Merthyr Vale
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Location within Merthyr Tydfil | |
Population | 3,831 (2011) [1] |
Community |
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Principal area | |
Preserved county | |
Country | Wales |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | Merthyr Tydfil |
Postcode district | CF48 |
Dialling code | 01443 |
Police | South Wales |
Fire | South Wales |
Ambulance | Welsh |
UK Parliament | |
Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament | |
Merthyr Vale (Welsh : Ynysowen or Ynyswen) is a linear village and community in the Welsh county borough of Merthyr Tydfil. Lying on the A4054 road it is on the east bank of the River Taff.
The community includes the villages of Aberfan on the opposite side of the Taff, Mount Pleasant and the village of Merthyr Vale itself.
The area was referred to and written as Ynys Owen as early as 1630, noting that the narrow valley was heavily wooded, with various traditional longhouse (tyddyn) farms marking out the rural territories. Ynys Owen, which translates from Welsh to English as Owain's riverside meadow, has been claimed by some possibly to commemorate Owain Glyndŵr, whose followers were involved in an uprising around 1400. [2]
There had been small scale coal extraction at Danyderi and Perthygleision, but in 1869 John Nixon (mining engineer) started development of the Taff Colliery, later to be known as the Merthyr Vale Colliery. The village immediately grew up around the shaft development, as did the later communities of Aberfan, Nixonville and Mount Pleasant. Completed in 1875, when the first commercial coal was brought up, there was a celebration called in the local Windsor Hotel. [2]
As the colliery was not the first developed in the area, and as colliery developers and owners were known to generally restrict spending on surrounding communities in which they housed their workers, Merthyr Tydfil council insisted on Merthyr Vale being developed with both adequate sanitation, as well as community infrastructure. Resultant planning regulations stipulated that the parish had effective sanitary and water supplies from the beginning. [2]
For the religious faiths chapels and churches for: Zion, Baptist, Calfaria, Welsh Baptist Bethel, Wesleyan Methodist, Disgwylfa, Calvinist Methodist and Trinity, Presbyterian denominations.
The local parish church of St Mary the Virgin, was built alongside the river Taff next to the Colliery in 1926. [3] It was a time of austerity, coinciding with the General Strike. Despite the deprivations of the time, and having very little money, a small group of parishioners encouraged by the Reverend Evans made plans with the help of the colliery engineer. They were fortunate to acquire the dressed stones from an old disused pump house at Pontyrhun Bridge in Troedyrhiw owned by the Glamorganshire Canal. But they would have to dismantle and transport it themselves. A church in Aberdare offered the people of Merthyr Vale a pulpit. Finally, after much backbreaking work and many willing helpers in the community, the church was finally consecrated [4] on Saturday 11 December 1926 by Joshua Pritchard Hughes, Bishop of Llandaff. The Church was demolished in 1967 due to subsidence in the colliery and a new Anglican Church of St Mary and Holy Innocents was built in Nixonville in 1970. [5] [6] [7]
In 1908 the first Roman Catholic church [8] dedicated to St Benedict was officially opened by John Hedley (bishop), an attractive stone building, the entrance of which was later surrounded by a fine avenue of trees. In 1926 a new parish priest, Fr Arthur Jordan arrived and confronted with the task of building a new church because the original had been condemned due to subsidence. The new St Benedict’s, was purchased with the help of the Powell Dyffryn Colliery, and officially opened on 18 December 1932, by Francis Mostyn (archbishop of Cardiff). Before these churches were built the growing Catholic community attended Mass in Mountain Ash and in St Mary’s, Merthyr Tydfil. Both journeys involved a walk of several miles. From 1892, Merthyr Vale was served by a Benedictine priest from St. Mary’s, Merthyr Tydfil who said Mass, at first, in 26 Taff Street and later at the Rechabite Hall Crescent Street.[ citation needed ]
Zion and Calfaria merged in 1974 to form the modern Baptist Church at Nixonville, which contains the first fibre-glass baptistry built in Wales.[ citation needed ]
The former Merthyr Vale School was built in 1879, while the Mount Pleasant School dates from 1912, it was closed in 2010. Merthyr Vale railway station opened in 1883. [9] The Gordon Lennox Constitutional Club was built in 1901, by the proprietor of the Brown-Lennox Engineering Company in Pontypridd, also the President of the East Glamorgan Conservative. [2]
The village developed sufficiently to create The Merthyr Vale Silver Prize Band - which won the Gwent Eisteddfod in 1905 and 1905, under conductor G. H. Thomas. [10] [11]
On 8 June 1940 1,600 evacuees arrived by train at Merthyr Tydfil from Deal and Folkestone in Kent. These were young children, clutching dolls and gas masks, accompanied by their teachers, welcomed by the civic dignitaries. Later the same evening about 210 children from Deal arrived at the Gordon-Lennox Hall, Merthyr Vale. The local police Inspector was in charge and together with the village clergy, St John Ambulance Brigade, and teachers from local schools were tasked with placing the children in their new homes. [12]
Then on 7 July 1941, while on a training exercise from No. 53 Operational Training Unit, two Royal Canadian Air Force Supermarine Spitfires collided over the village.
