Clynderwen
Clynderwen | |
Carmarthenshire, Pembrokeshire | |
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Castelldwyran Church, Clynderwen | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SN133198 |
Location: | 51°50’44"N, 4°42’43"E |
Data | |
Post town: | Clynderwen |
Postcode: | SA66 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Pembrokeshire |
Clynderwen is a rural village on the Carmarthenshire/Pembrokeshire border. The village is known as a camping destination and is popular for self-catering holidays. It has its own community council of 10 members.
History
The village is on a road to the West Wales coast adjacent to the Preseli Hills (where the stones for Stonehenge were quarried) and owes its more recent origins to the advent of the railways in the 19th century. The Great Western Railway line from London to the West coast ports of Milford Haven, Neyland and Fishguard all pass through the village and a rail junction for the line to Fishguard existed until the 1950s.
As the railways expanded, they became instrumental in the development of local economies and Clynderwen became a point where agricultural produce, livestock, etc. were transhipped. A small hotel was built next to the railway station and, for the next one hundred or so years, the village gently expanded. Nowadays it is within easy commuting distance of the nearby towns, but its function as a centre of the local agricultural community has long since ceased.
Clunderwen railway station is situated on the West Wales Line.