Meliden
MELIDEN, a parish, in the union of St.
Asaph, hundred of Prestatyn, county of Flint,
North Wales, 5 miles (N. by E.) from St. Asaph;
containing 844 inhabitants, of whom 440 are in the
township of Meliden. This parish, which is supposed
to derive its name from the dedication of its church,
is situated on the north-western extremity of the
county, on the shore of the Irish Sea; and comprises
an extensive tract of rich arable and pasture land, in
a high state of cultivation. The surface is in general
flat, and nearly the whole district, extending to
Rhuddlan, is remarkably fertile; the soil is favourable for the growth of all kinds of grain, but more
especially for wheat, the quality of which is not
excelled in any other part of the principality. The
total area is 1607 acres, of which 200 are common or
waste land. The great Talar Gôch lead-mine is
partly in Meliden, and partly in the parish of Dyserth,
which see. Among the more respectable houses is
Nant, an ancient mansion of a branch of the Conways
of Bryn Euryn, near Llandrillo-yn-Rhôs. The
scenery, though pleasing, is not distinguished by any
peculiar features; and the only views possessing
interest are those which extend over the Irish Sea,
at the time of flood-tide, when vessels are proceeding
towards the river Dee; at ebb-tide many sand-banks
appear, and the coast is in general low and sandy.
The Chester and Holyhead railway runs parallel
with the sea-shore.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with
£400 royal bounty, and £400 parliamentary grant;
total net income, £120; patron, the Bishop of St.
Asaph: the tithes have been commuted for £368,
and there is an impropriate glebe of six acres. The
church, dedicated to St. Melid, is not remarkable for
any peculiarity of architectural detail. A day and
Sunday National school is held; and there are two
places of worship for dissenters in the hamlet of Prestatyn, in each of which a Sunday school is also conducted. A noble donation was bequeathed to the
curate in 1783, by the Rev. Gilbert Bouchery, who
directed that the interest of £1000, three per cent.
Bank annuities, should be for ever paid in augmentation of the income of the curacy. He also left a
sum of £1400, in the same stock, the dividends to be
appropriated after the decease of his wife, who died
in 1807, to the augmentation, in equal portions, of
the livings of four resident incumbents in the diocese
of St. Asaph, who should have the most scanty incomes, and be the most remarkable for the diligent
and conscientious discharge of their ministry, the selection to rest with the bishop. The dividend on the
first bequest is regularly received by the curate; and
that on the second, amounting to £75 annually, is
divided among four poor beneficed clergymen, giving
a sum of £18. 10. to each. In the hamlet of Prestatyn are some vestiges of an ancient castle.—See
Prestatyn.
Melindwr (Melin-Dwr)
MELINDWR (MELIN-DWR), a township,
in that part of the parish of Llanbadarn-Vawr
which is in the Lower division of the hundred of
Geneu'r-Glyn, in the union of Aberystwith,
county of Cardigan, South Wales; containing
674 inhabitants. The situation of this township in
the Vale of Rheidiol is extremely picturesque, more
especially at Pont-y-Pren, where the dark rocks rise
on one side nearly 400 feet above the bed of the
river. Through a chasm among these a mountain
stream issues, forming a fine cascade, and turning a
small mill, which can only be approached by a rude
bridge composed of the trunk of a tree. The district
is well wooded; and there are some lead-mines.
Meliney, or Melinau
MELINEY, or MELINAU, a parish, in the
union of Cardigan, hundred of Kemmes, county of
Pembroke, South Wales, 8 miles (S. W. by S.)
from Cardigan; containing 492 inhabitants. This
parish is situated in the northern part of the county,
close to the road leading from Cardigan to Fishguard,
and is intersected by the great road between the
former place and Haverfordwest. It comprises 4056
acres. Rather more than half is inclosed and cultivated, and the remainder consists of barren heath and
stony common, forming part of the Percelly mountain; the soil in that portion which is inclosed is
tolerably fertile. The scenery, though not greatly
diversified, is enriched with some branches of the
river Nevern, which flow through the parish; and the
adjoining country is not destitute of interest. The
living is a discharged rectory, rated in the king's
books at £10, and in the patronage of the Rev. D.
Protheroe: the tithes have been commuted for a
rent-charge of £160; and there is a glebe of six
acres, worth £10. 12. per annum. The Independents have a place of worship here, and conduct a
Sunday school. There are some ancient mansions
in the parish, within the limits of which also are the
remains of a circular encampment, called Pen-yBenglog, defended by a single rampart.
Mellington
MELLINGTON, a township, in the incorporation of Forden, in that part of the parish of Churchstoke which is in the Lower division of the hundred
of Montgomery, county of Montgomery, North
Wales; containing 201 inhabitants. The tithes
have been commuted for a rent-charge of £138, payable to the warden of Trinity Hospital, Clun. Here
is a mansion called Mellington Hall.
Merford
MERFORD, with Hoseley, a lordship and
hamlet, in the parish of Gresford, union of Wrexham, partly in the hundred of Bromfield, county
of Denbigh, and partly in the hundred of Mold,
county of Flint, North Wales, 4¾ miles (N. E.
by N.) from Wrexham; containing 285 inhabitants.
These places anciently constituted two lordships:
Merford extends to the south bank of the river Alyn,
and the road from Chester to Wrexham passes through
it. The lands included in Flintshire were made part
of that county by act of parliament in the reign of
Henry VIII., and are surrounded on every side by
portions of Denbigh. The tithes of Merford and
Hoseley have been commuted for £47. 10. payable
to certain impropriators, £37. 16. 3. to the Dean and
Chapter of Winchester, and £28. 3. 9. to the vicar of
Gresford. There is a place of worship for Wesleyan
Methodists. In the lordship is the "Roft," an ancient British camp, forming the most elevated point
of an eminence commanding extensive prospects over
the Vale Royal of Cheshire, the city of Chester, the
forest of Delamere, and the hills of Lancashire,
Derby, Salop, &c. The encampment is rendered
nearly inaccessible, on the north and west, by the
almost perpendicular steepness of the hill: on the
east its inclosed area was protected by three ditches,
now nearly filled up; but its defences on the south,
consisting of three deep fosses, are still visible. In
the north-eastern corner is a very elevated mount,
or exploratory camp, from which is obtained a view
into nine different counties. The Chester and
Shrewsbury railway passes through Roft Hill.
Meriadog (Cevn-Meriadog)
MERIADOG (CEVN-MERIADOG), with
Wigvair, a township, in that part of the parish and
union of St. Asaph which is in the hundred of Isdulas, county of Denbigh, in North Wales,
1 mile (S.) from St. Asaph; containing 586 inhabitants,
of whom 329 are in Meriadog. It is situated on the
left bank of the Elwy, and the road from St. Asaph
to Denbigh passes through it, close to the river.
There are some curious natural caverns, extending a
considerable distance into the limestone hills, having
the roofs, in some places, forty feet high, and containing various fossil remains. Among other objects
of interest have been found the skull of a remarkably
large animal, with the teeth perfectly sound and
enamelled, and nearly as large as a cricket-ball; and
the tongue of another, equal in size to that of a deer,
with the form and grain remaining quite perfect,
though completely petrified, and as hard as the limestone rock in which it was found. Nearer the river
Elwy, and at the base of these hills, is an extensive
limestone rock, naturally perforated into an immense
arch, twenty-one yards in length, and thirty-six feet
in height, through which a road proceeds, and which
is capable of admitting the passage of a large wagon
loaded with hay.
Merionethshire
MERIONETHSHIRE, a maritime county of
North Wales, bounded on the west by the bay of
Cardigan, being that part of the Irish Sea which
separates the two great promontories of North and
South Wales; on the north-west by Carnarvonshire;
on the north and north-east by Denbighshire; on
the east and south-east by Montgomeryshire; and
on the south by Cardiganshire, and the estuary of
the river Dovey, or Dyvi. It extends from 52° 31'
to 53° 2' (N. Lat.), and from 3° 20' to 4° 28'
(W. Lon.); and includes an area, according to Evans'
map of North Wales, of 430,000 statute acres, or upwards of 670 square miles. Within its limits are
8480 houses inhabited, 546 uninhabited, and 75 in
the course of erection; the population is 39,332, of
whom 19,279 are males, and 20,053 females. The
annual value of real property assessed to the property
and income tax, for the year ending April 1843, was
as follows: lands, £108,237; houses, £31,231; tithes,
£3189; quarries, £9729; mines, £263; railways,
or tramways, £600; other property, not comprised
in the foregoing, £416: total value, £153,665.
The county derives its name, in Welsh written
Merionydd, Meirionydd, and Meirion, from a cantrev
of ancient Wales, called Meirion, which was incorporated with it, at its southern extremity, on the settlement of its present limits in the reign of Henry VIII.,
and which gave name to the province of Meirionydd.
This cantrev received its appellation from its having
been the portion of Meirion, grandson of Cunedda;
the latter, a prince of North Britain, came into North
Wales in the fifth century, to rescue it from some
Irish invaders, and, having succeeded in his enterprise, divided the recovered territory among his sons
and grandsons. Merioneth is the only county of
North Wales which retains its ancient name; with
the addition of the word shire.
In the time of Cæsar, the present county formed
part of the territory of the Ordovices; and after the
Roman conquest it was included in the district Mervinia, a sub-division of the great province of Britannia Secunda. The Roman station Heriri Mons is
placed by Stukeley near Bala, in the county, but by
others it is thought to have been situated at Tommen-y-Mûr, near Festiniog. Caer Gai, in the vicinity of Llanuwchyllyn, near Bala; and Pennal, on
the southern border of the county, near Machynlleth
in Montgomeryshire, are also considered to have been
the sites of Roman settlements. The Via Occidentalis ran the whole length of the county, from south
to north, entering it from the station Loventium, in
Cardiganshire, and passing by the large encampment
at Pennal, and the station Heriri Mons, to Segontium,
on the shore of the Menai. A branch of the southern Watling-street also traversed it from the station
Mediolanum, in Montgomeryshire, by Caer Gai, near
Bala, to the Via Occidentalis at Heriri Mons. In
the division made by Roderic the Great, this county
was included in the kingdom of Aberfraw, or North
Wales, excepting only the eastern and north-eastern
parts of it, forming the ancient cantrevs of Mowddwy,
Edeyrnion, and Glyndyvrdwy, and part of that of
Dinmael, which belonged to the kingdom of Powys.
Though sometimes the scene of internal struggles,
Merionethshire, from its remote and almost inaccessible situation, in the wars of the ancient Britons
with the Saxons; Danes, and Normans, was never
the scene of action until near the extinction of Welsh
independence. Henry II., having assembled the
choicest troops from every part of his extensive dominions, in the year 1165, entered the Welsh territory at Oswestry, while the power of all Wales was
collected at Corwen, in this county, to oppose him.
