Penysarn

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Penysarn
Anglesey
Chapel Street, Penysarn - geograph.org.uk - 1408297.jpg
Chapel Street, Penysarn
Location
Grid reference: SH460908
Location: 53°23’13"N, 4°18’54"W
Data
Post town: Penysarn
Postcode: LL69 9
Dialling code: 01407 / 01248
Local Government
Council: Anglesey
Parliamentary
constituency:
Ynys Môn

Penysarn is a small village located in the north-eastern corner of Anglesey, and on the north-eastern side of Parys Mountain, at approximately 140–150 feet above sea level.

Name

Penysarn is sometimes written 'Pen-y-sarn', but in both cases, the 'y' is silent. The name means "end of the causeway".[1]

Amenities

The village has one public house called Y Bedol, a camp site called Tyn Rhos Campsite, village shop and post office, an infants and junior school called Ysgol Penysarn, and a youth club. The village is well connected by regular bus routes.

The village is also the starting point of many officially designated circular tourist walks, including industrial heritage walks such as Llwybr Cadi Rondol, which takes walkers through the old copper mines at Mynydd Parys, and Llwybr Eilian, which takes walkers through Llaneilian and the surrounding countryside, including some of Anglesey's coastline which has gained Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty status.

History

Parys Penny

Penysarn grew throughout the eighteenth century, close to what was once the world's largest copper mine, at Parys Mountain. The village's expansion was due both to employment opportunities at the busy mines, and from providing subsidiary services such as cloggmaking, blacksmithing and baking. The ruins of a bakery still stand in the village, and the names of several of the older houses stem from the village's industrial past; with names translating from Welsh to "blacksmith's house", "blacksmith's field", etc.[2]

During this time, the Mountain and its locality, including Penysarn, had their own accepted currency; the Parys Penny which was made from the copper mined at the mountain.[3]

Outside links

References