• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Swansea Museum

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • Visit Swansea Museum
    • Boats and ships on display
    • Swansea Museum Collections Centre
    • Tram Shed
    • Staff Contacts
    • Friends of Swansea Museum
  • Our collection
    • Art UK
    • Egyptian artefacts
    • Transport
    • Nautical objects
    • Finds from Swansea and Neath
    • War time Swansea
  • Swansea – a brief history
    • Archaeology
    • Industry
    • The Sea
    • Mumbles Train
    • World War Two
    • Old houses and places
  • What’s on
    • Exhibitions
    • Events
    • Past exhibitions
  • Museum shop
  • 4 Site Education
  • English
    • Welsh
You are here: Home / Swansea – a brief history / Old houses and places / Norton House

Norton House

Norton House, Mumbles, with group of people in foreground c.1850 Norton House

Norton House was built in 1790 in Bath stone with a walnut staircase and elaborately decorated ceilings.

The people on the lawn may be the Jefferies, who were distantly related to Gabriel Powell the Duke of Beaufort’s powerful agent in Swansea, or the following tenants, Mr And Mrs Sydney Hall.

Taken by John Dillwyn Llewelyn (Swansea: 1810 – 1882)

Primary Sidebar

Search

Opening hours (main building)
Open Tuesday – Sunday
Closed Mondays except Bank Holiday Mondays
10am – 4:30pm (last admission 4.10pm)

Free admission

Swansea – A Photographer’s Dream
In ‘Swansea – A photographer’s Dream’ Colin Riddle’s pictures of Swansea in the 1960s represent images of a lost age, and though much of what he photographed still exists for the keen historian to seek out, much has also disappeared.

Buy your copy

Footer

Tweets by swanseamuseum

Return to top of page

Copyright © 2019 · Swansea Museum, City and County of Swansea

To help us provide you with the best browsing experience possible this site uses cookies. Find out how you can manage and disable your cookies here.