By cutting down the woods in his progress, to prevent surprise, notwithstanding some opposition which
he met with from detached parties of the Welsh
soldiery, Henry advanced to the Berwyn mountain,
at the north-eastern extremity of Merionethshire,
where he pitched his camp in order to refresh his
forces. The English were stationed on the acclivity
of the hills, and the Welsh, presenting a dark and
formidable front, were posted on the summit of the
opposite mountains, each army appearing unwilling
to commence the attack: but the situation of the
English monarch soon became critical, for the Welsh,
watching every movement, and neglecting no opportunity of intercepting his supplies, reduced his army
to the utmost distress for want of provisions and
forage. These difficulties were still further increased
by sudden and heavy rains, which rendered Henry's
position in such a broken and uneven country almost
untenable; and at last the waters, descending from
the hills in torrents, compelled him to retreat into
England with great loss of men and stores.
In 1404, Harlech Castle was suddenly seized by the
valiant Owain Glyndwr, on his raising the standard
of revolt against the newly-acquired authority of
Henry IV.; but four years after, it was retaken by
an English army sent to suppress the rebellion.
After the accession of Edward IV. to the throne of
England, the castle, then in the possession of David
ab Ievan ab Einion, a firm friend of the Lancastrians, was held for that party for several years, in
spite of entreaties and menaces. Finding the governor determined to continue the resistance, the king
at last sent an army against him, under the command
of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, who, after
encountering numerous obstacles in conducting his
forces through these alpine regions, at length invested the fortress, which, however, was not surrendered until after a long siege, and then only on
the most honourable terms. This appears to have
been the last post defended on behalf of the house
of Lancaster. Soon after the close of the war, DinasMowddwy and its neighbourhood became the resort
of numerous felons and outlaws, who formed themselves into desperate bands of plunderers, by one
of which, Lewis Owen, of Llwyn, near Dôlgelley,
Vice-Chamberlain and Baron of the Exchequer of
North Wales, was openly attacked and murdered,
in 1555, on his way to the assizes at Montgomery;
but by the most vigorous measures this evil was at
length abated. Early in the civil war of the seventeenth century, Harlech Castle was strenuously defended for the king by Sir Hugh Pennant, until,
the garrison becoming mutinous, it fell into the
hands of the parliamentarians: it was afterwards
again in the possession of the royalists, but was
finally taken, in March 1647, by a force under
General Mytton, being then the only fortress in
North Wales that held out for the king. Dôlgelley,
having been originally garrisoned for the parliament, was besieged by a small party of royalists,
who, however, were dispersed, and their leader
made prisoner. Prince Rupert appears to have
passed through Merionethshire, towards Oxford, in
August 1644.
A small portion of this county is in the diocese of
St. Asaph, the rest is in that of Bangor, and the whole
is included in the province of Canterbury. It comprises the deaneries of Mowddwy, Penllyn and
Edeyrnion, Ardudwy, Estimaner, and Tàlybont: the
total number of parishes is thirty-six, of which twenty
are rectories, five vicarages, and the rest perpetual
curacies. For purposes of civil government, it is
divided into the hundreds of Ardudwy, Edeyrnion,
Estimaner, Penllyn, and Tàlybont and Mowddwy,
which last consists of two former hundreds that were
united on account of the small size of Mowddwy. It
contains the market and assize towns of Bala and
Dôlgelley; the market, sea-port, and bathing town
of Barmouth; the market and sea-bathing town of
Towyn; the sea-port and bathing town of Aberdovey; and the market-towns of Corwen, DinasMowddwy, Festiniog, and Harlech. One knight is
returned to parliament for the shire, who is elected
at Harlech; the polling-places are Harlech, Bala,
Corwen, Dinas-Mowddwy, Dôlgelley, and Towyn.
The county is included in the North Wales circuit:
the Lent assizes, and the Epiphany and Midsummer
quarter-sessions, are held at Bala; and the Midsummer assizes, and Easter and Michaelmas quartersessions, at Dôlgelley: the county gaol is in the
vicinity of Dôlgelley; and the county houses of correction, or bridewells, are at Bala, Corwen, and Dôlgelley. It comprises the entire poor-law union of
Bala, the greater part of the unions of Dôlgelley and
Festiniog, and part of the unions of Corwen and
Machynlleth.
Nearly the whole of the surface is occupied by
wild and barren rocks and mountains; and though
the mountains are not so high as those of the adjoining county of Carnarvon, yet many are very lofty,
and others of less towering height are still, by their
precipitous and craggy sides, rendered sublime objects. Contrasted with the gayer character of a
highly cultivated country, the scenery of Merionethshire would be considered bleak and dreary; but a
variety of objects, forming innumerable contrasts,
render it strikingly pleasing and romantic. Besides the grandeur of its maritime views, its lofty
mountains, and inaccessible crags, the enjoyment of a
tour through the county is heightened by the diversified appearance of its lower hills, of several small
plains, and of numerous valleys; while the whole
district is interspersed with woods, lakes, rivers,
torrents, cataracts, and all the varied decorations
of nature in her wildest garb. From a line entering from Montgomeryshire, and running northwestward by Bwlch-y-Groes, near Aran Vowddwy,
to Drws-y-Nant, between Bala and Dôlgelley, and
thence across the mountains to Llyn Trywerin and
Llyn Morwynion, and terminating near the head of
the valley of Festiniog, the rivers descend in opposite directions, on one side eastward, and on the
other westward; and a farmhouse on the line, called
Pant Gwyn, is so situated that the rain which falls
on the western side of the roof may be said to flow
into Cardigan bay at Barmouth, and that falling
on the eastern side into the Irish Sea at Chester bar. The principal streams on the western
side of this parting ridge are, the Dovey, which
flows south-eastward along the rich valley of Machynlleth; the Maw, which pursues its course through
Ganllwyd, and is joined by the Wonion, that flows
from Drws-y-Nant along the Vale of Dôlgelley, the
united streams emptying themselves into the sea at
Barmouth; and the Traeth Bâch, which runs westward, along the Vale of Festiniog. The principal on
the opposite side is the Dee, which rises under a hill
near the head of Bala lake, and passes north-eastward
along the beautiful Vale of Edeyrnion, and thence
eastward along the romantic Vales of Glyndyvrdwy
and Llangollen. The Vale of Dovey far excels in
fertility the vales of any of the other streams; a
circumstance attributed by geologists to the difference in the qualities of the strata surrounding each.
The principal and most elevated chain of mountains is the Berwyn range, which, commencing in
the south-eastern part of Denbighshire, forms the
lofty summit of Cader Verwyn, near the northeastern extremity of this county, and stretching
south-eastward, presents numerous lofty peaks, and
includes the mountains called the Arans and the
Arenigs. The loftiest heights of the chain are,
Cader Idris, which rises with a trifurcated summit
to the south of Dôlgelley, near its south-eastern
extremity, and from which it makes a rapid ascent
to the sea-shore at Sarn-y-Bwch; Aran Mowddwy
and Aran Penllyn, to the south of Bala mere; the
Arenig mountain, westward of Bala; and Cader
Verwyn, above mentioned. In point of elevation,
these mountains hold a middle rank between the
towering peaks of Snowdon and the humbler swells
of the Plinlimmon range. The height of the first
above the level of the sea is 2914 feet; of the second,
2955; of Arenig, 2809; and of Cader Verwyn, 2563.
The vegetable produce of the mountains is fern and
furze, or gorse, upon the lower and drier outskirts;
heath upon the loftier summits of argillaceous schistus, having its roots in shallow peat upon clay or
rammel; and rushes, and a variety of mosses and
other alpine aquatic plants, on the humid slopes and
hollows, upon various depths of peat. These wastes
abound with grouse, and the town of Bala, situated
in the midst of them, is a place of great resort for
sportsmen.
The numerous Lakes are very small, except that
of Tegid, or Bala mere. This is the largest in
the principality, being nearly twelve miles in circumference, and has been fathomed in various places
to the depth of from fifty-five to one hundred
and twenty yards: the town of Bala is situated at
its northern extremity. Some of the principal of
the smaller lakes are, Tàlyllyn, near the foot of
Cader Idris, on the southern side of that mountain;
Llyn Bodlyn and Llyn Cwm Howel, near Cors-yGedol; Raithlyn, near Trawsvynydd; Cynwch,
Elider, Tecwyn Uchâ and Isâ, Llyn y Cwm Bychan,
Arenig, &c. Bala mere is remarkable for a peculiar kind of fish called gwyniaid, the salmo lavaretus
of Linnæus; Llyn Cwm Howel, for a deformed species of trout; and Raithlyn, for a singular variety of
perch.
On the SEA-COAST are various marshes scattered
along its whole extent; and the waste uninclosed
sands of the Traeth Bychan, at the northern extremity of the coast of the county, occupy several
thousand acres. Different embankments have been
made on the land skirting this marsh, thus securing
some hundreds of acres from inundation at spring
tides, to which they were before liable; and the
sandy estuary of the Traeth Bychan, a little to the
north of it, has been wholly inclosed. The sea is
thought to have made great encroachments on the
shore of the county in remote ages, a supposition accredited by tradition and various existing evidences.
Sarn-y-Bwch, above-mentioned, is a ridge of huge
stones covered by the tides, but appearing at low
water: it stretches westward into the sea, from near
the mouth of the river Dysynni, in the vicinity of
the church of Llangelynin. Another similar line,
but of much greater extent, reaches south-westward
from a point on the coast south-west of Harlech, and
is called Sarn Badrig, or the "ship-breaking causeway," from the accidents which occur to vessels
approaching this sunken reef unawares at full or half
tides: it is about twenty-four feet broad. Sarn signifies a causeway, or pavement; and a monkish
legend relates, that the way was miraculously formed
by St. Patrick, to facilitate his passage between
Britain and Ireland, and was therefore called Sarn
Badrig. By some, these ranges are considered as
the work of art, but by others merely as rocks in
their natural position. By such as entertain the
former opinion, Sarn-y-Bwch and Sarn Badrig, with
other causeways in more southern parts of Cardigan
bay, are asserted to have constituted the barrier of
a rich tract of land, named Cantrev Gwaelod, or the
"low-land hundred," the inundation of which is
recorded in verse in a very old manuscript, called
"The Black Book of Carmarthen;" the names, also,
of several towns that were overwhelmed, are yet
preserved in the traditions of the Welsh. This
event is said to have taken place about the year 500,
at the time when Gwyddno Garanhir, father of Elphin
the patron of the Welsh bard Taliesin, was lord of
the territory, owing to the negligence of a drunkard
named Seithennin, who in the night left the sluices
of the embankment open. In the sea, about seven
miles west of Aberystwith in Cardiganshire, is a collection of loose stones, termed Caer Wyddno, "the
fort or palace of Gwyddno;" and adjoining to it are
vestiges of one of the more southern causeways or
embankments of Cantrev Gwaelod. The depth of
water over the whole extent of the bay of Cardigan
is not great; and on the recess of the tide, stones
bearing Latin inscriptions, and Roman coins of
various emperors, have been found below high-water
mark: in different places in the water, also, are observed prostrate trees. The truth appears to be, that
the inundation swept away only a small part, and not
the whole, of the land now covered by the waters of
the bay, as Ptolemy the geographer, who lived in the
second century, marks the promontories by which
Cardigan bay is bounded, and the mouths of the
rivers, in nearly the same relative situations which
they occupy at present, giving the latitude and longitude of each place according to his mode of computation. Some account of the submarine forest in the
bay will be found in the article on Cardiganshire.
