 3rd Baron Herbert of Chirbury, c. 1675, to replace the family residences in Montgomery Castle and Black Hall in Montgomery. The house, which had been uninhabited but maintained for many years, was used for an event in 1921, when one of the floors collapsed with disastrous consequences, resulting in demolition in 1931. The Earls of Powis still own and maintain the park. The park includes the grounds of the Montgomery Cricket Club, which is the oldest cricket pitch in Montgomeryshire and Offa's Dyke forms its eastern boundary. It is listed on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.