Tanygrisiau
Tanygrisiau | |
Merionethshire | |
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Tanygrisiau, with the Moelwynion behind | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SH687450 |
Location: | 52°59’10"N, 3°57’22"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Blaenau Ffestiniog |
Postcode: | LL41 |
Dialling code: | 01766 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Gwynedd |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Dwyfor Meirionnydd |
Tanygrisiau is a village in Merionethshire that forms a suburb of Blaenau Ffestiniog in the upper end of the Vale of Ffestiniog. It can be found along the southern side of the Moelwyn mountain range and dates to around 1750. It is located between 650 and 750 ft above sea level.
Geography
The Moelwyns protect the village from much of the wind from northerly gales in the winter and give the village a pleasant southerly aspect with relatively mild weather considering its location high in Snowdonia. However rainfall in the upper end of the Ffestiniog valley can be very high all year around.
Industrial Past and Present
Tanygrisiau, or more properly 'Tan y grisiau', is Welsh for "below the steps", referring to the stepped cliffs above the village. Tanygrisiau was famous for its slate mining, producing a high quality black slate that was used across the world. The major quarries above the village were Cwmorthin, Wrysgan and Conglog.
Tanygrisiau railway station is on the famous Ffestiniog Railway, a narrow-gauge railway built to carry slate from the mines down to the sea at Porthmadog where it was shipped all around the world, mostly for use in roofing.
The nearby Ffestiniog power station, the high Stwlan Dam and Llyn Ystradau, colloquially known as Tanygrisiau Reservoir, are part of a pumped storage hydroelectricity installation. Much nearer the railway station is a waterfall on the Afon Cwmorthin and below the falls, and powered by a different water source, is a very small hydro-electric power station.
The closure of the slate mines during the late 1970s led to massive depopulation of the area from which it has only recently (2005) begun to recover.
Tanygrisiau has close links with the regiment of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers.
Leisure
The village is a starting point for walks into the Moelwyns, especially if the intention is to climb Moelwyn itself. Care should be taken as there are numerous mine shafts in the area.
As a result of the slate mining, when the Snowdonia National Park was created, Tanygrisiau, Manod and Blaenau Ffestiniog were left outside, thus creating a doughnut-shaped area excluded from the National Park.
Gallery
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Llyn Ystradau, looking down towards the dam.
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Cwmorthin Falls taken from the Porthmadog train leaving Tanygrisiau
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The sign at the car park for Tanygrisiau railway station
Notable residents
- Gai Toms, music artist
- Gwyn Thomas, poet, academic and National Poet for Wales, was born in Tanygrisiau in 1936. As a boy, his family then moved to Blaenau Ffestiniog.
- Meredydd Evans (born Llanegryn, 1919) is a collector, editor, historian and notable performer of folk music of Wales.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Tanygrisiau) |
- Landscape photographs in and around Blaenau Ffestiniog
- geograph.co.uk, photos of Tanygrisiau and surrounding area