The Vale of Towyn, in the south-eastern part of
Merionethshire, seems to have been restored by the
sea some time after the inundation of Cantrev
Gwaelod: a considerable part of it, of value only as
a turbary, was drained and embanked by the exertions
of the late Edward Corbet, Esq., of Ynysymaengwyn,
and converted into meadows of the richest quality.
In the larger valleys, and near the sea-shore, the
climate is mild; upon the mountains it is cold and
tempestuous, and on some of the higher summits the
snow sometimes remains until June, though in the
vicinity of the sea it soon disappears, even in the
depth of winter. The soils are various; those of
the low lands are very fertile. The prevailing kind
is peat or moss, which is found at all elevations, but
of the greatest depth on levels and in hollows favourable to its production. It occurs of less depth on
gentle slopes, upon clay or rammel, being such substrata as do not admit the filtration of water: this
latter is generally covered with a coarse matted
herbage, which characterises what is provincially
called rhossy land. Till, a hungry light mould,
tinged by the orange oxyde of iron, is common on
the mountains. Ferny soil, or hazel mould, is frequently found on the lower hills, producing fern,
broom, and the larger ulex or gorse, besides various
kinds of underwood. All the smaller valleys traversed by rapid streams have a light gravelly soil,
which becomes gradually more fertile in approaching
its lowest levels: the light soils of the Vale of Dovey
owe their superior fertility to their receiving from
one side deposits from the soft shaly mountains of
Montgomeryshire and Cardiganshire; while the soil
of every other valley in the county is derived only
from mountains of clay-slate, or of primitive siliceous
substances. Free loams, well adapted for the general
purposes of tillage, abound in the Vale of Edeyrnion,
in the vicinity of Corwen; and lighter soils on the
marine level, or semi-vale, of Ardudwy, on the western side of the county. The wastes on the sea-coast
consist of extensive sands.
Before the late continental war, the quantity of
land under tillage was computed at less than 14,000
acres, and the inhabitants chiefly depended upon
Montgomeryshire and Denbighshire for a supply of
grain, of which Bala was the principal mart; a few
cargoes of rye from London and Liverpool were also
brought to Barmouth. But a great and favourable
change has since taken place in the agriculture of the
county; and there is scarcely even an upland farm
upon which a sufficient quantity of oats and barley
for the consumption of the occupier is not grown.
Fallowing is hardly ever practised, the common farmers considering it much too expensive and unprofitable an operation. The fields in the more elevated
situations, having no other divisions than those made
by low fences of sods and fragments of stone walls,
cannot be brought under culture for wheat or any
other winter crop, as it would be entirely devoured
by sheep, which have the unlimited range of the
whole farm from November until the Lent crops are
sown, when they are turned out into their mountain
walks. Oats are the species of corn principally cultivated. This grain is generally sown for three, and
sometimes more, years successively, but with very
inferior profit; after which the land is commonly
sown with grasses, and depastured for five or six
years, and then again brought under the same course
of tillage. Various species of white oats have been
in cultivation for the last half century; and the hardy
black oat, which was formerly the only kind sown, is
now only partially grown, in situations where the
land is of inferior quality: the latter, however, is
more suited to the climate, and its straw is a highly
nutritious food for cattle. In the narrow valleys of
Merionethshire, which, like its streams, run generally
from north-east to south-west, most barley is grown
on the side having the southern aspect, and oats
chiefly on the opposite side; the latter side, called cîl
haul, that is, "a place forsaken by the sun," having
also generally a springy soil, while the former has a
dry gravel and hazel mould: the inhabitants of the
northern aspects have a phrase current among them,
that "the shade never went to the sunshine to borrow
oatmeal." Besides oats and barley, which are the
most common crops, wheat is grown on the best
soils, and rye on temporary inclosures of small pieces
of the waste lands, which are pared and burned, and
after the crop is gathered are again thrown open.
In the uplands, all the kinds of grain that are there
grown were formerly, in most places, cut with the
reaping-hook, instead of the common and more expeditious method with scythes, which is now practised. Potatoes are every where commonly grown;
in the eastern parts of the county with great care,
but in the western districts, and more especially in
the Vale of Ardudwy, in a more negligent manner.
Fruit-trees are profitably cultivated throughout the
whole of the county.
The artificial grasses are of the ordinary kinds,
and are extensively cultivated: the seeds are produced in the county, with the exception of those of
clover, which are generally procured from other districts. Various valuable species of grasses are indigenous, such as white clover, dog's-tail, &c. The
inclosed and uninclosed grass lands, which together
occupy by much the greater portion of the county,
are for the most part appropriated to the rearing of
lean cattle, to be sold to the graziers of richer districts, who fatten them to supply places of great consumption. In these hilly regions are also produced
great quantities of butter, of which about three tons
per week are sent in firkins to Chester, during the
six summer months, from the neighbourhood of Bala,
besides a supply to Denbigh, Holywell, and other
weekly markets: some is likewise forwarded by sea
to Liverpool. Much cheese is also made, but it is
of a very poor quality, all the richness of the milk
being extracted by the butter, and in lieu of it the
curd saturated with rennet to such a deg as to
render it quite spongy, and of a very strong flavour.
Many of the poorer class prefer this kind of cheese,
of which several tons are annually sold at the fair of
Dôlgelley, in the county. It is seldom coloured
with annatto.
Artificial irrigation is practised in different places,
and on a more particularly extensive scale on the
estate of Mr. Corbet, of Ynysymaengwyn, in the
Vale of Towyn. Lime is used as a manure within a
convenient distance of the Gwerclas and Havod
rocks, near Corwen, the only places in Merioneth
that produce white lime, and where about 50,000
bushels are burned annually. The argillaceous limestone found in different parts of it, derives its chief
value as a manure from being burned with peat, the
ashes of which become intermixed with the lime.
Great quantities of peat ashes are applied to the land
in every part of the county; and sea-thong (alga
marina), and the fucus of various kinds, are gathered
on the sea-coast after storms, and extensively employed as manures. The kind of plough in most
common use is the old large heavy one of North
Wales, the same that is still chiefly used in the counties of Anglesey and Carnarvon.
The cattle are remarkably small, and have few
particularly good qualities, except their extreme hardiness, and consequent cheapness of rearing; those
on the mountains are commonly black, but much less
in size, and less uniform in character, than the Anglesey breed. The sheep are of a small hardy kind,
peculiar to the mountains of Wales, having generally
white faces and legs, and sometimes horns. The
smaller weigh from seven to nine lb. per quarter, and
yield a fleece of from three-quarters of a lb. to one lb.
and a half; the larger weigh from nine to twelve lb.
per quarter, and carry from one lb. and a half to two lb.
of wool. The wool is of a very mean clothing quality,
being mixed with coarse long hairs, called by the
manufacturers kemps, and by the Welsh sythvlew:
the breed is, however, found to be susceptible of
great improvement, as is more especially seen in the
flocks of different farmers in the parishes of Tàlyllyn and Llanvihangel. Hardly any sheep of other
breeds have been introduced. In the county are
reared great numbers of the diminutive and exceedingly hardy ponies called merlins, that obtain their
whole support, during winter as well as summer,
from the coarse herbage of the mountain wastes,
where they breed promiscuously, and from which
they are never brought down until they are three
years old, and fit for sale. Those bred on the Berwyn mountains are then driven within a ring fence,
and such as are considered the best are separated
from the rest; the latter are again set at liberty, and
the former are driven for sale at the fair held at
Llanrhaiadr-yn-Mochnant. Great numbers of these
spirited little animals are employed in carrying on
their backs the produce of the manufacturers of the
county, when purchased by salesmen; and their use
is almost wholly confined to their native districts.
Another breed, somewhat larger than these, and probably raised by an intermixture with the English
horses, is occasionally seen; they are hardy, handsome, and exceedingly active in climbing the slippery steeps of the hills. The large heathy mountains, more particularly those of the Berwyn range,
swarm with a species of bees, and on a fine day these
wilds may be traversed for miles without hearing the
least noise save the monotonous hum of these busy
insects.
The woods were formerly very scanty, and of little
value; but in modern times the native woodlands
have received much attention, and extensive plantations have been made by different proprietors. The
Vale of Edeyrnion, near the borders of Denbighshire
and Montgomeryshire, and the vicinity of Bala, have
been greatly ornamented with plantations. In other
parts of the county, also, most of the vales are well
wooded; and although the bleak exposure of the
mountains is inimical to the growth of forest-trees,
yet there are various situations and soils in which
timber sometimes acquires a very large growth.
Some verses in celebration of a noted oak-tree formerly growing at Ganllwyd, in the parish of Llanddwywau, and which, when felled, measured 609
cubic feet, are still sung to the harp by the peasants
of the county, by whom it was held in great veneration; and many magnificent trees, produced from
acorns of this monarch of the forest, are scattered in
different places: some of the finest are on the Tany-Bwlch demesne. This county being, next to Carnarvonshire, the most mountainous of North Wales,
its waste lands are very extensive; but most of them
have been appropriated, and many of them inclosed
under different acts of parliament. Some mountains
are inclosed up to their very summits; but many
others are quite unsusceptible of improvement: the
most valuable wastes are the marshes on the sea-coast.
The principal fuel of the county is peat, of which it
contains great abundance, almost every farm having
its appropriated turbary: such as have no commonright buy the article by the load. On the sea-shore,
between Towyn and Aberdovey, is found a bed of
excellent peat, which extends to an unknown distance
under the waters of Cardigan bay: to arrive at this,
however, it is necessary to remove several feet of
sand deposited by the sea; and, owing to the saline
particles contained in it, the flame soon corrodes culinary vessels exposed to its action.
The MINERAL PRODUCTIONS of the county are
various, consisting chiefly of lead and copper ores,
and slates; and its geology is interesting, although it
has received but little illustration. To the west of a
line extending from the estuary of the Dovey up the
course of that river to its source, near Aran Mowddwy,
thence along the stream of the Twrch from its spring
to Bala mere, and from that place along the Dee to
its confluence with the Trywerin, and then up the
latter river to its own source and that of the Conway,
the Merionethshire mountains are for the most part
of the primitive siliceous kind, rugged, steep, and
barren; whilst eastward of the same line they are
chiefly composed of primitive argillaceous schistus.
The peaks and summits of the Berwyn range, like
those of the Snowdon chain, are composed of rocks of
the trap formation, which are succeeded on the northwest by slates of various kinds, extending to Snowdon: argillaceous schistus also appears on the southeast of this chain, extending into South Wales. A
line of dark-coloured argillaceous limestone extends
from Cader Ddinmael, near Cerrig-y-Druidion, on
the southern border of Denbighshire, south-westward
across this county, being observable successively at
the tremendous ravine called Glyn Diphwys; at
Llwyn-y-Ci, near Rhiwlas; on the borders of the
river Trywerin, near Llanuwchyllyn; at Llanvachreth, Braich-y-Bedw, Blaenau, Hengwrt Uchâ, Caerynwch, Minfordd near Tàlyllyn, and lastly at Bwlch
Côch near Cader Idris. A narrow tract of similar
limestone extends in a nearly parallel direction, on
the opposite side of the Berwyn chain, being found
at Rhiwarth, Bryn Melyn, Cwm Hyved, Bwlch-yGroes, and Cwm Tylyddian near Llanymowddwy,
all on the eastern border of the county: some of the
same kind also occurs at Rhiwaedog, near Bala. At
Gwerclas, near Corwen, is a detached rock of white
limestone.
