Brechfa

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Brechfa
Carmarthenshire
Brechfa Church - geograph.org.uk - 149359.jpg
Brechfa Church
Location
Grid reference: SN525303
Location: 51°57’7"N, 4°8’49"W
Data
Post town: Carmarthen
Postcode: SA32
Local Government
Council: Carmarthenshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Carmarthen East and Dinefwr

Brechfa is a village and ancient parish in the Cathinog hundred of Carmarthenshire, situated between Llandeilo and Carmarthen. It has existed since the 6th century at the top of the Cothi Valley.[1][2][3] Brechfa village is set in countryside, as well as being located by the Brechfa Forest[4]

History

In the 1840s, Brechfa featured in the Rebecca Riots when rioters destroyed tollgates on the local turnpike road.[5] During the 1930s Great Depression, unemployed men were set to work on the Forestry Commission land, breaking ground, building tracks, and undertaking other heavy labour. The men lived in a work camp in Brechfa, which was one of a number of Instructional Centres run by the Ministry of Labour.

Location and amenities

The village has a bridge over the river that links both sides of the village.

St. Teilo's Church is based in the middle of the Brechfa and replaced the former church building in 1893. The stone from the former church building was used to build the current church hall which is situated directly opposite St Teilo's Church.[6]

The Bryn Stores Community Store is a co-operative has been set up to run the village shop,[7] which featured in an article in The Daily Telegraph Magazine in 2007.[8] The village was chosen as a special stage in the British Rally from 2006 to 2008.

The Forest Arms, the public house located in the centre of Brechfa, featuring open fires, food and drink and car parking to the front and rear. The pub was closed between 2006 and 2014, and was re-opened in April 2014.[9]

Leisure & Recreation

Brechfa Forest is a mixture of ancient forest and managed woodlands containing mountain bike trails as well as promoted walks and rides, at the top of the Cothi Valley. The managed woodlands of the forest is managed by Natural Resources Wales.[10]

The village is the site of Brechfa Mountain Biking which have a number of free car parks with picnic and BBQ facilities. In Byrgwm car park there is The Shed café for those riding the Raven or Derwen Trails.[11]

Brechfa Forest provides 17,300 acres of open access for horse riders, who can use any of the tracks within the forest. A number of bridleways and byways run across the farmland and common land surrounding the forest to enable equestrian visitors to enjoy a variety of rides.[12]

The River Cothi is the largest tributary of the River Towy. It is noted for its trout and sea-trout fishing and for salmon. The Cothi valley runs through the Brechfa Forest joining the Towy a few miles south of Brechfa.[13]

Brechfa was chosen as a special stage in the British Rally from 2006 to 2008.

Notable people

  • William Thomas (Gwilym Marles) was born in Brechfa
  • Canon Patrick Thomas (author and cleric) Rector of Brechfa from 1984 to 2001. His books include Candle in the Darkness, Celtic Spirituality from Wales (Gomer), Celtic Earth, Celtic Heaven (Gomer), Brechfa and Beyond: Peregrinations of a Parish Priest (Carreg Gwalch), From Carmarthen to Karabagh: a Welsh discovery of Armenia (Carreg Gwalch), and Remembering the Armenian Genocide (Carreg Gwalch). His translations of the twentieth-century Welsh poet David Gwenallt Jones are included in the volume Sensuous Glory written with Densil Morgan and Donald Allchin (Canterbury Press)

References

  • John Field, "Learning Through Labour: Training, unemployment and the state, 1890-1939", Leeds University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-900960-48-5

Outside links