The first aircraft (X4024) of Sgt Gerald Fenwick Manuel (R/69888), [13] 25, from Halifax, Nova Scotia, [14] crashed into the home of the Cox family, at 1 South View Terrace (close to Mount Pleasant School) claiming the lives of Doreen Cox, 33, and her two daughters Phyllis, 14, and Doreen, 3. Husband James Cox, who was a shift worker at a munitions factory and was asleep in the house at the time of the crash, was thrown to safety; their three boys, Donald, Thomas and Len, were out playing. Neighbours tried to rescue the family - who had just returned from a shopping trip - but the heat from the fire was too intense.
The second aircraft (X4607) of Sgt Lois "Curly" Goldberg (R/56185), [13] 27, from Montreal, crashed into a field in Mount Pleasant, Treharris. [15]
The bodies of Sgt Manuel and the deceased family members were buried two days later in Ffrwd Cemetery, Merthyr Tydfil, while the body of Sgt Goldberg was interred in the Jewish cemetery at Cefn-coed-y-cymmer.
The Coventry Playground was built in 1972 on the site of the old Merthyr Vale School, with the monies collected by the people of Coventry. The playground was officially opened by the mayor of Coventry but closed to children many years ago and now is Coventry Gardens, a small housing estate with 11 bungalows.
Following the 1941 air crashes, in 2007 a mural was painted by local school children and unveiled by the Canadian High Commissioner shortly afterwards on the same site, [16] while there is an ongoing campaign by the Cox family for a permanent memorial. [17]
In 2009, 100 homes in two streets of Merthyr Vale were demolished to make way for a redevelopment on the site of the old Merthyr Vale Colliery. It was to include 230 new homes, a new school, two shops, a restaurant and offices. [18] After the first phase of the project – Ynysowen primary school – was completed, the school received its first pupils in 2010. Project Riverside was being jointly funded by the Welsh Government and Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council, who were to invest £8.2 million in the scheme.[ citation needed ]
Mount View, which translates from English to Welsh as Trem Y Mynydd, is a small village within Merthyr Vale, located at the bottom of Mount Pleasant
The village appears in Richard Fleischer's 1971 film, a British crime drama 10 Rillington Place starring Richard Attenborough and John Hurt. As Timothy Evans (Hurt) comes back to Wales, various scenes then shot inside the main village are seen. [2] The locations include: Merthyr Vale Station, Coronation Place Aberfan, and Cardiff. [19] The film dramatises the case of British serial killer John Christie (murderer), who committed many of his crimes in the titular Notting Hill (London) terraced house, and the miscarriage of justice involving his neighbour Timothy Evans, played by John Hurt who won a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal. Timothy Evans [20] was a Welshman born in Merthyr Tydfil wrongfully convicted and hanged for the murder of his wife and infant daughter at their residence at 10 Rillington Place in January 1950; after new evidence emerged, he was granted a posthumous pardon. [21]
Pontypridd is a town and a community in Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales.
The Aberfan disaster was the catastrophic collapse of a colliery spoil tip on 21 October 1966. The tip had been created on a mountain slope above the Welsh village of Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, and overlaid a natural spring. Heavy rain led to a build-up of water within the tip which caused it to suddenly slide downhill as a slurry, killing 116 children and 28 adults as it engulfed Pantglas Junior School and a row of houses. The tip was the responsibility of the National Coal Board (NCB), and the subsequent inquiry placed the blame for the disaster on the organisation and nine named employees.
The Taff Trail is a walking and cycle path that runs for 55 miles (89 km) between Cardiff Bay and Brecon in Wales. It is so named because it follows the course of the River Taff. Along much of its length, it follows the National Cycle Network Route 8 that continues to Holyhead, and is substantially off-road.
The River Taff is a river in Wales. It rises as two rivers in the Brecon Beacons; the Taf Fechan and the Taf Fawr before becoming one just north of Merthyr Tydfil. Its confluence with the River Severn estuary is in Cardiff.