The porous appearance of some of the rocks on
the sides of Cader Idris has led some travellers to
suppose that mountain, or at least parts of it, to be
of volcanic origin; and this opinion seemed to receive
strong corroboration from the existence of a large
hollow, high in the mountain, now filled with water,
and forming a lake overlooked by a steep cliff, greatly
resembling the crater of a volcano. It is, however,
now believed that no traces of volcanic matter are to
be found. The upper part of the steep cliff abovementioned forms the summit of the mountain, and
consists chiefly of immense columns of highly crystalline greenstone, similar to those forming the
Giant's Causeway in Ireland, rising at a considerable angle from beneath a collection of broken rocks
that lie between their base and the lake. The height
of these cliffs is about 1100 feet, of which at least the
lower half is occupied wholly by the columns of
greenstone. Similar, but smaller, columns appear
above, and are interstratified with slates, much resembling primitive clay-slate, lying at right angles
with the columns of greenstone. The southern flank
of the mountain consists chiefly of slates, lying at
almost every possible angle, in different places;
while on the north of the summit, between the lake
at its base and the town of Dôlgelley, is an immense
range of stony mountains, extending nearly from
east to west, consisting chiefly of greenstone, which
is in most places columnar, but in a few slaty. The
profile of these rocks, in the distance, resembles steps,
the intervening hollows of which are sometimes partially filled by slates. Some of the greenstone of the
range incloses crystallized carbonate of lime, thus
assuming the character of a porphyritic rock. In
many places it is observable that the carbonate of
lime has been decomposed, leaving cavities; which
circumstance, together with the decomposition of the
iron, forming an ingredient of the hornblende that
abounds in many places, has given to the rock a
cellular and rusty appearance. The peaks of the
other principal summits of the Berwyn chain are
similar in the general character of their geological
formation to that of Cader Idris, excepting those
situated eastward of Bala lake, where the hills and
mountains are wholly composed of primitive schistus,
that is, such as does not contain iron pyrites, or any
traces of impressions of organized bodies. Shivery
schistus, or shale, occurs in different parts of the
county, as also do quartz, mica, and spar, in connexion with the slate strata.
The Berwyn range of mountains has hitherto been
found richer in lead than in copper. Ores of the
former metal and of black-jack are found in the county
at Vigra or Buddugre, near Pont Ddû, in the parish
of Llanaber; at Moel Isbri, in the parish of Llanelltyd; in the vicinity of Dôlgelley; at Bwlch-y-Plwm,
near Traeth Mawr; at Graig Wen, near DinasMowddwy; at Melin-llyn-y-pair, in the parish of
Towyn; and at Bryndinas near Dyfryn Gwyn, also
in the vicinity of the last-mentioned place. In the
year 1847, the lead-mines of Merionethshire produced about 310 tons of ore. A mine of sulphate of
copper has been worked at Aberdovey, at the southwestern extremity of the county; and great quantities of sulphate and some carbonate of copper at the
Buddugre, or Vigra, and Clogian mines, near Dôlgelley, which adjoin the second of the lead-mines
above-mentioned. These copper-mines are valuable,
the ores being rich, and they are worked with spirit:
the matrix is semi-indurated whin, intersected by
veins of quartz; and as the ores are intimately blended,
as it were, in the solid substance of the rock, the success of working them was originally much more uncertain than regular-sided rake veins. A gentleman
resident in Dôlgelley, learning that the ashes of the
peat procured from a turbary near Dôlvrwynog, in
the parish of Llanvachreth, could not be applied with
advantage as a manure, suspected the cause, and by
chemical tests found that they contained copper. He
thereupon employed men to cut and stack the peat
that produced these ashes, and constructed kilns for
burning it: the ashes he shipped for Swansea, where
they were made to yield excellent copper. From
this circumstance it has been supposed that the surrounding mountains teem with copper-ore, which,
through the medium of springs, or otherwise, had impregnated the peat of the hollows below with a solution of sulphate of copper. In the rocks in the neighbourhood of this turbary are various works for procuring copper, and vast quantities of the ore were
obtained some time ago at Benglog, in the same parish. In the Berwyn range, slates for the roofing of
houses and other buildings are raised at Maen Gwynedd, near Cader Verwyn; Dinas-Mowddwy; Moel
Grychan, near Aberllyvni; and Peniarth Uchâv,
between Cader Idris and the sea. At the Idris
quarry, near Lake Arren, Minfordd, one vein alone
is found to measure 1200 yards in length, and upwards of 100 in width. The quarries at Festiniog,
near the north-western extremity of the county, are
in a branch of the Snowdon mountains; they employ
more than 1000 men and boys, and produce slates of
an excellent quality, which are conveyed by a tramway of about thirteen miles to Port-Madoc, in Carnarvonshire. The great proportion of argillaceous
earth in the composition of the argillaceous limestone
renders it of inferior value, both as a cement and a
manure, so that it is only worked on account of the
absence of better materials: large quantities of the
white limestone found near Corwen, are quarried and
burned.
The chief manufactures are those of webs, and
knit woollen stockings and socks. The former is
carried on in the town of Dôlgelley, and in the surrounding country, to the distance of twelve miles, as
also in the Vale of Dovey; and in these districts,
almost every little farmer is a manufacturer of webs,
and few cottages are without a loom. These webs,
called by the London drapers Welsh plains, or cottons, are a sort of thick white cloth, made in pieces
from 90 to 120 yards long, two pieces constituting a
web. The same branch of trade is carried on in the
western part of Montgomeryshire, and the southeastern portion of Denbigh; but the quantity produced in Dôlgelley and its neighbourhood is greater
than in either of the other districts. The Dôlgelley
webs may be divided into two classes; the coarser,
which are three-quarters of a yard wide; and the
finer, seven-eighths of a yard: these, as well as those
made in the district of which Machynlleth is the
centre, are indiscriminately called by the drapers
strong cloth, to distinguish them from those of the
Glyn district, near Oswestry, which are termed small
cloth, because they are about one-eighth of a yard
narrower, although of the same length. This manufacture has long prevailed in the shire of Merioneth,
as appears from acts of parliament passed in the 1st
and 3rd of James I., and from two orders of the Privy
Council of Charles I., one to the magistrates of the
county, in the year 1635, complaining that the Welsh
cottons made at that time were of inferior quality to
those formerly made, a circumstance injurious to the
interest of the London merchants trading to France;
and the other to the Lord President of the Marches,
in 1637, limiting the length of the webs, and prohibiting the use of fell and lambs' wool in their
manufacture; ingredients which are now found of
much value, and are imported to Barmouth, in great
quantities, from Leghorn, London, and Dovor. The
warp is at present made of the coarse fleece wool of
the country; whilst the woof is a mixture, containing about one-third, and sometimes one-half of lambs'
wool. Until about the close of the last century, the
only market for these webs was held weekly, on
Thursday, at Shrewsbury, where they were exposed
to sale in a hall belonging to the drapers' company
of the town, into which no buyers but of that particular fraternity were admitted. At that period the
manufacturers were exempted from the effects of the
monopoly, by means of professed dealers, travelling
over the country and buying the produce of their
looms generally at their own houses. Within the
last few years, the Dôlgelley flannel-trade has considerably declined.
The town of Bala is the centre of the stocking
manufacture, and the chief market for the sale of its
produce. The boundary of the district in which it
is carried on, commencing with Corwen, on the Dee,
extends by Bettws into Denbighshire, where it proceeds by Yspytty-Ivan and Llanrwst, and, including
the south-eastern extremity of Carnarvonshire, passes
by Penmachno to Festiniog in Merionethshire, and
thence by Llanuwchyllyn and Bwlch-y-Groes, along
the northern side of the Berwyn hills, to its commencement at Corwen. This line comprises a mountainous tract about eighteen miles in length, and
twelve in breadth. The stockings and socks are of
all sizes and colours, and of various degs of fineness: the number of pairs annually sold at Bala is
calculated at nearly 200,000, besides woollen gloves.
The Merionethshire hosiery is universally recommended by medical practitioners, being particularly
soft and warm, from the peculiar quality of the wool
of which it is manufactured. Besides the native
manufactures, there is a woollen-cloth factory at Dôlgelley, in which town also are dressed great quantities of native sheep and foreign lamb and kid skins,
that are sold to the glovers of London, Worcester,
Denbigh, and other places.
Barmouth is the chief port of the county, and its
harbour has received great improvement from an embankment of stone to secure its entrance, completed
in 1802, at which time a new quay was also constructed. Aberdyvi, or Aberdovey, at the mouth of
the river Dovey, possesses a harbour that might also
be rendered very commodious: it was almost unfrequented till of late years, but has now risen to some
little importance. The principal articles of export
from the county are cattle, sheep, webs, stockings,
dressed skins, ores of lead and copper, poles for the
collieries of South Wales, bark, slates, and butter;
the chief imports are corn, lamb and kid skins from
Italy and other foreign countries, and the various
kinds of ordinary shop-goods.
The largest rivers are the Dee, the Maw, or
Mawddach, and the Dovey, or Dyvi, which are joined
by numerous mountain torrents; independently of
various smaller streams in the county, flowing directly
to the sea: the chief of the latter are the Dwyryd
and the Dysynni. The Dee has its source a short
distance above Llyn Tegid, or Bala lake, which it
soon enters a little below the village of Llanuwchyllyn. Issuing from this extensive sheet of water beneath the town of Bala, it takes a north-north-eastern
direction along the beautiful Vale of Edeyrnion,
and afterwards an eastern course by Corwen, and
along the picturesque vales of Glyndyvrdwy and
Llangollen, into the south-eastern part of Denbighshire. Near the church of Llangar, a mile above
Corwen, it is augmented by the Alwen, which descends along the northern border of this county from
the south-west part of county Denbigh. The Maw
rises in the mountains of the northern part of the
county, and flows southward to the vicinity of Llanelltyd, where it is joined from the east by the Wonion.
The latter stream, which is about equal in magnitude
to the Maw, rises near the source of the Dee, at a
place called Drws-y-Nant, and winds along a narrow
valley, in a less turbulent course than is usual with
rivers having a mountainous origin, passing by the
town of Dôlgelley, about a mile below which it joins
the Maw. The united stream then expands into the
fine estuary of the Maw, stretching south-westward
until within a short distance of the sea, when it turns
westward to Cardigan bay, forming at its mouth the
harbour of Abermaw, or, as it is now termed, Barmouth. The river Maw is navigable to within two
miles of Dôlgelley. The Dovey rises at the foot of
Aran Mowddwy, and flows southward along the rich
vale to which it gives name, passing by the small
town of Dinas-Mowddwy, a little below which, on
entering the western part of Montgomeryshire, it
changes its direction to south-west. Near the town
of Machynlleth the Dovey becomes the southern
boundary of Merionethshire; and it discharges its
waters into the sea through a broad estuary at
Aberdovey. The Dwyryd has its source in the
mountains on the northern confines of the county,
and, gradually losing its character of a mountain
torrent, as it emerges into a more level district, flows
in beautiful meanders along the celebrated Vale of
Festiniog, and, passing beneath the rich groves of
Tan-y-Bwlch Hall, falls into the estuary of Traeth
Bâch, which opens into Cardigan bay, at the mouth
of the inlet Traeth Mawr. Traeth Mawr, extending
inland northward, forms for some distance the boundary between Merioneth and the county of Carnarvon, and receives, at its head, the torrent of the
Glâslyn, up which the line of separation is further
continued. The Dysynni descends in a very irregular course south-westward from the foot of Cader
Idris and the lake of Tàlyllyn, and flows into the
sea through a small estuary, a little to the north of
Towyn.
