Ystrad Mynach: Difference between revisions

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The town’s name is from the Welsh language; ''ystrad'' is a wide flat bottomed valley. The termination ''ach'' is associated with the names of marshy floodplains of rivers and is also found nearby in the names ''Llanbradach'' and ''Llancaiach''.
The town’s name is from the Welsh language; ''ystrad'' is a wide flat bottomed valley. The termination ''ach'' is associated with the names of marshy floodplains of rivers and is also found nearby in the names ''Llanbradach'' and ''Llancaiach''.


Ystrad Mynach is a corruption of Ystrad-Man-Ach meaning “valley of the marshy place (‘’man’’)and is not apparently derived from the Welsh ''mynach'' meaning monk.<ref>{{cite book|author=Gelligaer Urban District Council|title=The Gelligaer Story|publisher=Gelligaer Urban District Council|year=1959}}</ref>
Ystrad Mynach is a corruption of 'Ystrad-Man-Ach' meaning "valley of the marshy place (''man'')" and is not apparently derived from the Welsh ''mynach'' meaning monk.<ref>{{cite book|author=Gelligaer Urban District Council|title=The Gelligaer Story|publisher=Gelligaer Urban District Council|year=1959}}</ref>


Before the erection of defences on the River Rhymney in the 1960s, the town was subject to periodic flooding, as its name suggests.
Before the erection of defences on the River Rhymney in the 1960s, the town was subject to periodic flooding, as its name suggests.

Latest revision as of 18:06, 14 February 2018

Ystrad Mynach
Glamorgan

Ystrad Mynach
Location
Grid reference: ST145945
Location: 51°38’31"N, 3°14’26"W
Data
Population: 13,500
Post town: Hengoed
Postcode: CF82
Dialling code: 01443
Local Government
Council: Caerphilly
Parliamentary
constituency:
Caerphilly

Ystrad Mynach is a small town in Glamorgan, five miles north of Caerphilly. It has a population of around 13,500 and stands in the Rhymney Valley.

Before the Industrial Revolution and the coming of coal mining in the South Wales coalfield the valley was rural and farmed.

Name

The town’s name is from the Welsh language; ystrad is a wide flat bottomed valley. The termination ach is associated with the names of marshy floodplains of rivers and is also found nearby in the names Llanbradach and Llancaiach.

Ystrad Mynach is a corruption of 'Ystrad-Man-Ach' meaning "valley of the marshy place (man)" and is not apparently derived from the Welsh mynach meaning monk.[1]

Before the erection of defences on the River Rhymney in the 1960s, the town was subject to periodic flooding, as its name suggests.

Amenities and history

The nearby Penallta Colliery was the last coal mine to close in the valley. Other notable buildings and structures are the Ystrad Mynach railway station, opened in 1890, the viaduct, a sculpture to commemorate the area’s industrial heritage, a community hospital, a number of schools, and the Beech Tree, Coopers Arms and Royal Oak pubs.

From 1927 to 1996, Ystrad Mynach hosted the 'F' division headquarters of Glamorgan Constabulary (from 1968, South Wales Police).

Ystrad Mynach railway station was a location for one of Ronnie Barker's ‘’Porridge’’ episodes. Records show that Ystrad Mynach railway station was in existence in 1857, when it was known as Ystrad Junction.

To the north of Ystrad Mynach, is a collection of houses called Tredomen; these houses were built to house the workers of the since-demolished "Tredomen Works". This collection of houses is one of the best examples of socially graded houses in the world - ranging from two-up two-down, to a five-bedroom manor in Park Lane with adjoining servants' quarters.

Sport

  • Rugby: Penallta RFC, based in Ystrad Mynach. The Rugby Club was inaugurated by a group of miners from Penallta colliery in 1952.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Ystrad Mynach)

References

  1. Gelligaer Urban District Council (1959). The Gelligaer Story. Gelligaer Urban District Council.