The folklorist
Charlotte Burne recorded a local legend, told by a person in the parish of Condover in 1881 – noting it to be "utterly at variance with facts", which she meticulously explained- wherein Owen, here the "clever" "son of the ostler of the Lion inn", had risen through education into the legal profession. In studying past trials, he came to suspect that John Viam, a servant at Condover Hall, had been falsely accused of murdering the lord of the manor, Knevett, in the reign of
Henry VIII. Per the story, Knevett's son was the real murderer. Owen, "a special favourite with
Queen Elizabeth", was given permission for a new trial, and in successfully condemning the murderous younger lord to death, Owen was rewarded with the Condover estate. As Burne observes, however, Owen was the son of a wool merchant of old Welsh stock, and foremost amongst the discrepancies involved in the story is that Condover Hall was built for Owen's son Roger, fifty years after the death of Henry VIII. The only Knevett (or Knyvett) associated with Condover was a Sir Henry, who sold the manor soon after it was granted to him by Henry VIII. ==References==