The roads of Merionethshire, notwithstanding the
vast extent of mountain wastes, have shared in the
gradual improvement displayed in those of most
other parts of the island during the last seventy years.
Formerly, almost every valley or dale had its road
winding along the bottom of it, which, at its highest
extremity, ascended the mountains almost like a flight
of steps; but the modern roads commence the ascent
at the lower end of the vale, and attain the summit
by a gradual rise along the sides of the hills that inclose it: some of the mountain passes, however, yet
present great difficulties to the traveller. An abundance of hard siliceous stone is obtained from the
mountain ranges, forming excellent materials for
making and repairing the roads, the travelling on
which is now as easy as the extreme hilly nature of
the county will admit. The line from Shrewsbury
to Holyhead enters the north-eastern part of the
county from Llangollen in Denbighshire, passes
through Corwen, and soon after quits it again for
the south-western part of Denbighshire. Another
road enters from Llanvair, in Montgomeryshire, and
runs through Dinas-Mowddwy and Dôlgelley, and
by Trawsvynydd, Tan-y-Bwlch, and Pont-Aberglâslyn, into Carnarvonshire: a branch from this, at
Welshpool, reaches Bala, by way of Llanvyllin. Two
roads branch from the Holyhead line, at Corwen and
at Dwyryd or Druid, respectively, to Bala, whence
the means of communication thus formed is continued
to Dôlgelley. From the latter town an important
road extends through Barmouth and Harlech, and
across the Traeth Bâch sands, to Trêmadoc, in Carnarvonshire.
The relics of antiquity are interesting, more
particularly those of remoter ages. On the small
plain near Cors-y-Gedol, in which are situated the
lakes of Bodlyn, Cwm Howel, and Irddin, are still
numerous Druidical remains, forming a rare group
of this class of antiquities, comprising two circles
made of loose stones, one of which is about fifty-six
feet in diameter, and the other of less dimensions.
Half a mile southward from these, on the side of a
hill, are two carneddau, or monumental heaps of
stones, of extraordinary size; and to the east is a
large cromlech, composed of two incumbent stones,
one placed over the edge of the other, resting upon
five erect stones somewhat inclined. Near this is
another carnedd, whereon are two large cromlechs,
the tabular stone of one of which is twelve feet long
and nine broad. Four stone columns, from ten feet
to twelve feet eight inches high, are situated in the
vicinity of these cromlechs; three of them have
fallen, but one yet retains its erect position: several
cist-vaens, or stone chests, lie scattered around.
Near the fifth milestone, on the road from Harlech
to Barmouth, are two cromlechs, near each other,
singularly situated on carneddau of loose stones.
The vicinity of Harlech abounds with monumental
remains, more especially such as are supposed to
have been connected with the Druidical superstitions:
on the steep ascent of an almost precipitous hill, and
on its summit, are several circles, consisting of loose
stones, some of which are single, others concentric,
while others again intersect each other: the principal
of them, like those of Cors-y-Gedol, comprise also
upright stones, one in most cases in the centre.
Craig-y-Ddinas, a conical hill, situated near the
group of Druidical ruins first described, has its summit surrounded by a vast collection of rough stones,
forming rude ramparts for the defence of the small
plain which it incloses. This is generally considered
to have been a British fortified post, of a period as
early as the Roman invasion; and on another elevated site, at a little distance, is Castell Dinas Corddin, an intrenched camp with an advanced work,
supposed to be of equally remote antiquity. On the
summit of a lofty rocky eminence, overlooking Nannau, the seat of Sir Robert Williames Vaughan,
Bart., near Dôlgelley, is also a very ancient British
post, defended by a rampart of loose stones, called
Moel Ofrwm, "the hill of sacrifice."
Traces of Roman occupation are very numerous;
the following are the most remarkable. Near Pennal,
on the banks of the Dovey, in the vicinity of Machynlleth, is a place named Cevn Caer, "the ridge of
the city," where Roman coins have been frequently
found, and where are yet extensive remains of a large
and strong Roman fortification. In the vicinity of
Rhiw Gôch, in the parish of Trawsvynydd, are
vestiges of a small fort, very singularly situated on a
circular isolated rock, supposed to have been a
Roman station, from the regularity of the facing
stones of the remaining walls, and from the circumstance of the discovery of numerous coins and urns.
Its name, Castell Prysur, signifies "a castle built in
haste," which may account for the buildings being
destitute of cement. In the adjacent inclosed country, in the parish of Maentwrog, is a large Roman
encampment, commanding a number of passes. At
the south-eastern end of the town of Bala is an extensive artificial mount, designated Tommen-y-Bala,
supposed to be of Roman formation, and afterwards
the site of a British fortress; and in the vicinity of
Llanuwchyllyn are the remains of a Roman fort
termed Caer Gai, where various coins of that people
have been discovered. Many other Roman coins
have been dug up near Llanbedr; at Dôlgelley; and
Harlech, at which latter place has also been found a
golden torques: another of these rich and elegant
ornaments has been found on the mountain of Cader
Idris. The Via Occidentalis, now called Sarn Helen
(supposed by some to be a corruption of Sarn Lleon,
or Sarn y Lleng, "the legionary way"), entering
from Cardiganshire, might formerly be traced on the
banks of the Dovey, near Pennal, where it communicated with the station. It may yet be traced
between Dôlgelley and Trawsvynydd, at Pen-ystryd, or "the head of the street," though now
covered with turf, and only perceptible in consequence of its elevation above the ground on each
side. Near it are numerous tumuli. Beyond the
station Heriri Mons at Tommen-y-Mûr, it must have
entered the county of Carnarvon between PontAberglâslyn and Bethgelart. The branch of the
southern Watling-street, already mentioned, entered
Merionethshire from the vicinity of Llangynog, and
passed by Trûm-y-Sarn to the Roman station at
Caer Gai, near Bala, beyond which it is plainly
visible, and is called Sarn hîr, or "the long causeway." Crossing the mountains by the pass termed
Bwlch-y-Buarth, it proceeds to Tommen-y-Mûr.
On a mountain named Migneint, near Rhŷd-ar-Helen, within a quarter of a mile of the Sarn Helen,
are some remarkable monuments, designated Beddau
Gwŷr Ardudwy, "the graves of the men of Ardudwy," in which ancient division of the country
they are situated. The graves are at least thirty
in number, and local tradition states them to be sepulchral memorials of persons of note, slain here in
a battle fought between the men of Dyfryn-Ardudwy and some of Denbighshire. In the vicinity
of these graves are several circles of stones, the
largest of them about fifty-two feet in diameter, as
also an extensive carnedd, with two upright stones,
the whole of which appear to have been surrounded
by one very large circle. In a field also near the
course of the Sarn Helen, in the vicinity of Trawsvynydd, is a large rude upright stone, called Llêch
Idris; and near it is a stone bearing a Latin inscription, named Bedd Porws, or "Porius' grave." Close
to the village of Llanbedr are two rude upright stones,
of the kind styled by the Welsh meini gwŷr, or "the
stones of heroes." Near Corwen was a British fortified post of more modern date than those abovementioned, termed Caer Drewyn; this encampment
was occupied by the Welsh forces, at the period of
the invasion of the principality by Henry II., and its
site may yet be traced by a rampart of earth, situated
between the church of Corwen and the village of
Cynwyd. The remains of the Cistercian abbey of
Cymmer, in the parish of Llanelltyd, the only religious house in the county at the time of the Reformation, form a picturesque ruin, known to the
Welsh under the name of Mynachlog y Vaner, and
frequently denominated Vaner Abbey. There are
yet striking remains of the castle of Harlech; and at
a place called Sychnant, about three or four miles
from Corwen, are some remains of a mansion which
belonged to the celebrated Welsh hero, Owain
Glyndwr.
The principal seats are, Abergraynant, and Arthog,
near Dôlgelley; Brondanw; Bryn-y-Gwîn, and
Caerynwch, near Dôlgelley; Cors-y-Gedol, between
Barmouth and Harlech; Dôlgûn, near Dôlgelley;
Dôlvriog, near Bethgelart; Garthyngharad, near
Dôlgelley; Glàn-y-Llyn; Glànwilliam, near Maentwrog; Hengwrt-Uchâ, Hengwrt, Llwyn, and
Nannau, near Dôlgelley; Palê, near Bala; Peniarth; Penmaen Dovey, near Towyn; Rhagat, near
Corwen; Rhiwlas; Rûg, near Corwen; Tàlgarth;
Tàn-y-Bwlch Hall; Vronheulog; and Ynysymaengwyn. The better class of houses in the county are
frequently built of blasted stone and schistus, much
of the latter of which will bear to be regularly
squared. A few modern farmyards are well planned
and of good construction; but the rest are of a very
mean description. In the vicinity of the schistose
hills and mountains the fences are commonly walls of
loose stones, built without mortar. Servants hired
by the year usually commence their term of service
on the twelfth of May. The common bread of the
inhabitants is oatmeal cake, made by mixing oatmeal
with a due proportion of lukewarm water, rolling out
the dough into thin round cakes, and baking them
upon iron plates suspended over the fire, commonly
called bake-stones; rye bread, and bread made from
muncorn, or rye and wheat blended, are also in ordinary consumption. Some of the most remarkable of
the numerous waterfalls are, Rhaiadr Dôlymelynllyn,
about five miles from Dôlgelley; Pistyll Cain, or
"the fall of the Cayne," about two miles further
distant from the same place; and Pistyll Mawddach,
or "the fall of the Mawddach," in the vicinity of the
latter. In the channel of the Cynvel, a tributary of
the Dwyryd, rises a singular columnar rock, called
Pulpit Hugh Llwyd Cynvel, or "Hugh Lloyd of
Cynvel's pulpit."
Merthyr
MERTHYR, a parish, in the Lower division of
the hundred of Elvet, union and county of Carmarthen, South Wales, 4 miles (W.) from Carmarthen; containing 295 inhabitants. This parish
is situated in the south-western portion of the county.
It is intersected on the west by the river Cywin,
which falls into the Tâf at Llanvihangel-Abercowin; and on the south by the turnpike-road leading
from Carmarthen to St. Clear's. The living is a
discharged rectory, rated in the king's books at
£4. 17. 1., and in the patronage of the Crown: the
tithes have been commuted for a rent-charge of
£165, and there is a glebe of thirty-eight acres,
valued at £36 per annum; also a glebe-house. The
church, dedicated to St. Martin, is a small plain
building, undistinguished by any architectural details.
