Wedding & Reception Sites
Hanover House Bed &
Breakfast
Newark, Ohio
Come stay in a grand country house on 16 acres near the Longaberger Golf Club.
Weddings, Receptions, Meetings, Conferences.
Birthday, Anniversary, and Retirement Parties.
Indoor or Outdoor
Hanover House Bed & Breakfast
3286 Licking Valley Road
Newark, Ohio 43055
(740) 763-4952
Toll Free: (800) 377-6229
email:
info@hanoverhousebandb.com
Dr. Christina Henneke, Innkeeper
Bryn Du

Click Picture To Go To Website
The Estate. . .
Seven Buildings on fifty-two acres:
Federal Style Sandstone Mansion circa 1905
7,200 Square Foot Field House
Landscaped Patio Areas and Sites For Tents
Five Matching Outbuildings
Thirty-two Acre Front Lawn
The
Mansion. . .
Old Fashioned Elegance
Meets Modern Convenience
Oversized Wood Paneled Rooms
Formal Dining Room
Spacious Front Porch with Three-Story Portico
That Overlooks the Front Lawn
East and West Solariums
Handicapped Accessible
Complete New Catering Kitchen & WI-FI
Bryn Du. . .
For Your Next:
Dinner Party, Wedding, Athletic Event, Art Exhibit,
Board Meeting, Luncheon, Gala, Corporate Retreat,
Lecture Series, Club Meeting, Reception, Antique Show,
Carnival, Concert, Murder Mystery, or Debutant Ball.
A one-in-a-million setting
for your one-of-a-kind event!
(740)587-7053
537 Jones Road
Granville, Ohio 43023
Phone: (740) 587-7053
Bruce Cramer, Executive Director
bcramerbryndu@alltel.net
Owned by the Village of Granville, the property is operated by the Bryn Du Commission, a non-profit entity. Bryn Du has been owned by local entrepreneurs who achieved national prominence, most recently Dave Longaberger. Mr. Longaberger added the indoor tennis court building and was in the process of remodeling the out buildings at the time of his death.
Prior to that, it was owned by John Sutphin Jones who named it “Bryn Du”, (Welsh for Dark Hills) and lived there with his wife and children. Jones made his fortune in the railroad and coal businesses and built both the Granville Inn and the Granville Golf Course (designed by Donald Ross). During the Jones’ occupancy, dinner was served to Calvin Coolidge, William Howard Taft and Warren G. Harding. Here also, Lillian Gish and Katherine Cornell sipped coffee and Paderewski and Rachmaninoff played the Steinway. After the death of J.S. Jones, his daughter Sallie lived on the estate managing the farm. Sallie remains a local legend, famous for breeding and training show horses, and for her vivid personality and colorful language.
The beautiful Bryn Du Mansion is a well-known local landmark and is on The National Register of Historic Places.