Built in 1626 by Sir Thomas Morgan,[4][5][6][7][8] Steward to the Earl of Pembroke, it was one of the first of the mock castles to be built in Wales. King Charles I spent two nights at Ruperra Castle in 1645[8] shortly after the Battle of Naseby. Resultantly the royal coat of arms was added to the decoration on the South Porch, and the present public footpath from Rudry to the Castle is still known as "King's Drive".[5][6][7]
It was bought as his home by wealthy John Morgan "the merchant" for 12,400 pounds. He was unmarried and it was consolidated on his death in 1715 into the Tredegar estates of the Morgan family.
It was destroyed by fire in 1785,[8] and rebuilt, resultantly becoming home, especially in the 19th century, to the heir of the estate.[5][6][7]Godfrey Charles Morgan, 2nd Baron, 1st Viscount Tredegar, who was a captain in the 17th Lancers during the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaklava in the Crimean War, was born at Ruperra.[6][7] It was during the early Victorian age that he undertook a lot of development, adding three new lodges as well as in 1826 a now listed iron bridge, allowing a carriage way through Coed Craig Ruperra and across the Rhymney River to Lower Machen Church, where the family and their servants attended Sunday services.[6][7]
After the death of army officer turned politician Colonel Frederick Courtenay Morgan in 1909, his son Courtenay Morgan, 1st Viscount Tredegar, embarked on a programme of refurbishment. Minor adjustments were made to the main house, but his major improvement was the building of a new stable block to replace the one destroyed by fire in 1895, a new reservoir and pump house in the deer park, and a new power house fitted with duplicate steam-driven generators, dynamos and boilers. The 1840s brew house, laundry and dairy range were converted to accommodate the estate's staff.[6][7]
But by 1935, the Morgan fortune was in decline. Despite having invested heavily in the property, the Morgan seat and main home remained Tredegar House, with Ruperra used as a weekend hunting lodge.[7] The entire 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) estate was put up for sale, with the contents either moved to Tredegar House or sold in a three-day auction. Unstaffed and effectively abandoned, at the start of World War II, like many other large estate houses, it was taken over by the British Army, under whose control in 1941 it was destroyed by another fire.[8] Post-war, it was left to deteriorate. In 1956, John Morgan, 6th Baron Tredegar, sold the Castle along with its surrounding agricultural land to Eagle Star Insurance Company for around £35,000, during his liquidation of the Morgan estates.[12][a]
Later ownership
Ashraf Barakat bought the castle in 1998 and tried to revive the sport of polo in Wales.[14] After failing in a planning permission application to construct nine residential flats within the building, following the discovery of roosting Greater and Lesser horseshoe bats on the premises, he applied to demolish it to build housing; planning permission was refused. In September 2010, Barakat put the castle up for sale, at a price of £1.5M for 14 acres (with an optional further 16 acres),[8][15] and it was sold in about July 2014.[16][b]
It remains privately owned and its condition continues to deteriorate. A charity, the Ruperra Castle Preservation Trust, has been established which is working towards the building's restoration.[17] In 2022 Cadw designated the castle gardens and park Grade II on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.[18] In November 2023, inspectors found the building was structurally unsound and in imminent danger of collapse.[19]
Footnotes
^£35,000 in 1956 equates to approximately £1,103,000 in 2023, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[13]
^£1,500,000 in 2010 equates to approximately £2,429,000 in 2023, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[13]
^Conrad Black & David Nassaw. The Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst – The Rise and Fall of the Real Citizen Kane. Gibson Square Books. ISBN1-903933-27-7.