There are places of worship for Independents and
Calvinistic Methodists, in each of which a Sunday
school is also held. Some remains of an ancient
monument, thought to be of Druidical origin, are
discernible; and within the parish is a farm called
Derllŷs, once the residence or property of George
Vaughan, a Welsh judge, and which is supposed to
have given its name to the hundred of Derllŷs.
Merthyr-Cynog
MERTHYR-CYNOG, a parish, comprising
the hamlets of Upper Dyfryn Honddû, Lower Dyfryn Honddû, Yscir-Vawr, and Yscir-Vechan, in the
hundred of Merthyr-Cynog, union and county of
Brecknock, South Wales, 8 miles (N. N. W.)
from Brecknock; containing 815 inhabitants. The
name, signifying "Cynog the martyr," is derived
from the erection of a church to the honour of Cynog, son of Brychan Brycheiniog, who is said to
have been murdered on a mountain called the Van,
in this parish, towards the close of the fifth century,
and to have been canonized after his death. The
parish is situated principally between the rivers
Yscir and Honddû, by the former of which it is intersected on the west, and by the latter on the east.
It is also traversed on the east side by the turnpikeroad leading from Brecknock to Builth. The surface
is chiefly mountainous, occasionally alternated with
valleys and low grounds, comprising a portion of
arable land, and, towards the sides of the rivers, some
rich meadows, affording excellent pasturage. The
total area is 21,278 acres, of which 7921 are common
or waste land. The scenery is strikingly varied,
and in many parts beautifully picturesque; the
winding Vale of Honddû abounds with romantic
features.
Near the chapel of Llanvihangel-Vechan the
Vaenol is prominently conspicuous, rising almost
precipitously in the Vale of Honddû to a very considerable height, and having near its summit a pleasing cottage: on the left is a beautiful knoll, luxuriantly wooded, towards the top of which, on the
right, is a projecting rock, from whose fissures there
grows a yew-tree, adding a romantic character to
the landscape. Beyond the rich woods near Castle
Madoc, the remainder of the vale is chiefly arable,
but is agreeably softened by a few verdant meadows
near the margin of the river. At the extremity of
the dell named Cwm Login commences a range of
mountains, that constitute more than one-half of the
parish, extending on one side to the boundary of the
hundred of Tàlgarth, and on the north to the hundred of Builth. Along this whole tract there is
scarcely a house, except at the head of the river
Honddû, where are a few small cottages, called
"Pentre Blaen-Dôl-Honddû." The right of common forms a very important object to the occupiers
of small farms on the hills, who, raising little more
corn than what is sufficient for the supply of their
families, depend greatly on the rearing of their flocks.
The village is situated in a cheerless mountain dell,
accessible only by a dreary road along a high ridge
between deep dingles, watered by two branches of
the river Yscir, over which is a neat bridge of one
arch, designated Pontvaen.
The living is a discharged vicarage, rated in the
king's books at £7. 10. 5., and endowed with £400
royal bounty, and £800 parliamentary grant; present net income, £90, with a glebe-house; impropriators, Marquess Camden, and John Lloyd Vaughan Watkins, Esq., the latter of whom is patron.
The impropriate tithes have been commuted for a
rent-charge of £410. The tithes and advowson were
given by Milo Fitz-Walter, Earl of Gloucester, to
the priory of Malvern, after the dissolution of which
establishment they devolved to the crown, and were
sold in the reign of James I. In 1646, they were
the property of Sir Francis Fane, a zealous loyalist,
and were, on that account perhaps, sequestrated by
the parliament, who ordered an annual payment of
£50 to be made out of the rectorial tithes to the vicar
of Merthyr-Cynog; £40 to the officiating minister of
Llanvihangel-Nant-Brân; £40 to the officiating minister of Llandilo-Vawr; and £10 to the minister of
Dyfryn Honddû chapel; all which places were then
comprehended within, or considered to be dependent
upon, this parish. At the Restoration the property
reverted to the rightful owner, and the grants made
by the parliament became void. Of the several
places above-named, exclusively of Merthyr-Cynog,
the chapel of Dyfryn Honddû alone remains within
the limits of the parish, or connected with it. The
church, dedicated to St. Cynog, is a neat ancient
structure, with a square tower at the west end: the
churchyard is surrounded with stately trees, of which
two or three are yews. There are places of worship
for Independents and Calvinistic Methodists, and
four Sunday schools supported by the dissenters, two
being conducted by each denomination. Edward
Gwyn, of Pant-y-Cored, in 1760, charged the tenement of Dôlwydd with the annual payment of £2
to the poor, to be distributed on the 20th of December.
On the bank of the Honddû is a small farm designated Mynachtŷ, a name derived from its having
been the residence of monks from Malvern, for the
purpose of superintending their possessions in this
parish, and of transacting the business relating to
them. At the east end of the building is a stone,
about five feet long, marked with a rude cross, the
head of which is inscribed within a circle; and in the
porch is another of the same size and character,
having the head of the cross within a square: they
are both considered as relics of the fifth or sixth
century. A hill in the parish, styled Alltarnog,
bears distinct marks of a British encampment, of
elliptical form, and about 200 yards in circuit, originally defended on the north by three ramparts, and
on the south inaccessible from its precipitous declivity. It is supposed to have been occupied by the
descendants of Maenarch, prior to the erection of
their mansion in the Vale of Honddû.
Merthyr-Dovan (Merthyr-Dyfan)
MERTHYR-DOVAN (MERTHYR-DYFAN), a parish, in the union of Cardiff, hundred
of Dinas-Powys, county of Glamorgan, South
Wales, 8 miles (S. W.) from Cardiff; containing
130 inhabitants. This small parish, bordering on
the Bristol Channel, is in general hilly, and the
inhabitants are exclusively employed in agriculture.
The living is a discharged rectory, rated in the
king's books at £4. 17. 3½., and endowed with £200
royal bounty; present net income £109; patron,
R. F. Jenner, Esq. The church, dedicated to St.
Dovanus, is situated in a valley watered by a small
stream which passes near Cadoxton, and falls into
the Bristol Channel at Barry Island. Highlight is
an extra-parochial district, for ecclesiastical purposes
attached to this parish, the inhabitants attending
divine service here. The late Mr. Richards, of
Barry, left £40, and the Rev. Mr. Powel, £54, the
former secured upon the Rumney bridge trust, and
the latter in the new four per cent. stock, directing
the interest to be given on St. Thomas's day, among
the poor not receiving parochial relief.
Merthyr-Mawr
MERTHYR-MAWR, a parish, in the union of
Bridgend and Cowbridge, hundred of Ogmore,
county of Glamorgan, South Wales, 1½ mile
(W. S. W.) from Bridgend; containing 147 inhabitants. It is situated a little south of the turnpikeroad between Cardiff and Swansea, on the right bank
of the Ogmore, near its mouth, forming the only
portion of the hundred lying on that side of the river.
A part of the parish, to the south, is occupied by
low barren sand-hills; but a lofty and extensive
elevation composes the greater part of it, at the
eastern foot of which, near the bank of the river,
stands its small and pleasant village, with the church.
The manor, together with the castle and lordship of
Talavan, was given by Robert Fitz-Hamon, on his
dividing the ancient kingdom of Glamorgan among
the Norman knights and others who had assisted him
in his subjugation, to Sir Richard Syward. Leland
says, "Martyr Maur, a fair manor place of stone,
stondith on this west ripe, a mile above Ogor
mouth:" in his time it belonged to the Stradlings.
Near the church is an elegant modern mansion, surrounded by a thriving plantation, the seat of the late
Right Hon. Sir John Nicholl, Knt., Dean of the
Arches, by whom it was erected: it is now the residence of his son, the Right Hon. John Nicholl,
D.C.L., M.P. The living is a perpetual curacy,
endowed with £200 private benefaction, and £800
royal bounty; present net income, £69; patron, the
Right Hon. John Nicholl. The church is dedicated
to St. Teilaw. A day school in connexion with the
Church is held in a very pretty building erected on
the land, and at the expense, of the Right Hon.
Mr. Nicholl, by whom the school is chiefly supported.
There is a Sunday school kept in a farmhouse by the
Calvinistic Methodists. Mrs. Elizabeth Jenkins,
previously to 1769, left £5 to the poor, the interest
to be distributed on Christmas-day; but since 1771,
when interest was paid out of the parish rates on a
moiety received from the minister, no trace of the
charity can be discovered. Slight vestiges of an old
chapel, commonly styled Capel St. Roque, are discernible.
Merthyr-Tydvil (Merthyr-Tudfyl)
MERTHYR-TYDVIL (MERTHYR-TUDFYL), a market-town, a parish, a newly-created
borough, and the head of a union, in the Upper
division of the hundred of Caerphilly, county of
Glamorgan, South Wales, 24 miles (N. N. W.)
from Cardiff, and 175 (W. by N.) from London; the
parish containing 34,977 inhabitants. It derives its
name from Tydvil, or Tudvyl, daughter of Brychan,
Prince of Brycheiniog in the fifth century. The
latter, having towards the close of his life retired
with part of his family into this neighbourhood, was
attacked by a party of Saxons and Irish Picts, who
put him to death, together with his son Rhûn Dremrudd, and his daughter Tydvil; a church was soon
afterwards erected near the scene of slaughter, in
honour of the murdered Tydvil, and the rude building received the appellation of Merthyr Tydvil, or
"Tydvil the martyr." Concerning the early history
of this place, now so important for the richness of its
mineral produce and the vast extent of its manufactures, very few events of general interest are recorded. It continued till the middle of the last
century an obscure village, noticed only in the
Welsh annals as containing within its limits a border
fortress called Morlais Castle, erected by Gilbert,
lord of Glamorgan, for the protection of his estates
in this part, against the attacks of the tenantry in the
adjacent territories of the lord of Brecknock, by
whom they were frequently invaded. The uncertain
and ill-defined limits of these contiguous lordships
generated perpetual feuds between their respective
owners; and the erection of the castle added materially to the acrimony with which the hostilities were
conducted.
In the reign of Henry I., the fortress is said to
have been occupied by Ivor Bâch, a native lord of
Upper Senghenydd, who from this place is supposed
to have made a descent upon Cardiff Castle, and to
have taken Robert, Earl of Gloucester, and his lady,
prisoners, and detained them in confinement till they
consented to observe the ancient customs of the
country, and restore the laws of Hywel Dda. In the
time of Leland the place does not appear to have
been regarded as possessing any importance: that
writer, having noticed Morlais Castle, makes no
further mention of Merthyr, than as the parish
through which "Morlais riveret goith to the ripe of
Tave." The fortress was demolished by the parliamentary forces in the middle of the seventeenth century. The first congregation of dissenters known to
have assembled in Wales, was formed here, about
the year 1620, when Vavasour Powel, celebrated
in the annals of nonconformity, was apprehended
while preaching to this congregation, and committed
to Cardiff gaol. According to a curious journal
kept by the incumbent of the parish at that time, the
dissenters were not contented with the liberty of
paying only what they pleased for tithes, but were in
the habit of entering the church in a body, during
the performance of divine service, and forcibly wresting the Book of Common Prayer from the hands of
the officiating minister; and when he ascended the
pulpit to preach, a teacher of their own would climb
up into one of the yew-trees in the churchyard, and
commence an address to his followers.
