Iscoyd Park is a Georgian red-brick country house and estate on the Welsh side of the Shropshire border, near Whitchurch, now run as a private country house wedding and events venue while remaining a family home.
The house stands in 18th‑century landscaped parkland, with a cricket pitch and pavilion giving it a very traditional country‑house setting. The house a three‑storey redbrick Georgian house with a slate roof, the main front dating from 1737, though parts of the building go back to the 17th century.
A lovely place owned by the same family for 150 years. The estate even supports a local cricket club, parish events (such as St David’s Day lunches and Christmas teas), concerts, opera and arts evenings, and fitness classes, making it a cultural hub as well as a private venue.
Interesting facts...
The parkland was turned into a massive 1,500-bed U.S. military hospital during World War II, complete with Nissen huts, barbed wire, and a POW camp, obliterating its landscape. Postwar, it housed Polish refugees in a camp and hospital until 1957, forcing the Godsal family to live in a makeshift flat within their own home.
Architectural Illustration: Iscoyd Park, Whitchurch. Wrexham
A3 on 300gsm paper










