The house was later ooccupied by William Williams (1746-1781), Thomas Williams' grandson. William was a wealthy man having accrued his fortune with the East India Company. It was this according to some paid for the present Georgian range that comprises the main part of today's house. But the style of architecture suggests that it was carried out between 1755 and 1760 at a time when William would have been only 15 years old. It is more likely that his father, Robert Williams was reponsible for the changes. Little is known about Robert Williams but the grandness of the house was consistent at the time with the dwelling of such a wealthy and well respected man. In 1783 following the death of William Williams' daughter and heir, Williams Williams' wife sold the house to John Goodman of Porthamel, Anglesey.
When Edmund Hyde Hall visited Ty Newydd in 1809/10 it was occupied by tenants and he noted that the house was 'much out of repair'. In 1856 the house was sold once again, this time to the Jones' of the Broom Hall Estate.
Click here to read more about the house and the accommodation at Ty Newydd.
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