In June 1831, serious dissensions arose between
the workmen and the proprietors of the iron-works
in the parish, which were attended with consequences
much to be regretted. The workmen having assembled in a tumultuous manner, the riot act was read
by the police magistrate of the district, and the
yeomanry and military, together with a company of
the militia, which was then at Cardiff, advanced to
the spot, and at length succeeded in restoring order,
though unhappily not without the loss of several lives
on the side of the workmen, and some of the military
being wounded. Major Falls, who commanded the
regular forces, was severely wounded at the beginning
of the conflict, and the command of the military devolved upon Lieutenant-Colonel Morgan, of the
Glamorganshire militia, whose coolness, intrepidity,
and judgment were subsequently eulogised by the
lord-lieutenant of the county, in his reply to an
address of the gentry of Glamorganshire on the
occasion.
The Town is situated in a mountainous district,
near the extremity of the Vale of Tâf, and chiefly on
the eastern side of the river of that name, by which
it is partly separated from the county of Brecknock.
It was formerly very irregularly built, merely consisting of assemblages of huts, cottages, and houses,
confusedly mixed together, without any regard to
uniformity of style or arrangement, and occupying
both banks of the river, which is crossed by two
bridges. Great improvements, however, have been
made of late years, by the construction of a street
forming the principal thoroughfare, in which are
some shops and houses of a better character; and
near the centre of this street is one of the largest and
most commodious market-places in Wales, built some
years since by William Meyrick, Esq., of Gwaelody-Garth, and William Thomas, Esq., of Court House.
It was erected in a field which was the property of
the latter gentleman, and the remainder of which was
leased out for building, and now contains several
lines of well-arranged and uniform houses. A large
market-place has also been erected at Dowlais, by
the Dowlais Iron Company, who employ from 5000
to 6000 men. A mechanics' institute was established
at Dowlais in 1829, in which, since the philosophical
society at Coedycummer has been discontinued,
weekly lectures are delivered on various subjects, but
chiefly on mineralogy and metallurgy: there is also
a tradesmen's and workmen's library in the same part
of the town, commenced in 1845.
Cyvarthva Castle and Park form a fine object
above the town; and Pen-y-Darren House, with its
gardens, is equally interesting at the other extremity.
But the general aspect of the vicinity is unprepossessing, the face of nature being disfigured by
towering heaps of scoria from the furnaces, which
are undergoing continued increase, thus precluding
the growth of vegetation upon them, and exhibiting
from their nakedness, in combination with the
columns of smoke emitted from the works, a repulsive appearance of rudeness and gloomy sterility. In
the lower part of the parish, however, and in other
detached portions, are several well-wooded tracts and
extensive plantations. The Vale of Tâf, at the distance of some miles below the town, is narrow, and
bounded by steep hills, but expands gradually
towards the part on which the town is principally
built. The parish extends about ten miles from
north to south; at the northern extremity its breadth
is about five miles, but towards the south it contracts
to a breadth of less than one mile.
The mineral treasures of this district, though
they were not fully explored, or rendered so extensively available as they have been since the middle
of the last century, were not altogether unappreciated
or neglected previously to that period, as is evident
from the great heaps of scoria, and other remains
which are frequently turned up by the plough in the
adjacent lands. From the simple apparatus employed in the mining operations prior to that time,
it is clear that the process must have been tedious,
and the produce inconsiderable; and it appears from
tradition, that the ore was smelted in small blomeries
blown by bellows similar to those used in the common forges of smiths. About 180 years since, some
small improvements were introduced into the operations; and works upon a more enlarged scale were
constructed on the site upon which the Pen-y-Darren
works have been subsequently established, wherein
the bellows were worked by a water-wheel, said to
have been one of the earliest instances of the application of water to this purpose known in the island.
Charcoal was used in calcining the ore, instead of
coke, the method of preparing the latter from mineral
coal being at that time unknown; and the wood for
the supply of these works is thought to have been
obtained from a common contiguous to the town,
called Coedycummer. To the general use of charcoal for this purpose may be attributed the great
want of timber on the districts adjoining the town,
which are known to have been richly wooded in
former times.
The present extent and importance of the iron
and coal works, and the consequent enlargement of
the town, and amazing increase in the amount of its
population, are to be primarily attributed to Mr.
Anthony Bacon, subsequently member of parliament
for the borough of Aylesbury, who, about the middle
of the last century, in conjunction with some other
gentlemen, obtained a lease for ninety-nine years, at
£200 per annum, of a mineral tract in this district,
abounding with coal and iron-ore, and extending
about eight miles in length and four in width. Mr.
Bacon shortly afterwards erected a furnace and works
at Cyvarthva, for smelting the ore, and subsequently
a forge for the manufacture of bar-iron. The Dowlais and the Plymouth works were successively established by different companies; but they were not
carried on to any great extent, or with any considerable benefit to the proprietors. Soon after the commencement of the American war, Mr. Bacon entered
into a contract with government for supplying the
different arsenals with cannon, and built at Cyvarthva
a foundry, and works for the boring of cannon, which
in 1782 he let on lease to Mr. S. Homfray, who
contracted with him for all the iron produced at Cyvarthva, at £4. 10. per ton, long weight, and for as
much coal as he should require, at the rate of four
shillings per ton. Mr. Homfray, having entered
into this contract for a term of fifty years, completed
his establishment, and introduced a number of the
best workmen from England; he made great improvements in the machinery for boring cannon, and
also erected some forges for manufacturing bar-iron.
In consequence, however, of some misunderstanding
with Mr. Bacon, he in a very short time disposed of
his portion of the Cyvarthva works to Mr. Tanner, of
Monmouth, who subsequently sold it to Mr. Richard
Crawshay, an iron-master from London. Upon his
retirement from the works of Cyvarthva, Mr. Homfray, in company with some other gentlemen, in
1784 established the Pen-y-Darren iron-works, which
he conducted with very great success; and in 1793
he discovered a method of producing what is here
called Finer's metal, a discovery of the highest
value and importance in the manufacture of iron,
as this valuable ingredient not only increases the
quantity, but also improves the quality, of the iron.
After superintending the Pen-y-Darren works for
some time, Mr. Homfray projected the construction
of a canal from the Cyvarthva works at MerthyrTydvil to Cardiff, over a tract of country peculiarly
difficult, from the hilly nature of the ground; but
from some disagreement that arose between the managers and the proprietors, he finally withdrew from
the concern, the control of which devolved upon Mr.
Richard Crawshay, and which has proved of incalculable benefit to the district intersected by the navigation.
On the death of Mr. Anthony Bacon, his various
works were let on lease to different gentlemen: those
at Cyvarthva were taken by Mr. Richard Crawshay,
who had previously held the portion of them originally
leased to Mr. Homfray; the works at Hîrwaun, by
Mr. Glover, and the Plymouth works, by Mr. Hill.
The Cyvarthva works, under the superintendence of
Mr. Crawshay, who had a large amount of capital at
his command, rapidly increased in extent and improvement; and in the year 1800, that gentleman
constructed an overshot water-wheel of cast-iron,
fifty feet in diameter, at an expense of £4000, by
the power of which the operations were much accelerated. This wheel was set in motion by a stream of
water brought from a considerable distance by an
aqueduct eighty feet above the bed of the river; but,
after being used for some time with great effect, it
was at length superseded by steam-engines.
The principal establishments in the iron trade are,
the Dowlais works, belonging to Sir Josiah John Guest,
Bart., and Co.; the Cyvarthva works, belonging to
Messrs. Crawshay and Sons; the Plymouth works, to
Messrs. Hill; and the Pen-y-Darren, to Messrs.
Thompson and Co. In the year 1830, the two first
had each nine furnaces in blast, besides others out
of work or under repair; the third had five furnaces
in operation, and the fourth had four, making a total
of twenty-seven furnaces in blast. In the same year
the quantity of iron manufactured at the works collectively was 66,500 tons, in the making of which
were consumed 500,000 tons of coal, 280,000 of ironstone, and more than 100,000 of limestone. The
number of men employed, including those in the
mines and quarries connected with the works, was,
at Dowlais, 3500; at Cyvarthva, 3000; at the Plymouth works, 1500; and in the Pen-y-Darren works,
1000: making a total of 9000 persons. Since 1830,
however, the works have been considerably extended.
In the twelve months ending the 31st January, 1840,
the following quantities of iron were conveyed down
the Glamorganshire canal, from Merthyr, namely,
from Dowlais 45,218 tons, Cyvarthva 35,507, Pen-yDarren 16,130, Plymouth 12,922; total, 109,777
tons: and in addition to the iron exported, there
could not be less than 10,000 tons consumed at the
different works in tram-plates, wheels, castings for
machinery, and bar-iron for tools of various descriptions. In the years 1846 and 1847 the town was in
a higher state of prosperity than it had ever before
been. At the Dowlais works, according to Mr.
Cliffe's Book of South Wales, there were nineteen
blast furnaces, at Cyvarthva thirteen furnaces, at
the Plymouth works eight furnaces, and at Pen-yDarren six furnaces. Messrs. Crawshay, besides
the Cyvarthva works, which employ with colliers upwards of 4000 men, possess iron-works at Hîrwaun,
in the parish of Penderin, six miles from MerthyrTydvil; and Messrs. Thompson and Co., of Pen-yDarren, have two other large iron-works in addition
to their establishment to Merthyr. The town is one
of the great seats of the bar-iron trade; and so extensive are the rolling-mills, of late years almost exclusively occupied in the production of railway-bars,
that it has been found necessary to import a quantity
of pig-iron, chiefly from Scotland, to supply the
demand, as well as large quantities of iron-ore of
various qualities. The stratum of coal found is excellent for smelting the ore, and is accompanied with
parallel veins of argillaceous iron-ore, which penetrate the mountains to a great depth, and yield upon
an average about thirty-five parts of metal out of a
hundred; the mines are wrought by levels. The
limestone is not so strong as that in some parts of
England; but it varies in quality and in colour
from a deep black to a richly variegated marble of all
hues. Stone of a fine kind for millstones also exists
in abundance in the mountains in the neighbourhood.
The home trade of the place, consisting chiefly of
the importation of shop goods and manufactured articles for the supply of this populous district, is very
considerable; these are brought to the town by the
canal or the railway from Cardiff, chiefly from Bristol. The canal from Merthyr-Tydvil to Cardiff,
known by the name of the Glamorganshire canal, was
projected originally by Mr. Homfray, while connected with the Pen-y-Darren iron-works, as related
above: the work was commenced under an act of the
30th of George III., and completed under another of
the 36th of the same reign, in 1796. It begins at
the Cyvarthva works; is carried over the river Tâf
by an aqueduct, and along a line of country singularly difficult from the hilly nature of the ground;
and terminates at Cardiff, a distance of twenty-five
miles, having in its whole course a total fall of 611
feet. About two miles and a half from the town,
opposite to Troed-y-Rhiw mill, is a powerful steamengine, constructed by Messrs. Boulton and Watt,
for raising water from the Tâf, for the supply of the
canal.
