The building is of three storeys, with a prominent bay window on the ground floor, and faced with white
stucco which dates from the early nineteenth century. There was an earlier inn, the Swan and Falcon, on this site from at least 1709, but by 1774 it was known as the White Swan. The inn, and surrounding court, were rebuilt in 1839, following the redevelopment of Priory Street, a reconstruction to which the prolific Monmouth architect
George Vaughan Maddox contributed. It had a coach entrance from Priory Street when the new by-pass was built, and this archway provides one entrance to what is now White Swan Court, with the other entrance from narrow Church Street. The name probably refers to
Mary de Bohun, who gave birth to
Henry V in
Monmouth Castle – the heraldic
badge of the Bohun family was the
Bohun swan, a swan collared and chained. The White Swan was appropriated for a billet by a Troop of the
12th Lancers when the Chartist Trials took place in the
Shire Hall in 1840. This event caused great consternation amongst the "respectable folk" of the town who feared a revolution and thought that the Lancers were there to protect them. The hotel continued until the late 1950s, and its lead sign of a swan was still displayed here until stolen some years ago. Now the courtyard provides for a pleasant collection of shops, a coffee house and a cafe bistro. In Church Street, the rather irregular bow window to the chemists by the entrance to White Swan Court, which the poet laureate
John Betjeman said "must never be demolished". ==Notes==