Nantgarw

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Nantgarw
Glamorgan
Location
Location: 51°33’53"N, 3°16’1"W
Data
Post town: Cardiff
Postcode: CF15
Dialling code: 01443
Local Government
Council: Rhondda Cynon Taf
Parliamentary
constituency:
Pontypridd

Nantgarw is a village in Glamorgan, to the west of Caerphilly. The original village was destroyed by the development of the A470 trunk road, which was situated at the location of the current Nantgarw/A468 junction.[1] Located close to the A470, Nantgarw is within easy reach of the town of Pontypridd (5½ miles to the north-west) and Cardiff city centre (around 7½ miles further south).

History

Nantgarw lies on the River Taff. It is known for its porcelain, produced in between 1813-1814, and later between 1817-1820 at the Nantgarw Pottery, commemorated at the China Works Museum.

Nantgarw is the home of the "Nantgarw tradition" of folk dancing.

After the building of the Glamorganshire Canal, by the 1841 census of the 300 residents, about 60 owed their living to work associated directly with the canal.[1] But the development of drift mines and the development of the Taff Vale Railway, meant that by 1875 the majority of the villages residents were colliers.

The development of the village stopped until the 1910 development of the Nantgarw Colliery, but various geographical problems resulted in a series of stalled developments of the colliery until post-World War II, when new workings and a coking coal plant were developed by 1951. A new village settlement was then built on the hillside behind the colliery.

Nantgarw Colliery

Craig Yr Allt Colliery was situated south of Nantgarw village. However, whenever the Taff River flooded, water frequently entered its workings, and it was abandoned in 1878.[1]

Thomas Taylor of Pontypridd began the development of Nantgarw colliery in May 1910,[1] near the base of the Caerphilly Syncline seam.[2] The sinking of the twin shafts in 1911 reached the coal seam at a depth of more than 850 yards in 1915, placing them 2,000 ft below sea level and making Nantgarw the deepest pit to be sunk in the South Wales Coalfield up to that time.[1][3][4]

Having suffered from various geographical issues, Powell Duffryn designed a development scheme in 1937, but work was suspended when World War II broke out in 1939.[5] A later project to re-open the colliery was approved by the Ministry of Fuel and Power in 1946, and after nationalisation in 1947, the National Coal Board invested £5 million on modern surface constructions and modern mining methods. Having survived the mass pit closures of the 1960s, the geographical problems meant the closure of the mine working in 1974,[3] and the unit merged with Windsor Colliery, Abertridwr from 1975. By 1979, the combined Nantgarw/Windsor Colliery employed around 650 men, producing over 4,000 tons of coal per week, making a profit of over £0.5 million.[5]

The unit lost £7 million in 1981, employing: 142 on development; 131 on the coalface; 197 below the ground; 101 on the surface.[2] In 1982 output declined steeply as a major coal seam at Windsor became unworkable, while in 1984 an overtime ban led directly to the 1984/5 UK miners' strike spreading to the area. Although profitable post the strike, both sites of the whole unit closed as part of the NCB regional review on 6 November 1986.[1][4]

Village today

The village declined after the 1969 construction of the A470 which destroyed the historic old village. After the closure of the Nantgarw/Windsor Colliery and Coking works 18 months after the miners' strike, the site was developed as Parc Nantgarw, joined to the larger Trefforest Industrial Estate. All that now remains of Nantgarw colliery are two small concrete pyramids marking the sites of the two shafts, and a commemorative winding wheel.[5]

Parc Nantgarw is home to the headquarters of Cadw (the Welsh equivalent of English Heritage), and a large office for Santia Consulting. The social side of the estate provides a cinema, indoor 10-pin bowling and various restaurants.

The Coleg Morgannwg (Glamorgan Further Education College) has a campus in Nantgarw.

References

Outside links