The Tâf-Vale railway, for passengers and goods,
was begun under an act of parliament passed in 1836,
and was completed, and opened to the public, in
April 1841. It commences at Merthyr, and proceeding southward, down the valley of the Tâf river,
runs through or near Gellygaer, Navigation-House,
Llanwonno, Llanvabon, Newbridge, Eglwysilan,
Lantwit-Vairdre, Pentyrch, Radyr, Llandaf, and
Whitchurch, to its terminus at Cardiff. Most of
these are populous districts abounding in mineral
produce: about Newbridge, as many as 3000 dwelling-houses are said to be scattered. The traffic on
the line is consequently enormous; and it is a remarkable fact that the Glamorganshire Canal Company, also, notwithstanding railway competition, at
present carry more goods than they ever conveyed before. The Vale of Neath railway, for which
acts were passed in the years 1846 and 1847, will
pass from Merthyr, north of Aberdare, by the Hîrwaun works, to Pont-Neath-Vaughan; then, taking
the course of the river-valley, will run by Aberpergwm, Lantwit, and Cadoxton, to the port of
Neath, where it will join the great South Wales
railway. This important line will have several
branches, one of them connecting it with the Aberdare branch of the Tâf-Vale railway. The total
length, including the branches, will exceed thirty
miles.
The value of land has increased in a ratio corresponding to the improvement of the place in commercial and manufacturing importance. One farm
in the neighbourhood, which, in the year 1775, the
time when the first furnace was erected, was let for
£2. 10. per annum, now produces a rental of £50;
and another, which at the same period was let for
£5, has since been advanced to £100 per annum.
The increase in population has been equally progressive: the return, according to the census of 1801,
was 7705; in 1811, 11,104; in 1821, 17,404; in
1831, 22,083; and in 1841, 34,977, of whom nearly
10,000 were in the Dowlais district. The market
days are Wednesday and Saturday: in 1835 an act
was obtained for providing a market-place, and regulating the markets. A fair for cattle is held on
May 14th; and at Twyn-y-Waun, on a neighbouring hill within the limits of the parish, are fairs on
the first Monday in July, and the first Monday in
August, also for cattle. An act for a market-place
and market at Dowlais was passed in 1837, the
provisions of which, and of the act of 1835, as observed in a former part of the article, have been
carried into effect.
Part of the parish of Merthyr-Tydvil, with the
parish of Aberdare, and the village of Coedycummer
in the adjoining parish of Vainor, county of Brecknock, was constituted a Borough by the act of 1832
for "Amending the Representation," with the privilege of returning a member to parliament. The right
of voting is vested in every male person of full age
occupying, either as owner, or as tenant under the
same landlord, a house or other premises of the annual
value of at least £10, provided he be capable of
registering as the act demands; and the number of
such tenements within the limits of the borough,
which are correctly detailed in the Appendix to this
work, is 657 in Merthyr-Tydvil, 206 in Aberdare,
and 20 in Vainor. The returning officer is annually
appointed by the high sheriff for the county. Merthyr is also a polling-place in the election of knights
for the shire. The parish, together with those of
Aberdare and Gellygaer, is under the superintendence of a stipendiary police magistrate, appointed by
act of parliament of the 10th of George IV., with a
salary of £600 per annum, one-half of which, under
the provisions of that measure, is levied on the
several furnaces in the three places, and the other
half by a rate on the inhabitants of Merthyr-Tydvil
alone. The powers of the county-debt court of
Merthyr, established in 1847, extend over the registration-district of Merthyr. The petty-sessions for
the Upper division of the hundred of Caerphilly are
held in the town.
The living is a rectory, rated in the king's books
at £20. 5. 7½.; present net income, £675, with a
glebe-house; patrons, the Stuart family, Marquesses
of Bute. The church, dedicated to St. Tydvil, and
entirely rebuilt of late years, is a spacious structure,
in the later style of English architecture, with a high
tower; it has received 344 additional sittings, including 282 free, in consideration of which latter the
Incorporated Society for the enlargement of churches
and chapels granted £150 towards defraying the
cost. At Dowlais is a church, erected by the proprietors of the iron-works there, at an expense of
£3000; it is a neat and appropriate edifice, containing 450 sittings, one-half free: the living is a rectory not in charge, in the gift of the Stuart family;
income, £150. In 1846 a new church, dedicated
to St. David, was commenced at Merthyr, towards
which the late Marquess of Bute gave a donation of
£300, Sir Josiah John Guest, £250, the Hon. Robert
H. Clive, £100, and the Bishop of Llandaf, the ironmasters, and land-owners, other sums proportionably
large, aided by grants of £1000 from the Church
Commissioners, and £500 from the Incorporated
Society. The building is in the pointed style, with
a bell-turret, and contains 1200 sittings, half free:
the site formed part of the rectory glebe, and is a
very eligible spot, near the centre of the street. At
Cyvarthva is an incumbency formed under the act 6
and 7 Victoria, cap. 37: the patronage is vested in
the Crown and the Bishop of Llandaf, alternately.
There are places of worship for Baptists, Independents, Wesleyans, Calvinistic Methodists, Primitive Methodists, and Unitarians; also a Roman
Catholic chapel, lately erected. John Williams, in the
year 1735, bequeathed a rent-charge of £4, one-half
of which he appropriated to teaching poor children of
dissenters to read Welsh, and the other half to the
poor of the Protestant dissenting congregation at
Merthyr; and the residue of his interest in a moiety
of the lands of Pen-y-Darren farm he devised to
support the dissenting minister at Merthyr. Other
chapels having subsequently sprung up in the parish,
the congregation of the original one was dissolved;
but one of the new buildings, erected at Ynysgow,
has been considered by the court of chancery a continuation of the former, and its minister now receives
the residue of the charity, which amounts to about
£54 per annum, chiefly arising from the rents of
houses in the town. The rural part of the farm, consisting of about eighty acres, was let in 1784 to a
company of iron-masters; several furnaces have been
erected on it, and it has become most valuable from
the great quantity of coal and ironstone found beneath the surface. There are several day schools,
and nearly forty Sunday schools, held in the parish.
The poor-law union of which Merthyr is the head,
was created November 3rd, 1836, and comprises the
following nine parishes and townships; namely,
Aberdare, Gellygaer, Llanvabon, Llanwonno, Merthyr-Tydvil, Rhigos, and Ystrad-Dyvodog, in the
county of Glamorgan; and Penderin and Vainor,
in the shire of Brecknock. It is under the superintendence of twenty-one guardians, and contains a
population of 52,864.
The only vestiges of antiquity in the parish, worthy of notice, are the remains of Morlais Castle already
referred to, occupying the highest point of a lofty
hill, surrounded by a desolate tract of country, now
abounding with rabbits. The ruins of this ancient
fortress, though inconsiderable, convey some idea of
its original strength. Its walls inclosed a pentagonal
area of no great extent. The principal apartment of
the castle, almost buried in the ruins of the other
parts of the building, yet remains, forming a circular
room about thirty feet in diameter, with a vaulted
roof supported on a single central pillar; the inner
wall is divided into twelve arched compartments, in
which were originally windows. The entrance into
this apartment is by a narrow gallery or passage, now
so obstructed by the ruins of the walls as to be almost
inaccessible. Immediately below the castle, the
Lesser Tâf, impetuously rushing along its rugged
bed to its confluence with the greater river Tâf, is
crossed by a bridge of picturesque appearance, called
Pont Sarn, thrown over a chasm in the limestone
rock, thirty feet in width, the sides of which are
fringed with underwood, whilst at the base are fragments of rock obstructing the channel of the river,
which roars beneath. At a short distance above Pont
Sarn is a hollow in the rock, designated Dryford
Cavern; a spring from above falls into it, and in
times of flood, overflowing the brink, forms a cascade
of interesting and romantic appearance. Several chalybeate springs flow from the mountains in various
parts of the parish. At a place called Gethin, between the river Tâf and the canal, are the remains of
a small but very ancient furnace; and about two
miles lower down, between Gethin and the engine for
supplying the canal, are the ruins of a similar one,
near which, in the river, are the oak stakes which
once formed a weir, named Wattle Weir: but of the
origin or history of these works nothing has been recorded even by tradition. Gwilym Tew, an eminent
Welsh poet, is said to have been a native of Tavedale, in the vicinity of the town.
Mevennydd (Mefenydd)
MEVENNYDD (MEFENYDD), a hamlet, in
the parish of Llanrhŷstid, union of Aberystwith,
Lower division of the hundred of Ilar, county of
Cardigan, South Wales, 9 miles (S.) from Aberystwith; containing 722 inhabitants. There are
some respectable residences in this township, and the
river Aëron has its source here, in a small lake called
Llyn Aeddwen.
Meylltyrn (Myllteyrn, or Mellteyrn)
MEYLLTYRN (MYLLTEYRN, or MELLTEYRN), a parish, in the union of Pwllheli,
partly in the hundred of Gaflogion, and partly in
that of Commitmaen, Lleyn division of the county
of Carnarvon, North Wales, 9 miles (W. by S.)
from Pwllheli; containing 248 inhabitants. This
parish is divided by the stream Rhŷdlâs into two
nearly equal parts, of which the eastern division is in
the hundred of Gaflogion, and the western in that of
Commitmaen. It is separated from the parish of
Bottwnog by the river Cofan, and from that of Bryncroes by the Avon Soch. The village is small, but
is pleasantly situated on a narrow plain; the lands
in the vicinity are fertile, and the inhabitants are
wholly employed in agriculture. At Sarn, a village
in the parish, fairs for horned cattle and for horses
are held on the 11th of April and 10th of October.
The living is a discharged rectory, with the perpetual
curacy of Bottwnog annexed, rated in the king's
books at £5. 15., and endowed with £200 royal
bounty, which was laid out in the purchase of land,
now attached to the glebe; present net income, £217,
with a glebe-house; patron, the Bishop of Bangor.
The tithes of Meylltyrn have been commuted for a
rent-charge of £160. The church, dedicated to St.
Peter ad Vincula, was rebuilt in 1847-48, in the decorated English style, from the designs of Henry
Kennedy, Esq., of Bangor; and will accommodate
about 200 persons. In the churchyard is an ancient
upright stone of large dimensions, without either
sculpture or inscription. There is a trifling bequest
for the relief of the poor. Henry Rowlands, Bishop
of Bangor, and founder of the grammar school at Bottwnog, was born in this parish, in 1551, at what was
originally an old mansion near the church, but which
has been taken down, except a small part that is still
remaining; he died in 1616, and by his will ordered
that the school should be built either in this his native
village, or at Bottwnog. One of the inmates of
Bishop Rowlands' almshouse at Bangor is chosen
from Meylltyrn.
Miawst
MIAWST, with Trech Gwinnon, a hamlet, in
the parish of Llanarthney, Higher division of the
hundred of Iscennen, union and county of Carmarthen, South Wales, 9½ miles (E. by S.) from Carmarthen; containing 375 inhabitants. It occupies a
vale near the source of the Gwendraeth Vâch river,
where the population is thinly scattered, and exclusively employed in agriculture.