Abercynon is a village and community in the Cynon Valley within the unitary authority of Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales. The community comprises the village and the districts of Carnetown and Grovers Field to the south, Navigation Park to the east, and Glancynon to the north.
Ynyshir is a village and community located in the Rhondda Valley, within Rhondda Cynon Taf, South Wales. The name of the village means "long island" in Welsh and takes its name from a farm in the area, falling within the historic parishes of Ystradyfodwg and Llanwynno (Llanwonno). The community of Ynyshir lies between the small adjoining village of Wattstown and the larger town of neighbouring Porth.
The South Wales Valleys are a group of industrialised peri-urban valleys in South Wales. Most of the valleys run north–south, roughly parallel to each other. Commonly referred to as "The Valleys", they stretch from Carmarthenshire in the west to Monmouthshire in the east; to the edge of the pastoral country of the Vale of Glamorgan and the coastal plain near the cities of Swansea, Cardiff, and Newport.
Abercanaid is a small village in the county borough of Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom with a population of about 5,060. It is situated 2.5 miles (4.0 km) south of Merthyr town centre and is west of Pentrebach, across the River Taff and north of Troedyrhiw. The Taff Trail runs through the village, adjacent to the path of the disused Glamorganshire Canal, which was an important in transporting iron and coal during the industrial boom in which the South Wales Valleys prospered.
Quakers Yard railway station serves the village of Edwardsville in the community of Treharris, Merthyr Tydfil, Wales. It is located on the Merthyr Tydfil branch of the Merthyr Line. Passenger services are provided by Transport for Wales.
Merthyr Vale railway station is a railway station serving the villages of Merthyr Vale and Aberfan in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales. It is located on the Merthyr branch of the Merthyr Line. Passenger services are provided by Transport for Wales.
Treharris is a small town and community in the Taff Bargoed Valley in the south of Merthyr Tydfil County Borough, South Wales. It is located about 0.6 miles (1.0 km) west of Trelewis, from which it is separated by the Taff Bargoed river, and 0.9 miles (1.4 km) from Nelson in Caerphilly county borough and has a population of 6,356 from the 2011 Census. As a community, Treharris includes the villages of Quakers Yard and Edwardsville. Due to steepness and narrowness of both the Taff and Taff Bargoed valleys at Treharris several notable bridges and viaducts have been built in the area.
Quakers Yard or Quaker's Yard is a village in the Merthyr Tydfil County Borough, situated where the Taff Bargoed Valley joins the Taff Valley. The settlement is part of the community of Treharris.
Nelson is a village and community in the County Borough of Caerphilly, Wales. It sits five miles north of Caerphilly and ten miles north of Cardiff, at the lower end of the Taff Bargoed Valley, and lies adjacent to Treharris, Trelewis and Quakers Yard.
Pentrebach is a village in Merthyr Tydfil County Borough, Wales and is formed from the original settlements of Lower Pentrebach, Tai-bach and Duffryn.
Mount Pleasant is a small village in the south of Merthyr Tydfil County Borough, Wales. It lies about 1 km south of Merthyr Vale, along the A4054 road and between that road and the River Taff.
Cilfynydd is a village in the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales, a mile from the South Wales Valleys town of Pontypridd, and 13 miles north of the capital city, Cardiff. Cilfynydd is also an electoral ward for the county council and Pontypridd Town Council.
The Taff Bargoed is a river and valley near Pontypridd in South Wales, and lies off the Abercynon roundabout on the A470 road, and is approximately 14 miles from Cardiff. The main settlements are Nelson, Edwardsville, Quakers Yard, Treharris, Trelewis, and Bedlinog. The valley is situated where the three County Boroughs of Caerphilly, Rhondda Cynon Taff, and Merthyr Tydfil meet.
Aberfan is a former coal mining village in the Taff Valley 4 mi (6 km) south of the town of Merthyr Tydfil, Wales.
Mynydd Merthyr is a broad ridge of high ground between Taff Vale and the Cwm Cynon in the Valleys region of South Wales. It forms the boundary between the unitary authorities of Rhondda Cynon Taff to the west and Merthyr Tydfil to the east.
Merthyr Tydfil County Borough is a county borough in the south-east of Wales. In mid 2018, it had an estimated population of 60,183 making it the smallest local authority in Wales by both population and land area. It is located in the historic county of Glamorgan and takes its name from the town with the same name. The county borough consists of the northern part of the Taff Valley and the smaller neighbouring Taff Bargoed Valley. It borders the counties of Rhondda Cynon Taf to the west, Caerphilly County Borough to the east, and Powys to the north.