T
Tach-Lleuan (Tach-Leian)
TACH-LLEUAN (TACH-LEIAN), with
Rhiwlas, a hamlet, in that part of the parish of
Llandilo-Vawr which is in the Lower division of
the hundred of Cayo, in the union of LlandiloVawr, county of Carmarthen, South Wales, 2½
miles (N.) from Llandilo-Vawr; containing 197 inhabitants. The name implies "a spreading to the
west," being descriptive of the situation of the hamlet
in the parish.
Tâf
TÂF, with Cynon, a hamlet, in the parish and
union of Merthyr-Tydvil, hundred of Caerphilly, county of Glamorgan, South Wales, 6
miles (S.) from the town of Merthyr-Tydvil; containing 395 inhabitants. In this hamlet a canal proceeds along the Vale of Tâf, to Merthyr; and from
this, immediately below the hamlet, branches the
Aberdare canal, along the valley of the river Cynon,
to Aberdare. To connect these lines of navigation
with the main trunk from Cardiff, there is a fine
aqueduct over the river Tâf, near the spot where
the stream is crossed by a bridge on the road to
those places. The Tâf-Vale railway also passes in
this vicinity, and up the Cynon valley proceeds the
Aberdare branch railway. The banks of the Tâf
are here finely wooded, presenting some beautiful
views; and several agreeable residences are contained in the hamlet, especially in the Vale of
Cynon. A portion of the hamlet is included within
the limits of the borough of Merthyr.
Tàlachddû (Tàl-Achddû)
TÀLACHDDÛ (TÀL-ACHDDÛ), a parish,
in the hundred of Pencelly, union and county of
Brecknock, South Wales, 3½ miles (N. E.) from
Brecknock, on the road to Hay; containing 196
inhabitants. This parish comprises about one thousand five hundred and fifty acres of land. It derives
its name from its situation at the head of a small
rivulet called the Achddû, from the black colour of
its water; and is separated from the adjacent parish
of Llandevalley by the river Dulas, which, at the
little village of Velin-Vâch, is crossed by a neat
bridge. The soil is various, in some parts extremely fertile, and the surrounding scenery is pleasingly diversified. Copper-ore has been found in the
parish, and, some time since, a mine was opened on
a farm belonging to Samuel Church, Esq.: the vein
extends to the depth of sixty yards, and the ore,
which is supposed to be very rich, in parts lies within
a foot of the surface, but no progress was made in
working the mine. In descending the hill from
Brecknock to this place, the village and church have
a beautifully picturesque appearance; they are situated on rising ground, and form an interesting feature
in the superb view which is obtained from the hill:
in front is a large common, overlooking a fertile and
rich tract of country, bounded by swelling hills, cultivated to the very summit; beneath is a pleasingly
wooded dingle, along which the river Dulas takes its
course; on the left the fine range of the Black
Mountains is seen extending for several miles, and
on the right is the more magnificent chain of the
Brecknockshire Beacons. The living is a discharged
rectory, rated in the king's books at £4. 12. 1., and
in the patronage of Mrs. Anna Griffith; total net
income, £143: there is a good parsonage-house,
with a garden of about half an acre, and forty-seven
acres of glebe land. The church, dedicated to St.
Mary, is a small ancient building with a low tower;
part of the rood-loft is remaining, and has been
converted into a gallery. The register contains entries of marriages celebrated, during the protectorate
of Cromwell, before the bailiff of Brecknock; and,
in the same period, the births, and not the baptisms,
are registered. There is a place of worship for Anabaptists. A day school is held, in connexion with
the Established Church; and two Sunday schools
are conducted, one of them on Church principles,
and the other held in the Anabaptist meeting-house,
above mentioned.
Talbenny
TALBENNY, county of Pembroke, South
Wales.—See Telbenny.
Tàlgarth
TÀLGARTH, a parish, partly in the hundred
of Tàlgarth, in which it comprises the decayed
borough of Tàlgarth, and the townships of Grwyne
Vawr and Grwyne Vechan; and partly in the hundred of Pencelly; unions of Hay and Crickhowel, county of Brecknock, South Wales, 9
miles (E. N. E.) from Brecknock; containing 1388
inhabitants, of whom 673 are in the borough. This
place derives its name from its situation in front of
the chain of lofty hills called the Black Mountains,
which are partly included within the limits of the
parish. It once comprised three inferior lordships
marcher, called respectively English Tàlgarth, Welsh
Tàlgarth, and Dinas; the village was anciently a
borough and market-town, and had numerous privileged fairs, which are all that remain of its former
distinctions. The parish is very extensive, comprising, according to a survey made in 1801, which
is quoted by Mr. Jones in his History of Brecknockshire, an area of not less than ninety thousand one hundred and forty-five acres. Its surface
is mountainous, and the soil extremely various, being
in some parts fertile and productive, and in others
affording only scanty herbage for sheep and young
cattle. The 'scenery is much varied, but it is
characterised more by features of rugged boldness
than of picturesque beauty; in some parts the
views border upon the romantic. Though no longer
a market-town, nor retaining any of its municipal
privileges, Tàlgarth is, notwithstanding, a large
and well-built place: it occupies an eminence rising
gently from the river Ennig, which is here crossed
by a stone bridge of one arch, and, after precipitating itself over several successive ledges of rock,
falls into the river Llynvi.
In the parish were formerly many ancient seats,
the residences of genteel families, which, having in
course of time been abandoned by their proprietors, have fallen into neglect, and are now become
comparatively insignificant. Among these is Porthaml, noticed by Leland, who derives its name from
the hospitality and affluence of the proprietors, the
Vaughans, of whom Sir William Vaughan was first
high sheriff of Brecknockshire; it is now the property of the Earl of Ashburnham, by the marriage
of one of his ancestors with the heiress of that family:
part of the embattled wall of the old mansion, and
one of the towers, are at present remaining. Tregunter, an old seat of the Gunters, from whom it
derives its name, was originally bestowed by Bernard
Newmarch upon Sir Peter Gunter, in reward for his
services, and continued in that family for many
years: the estate was purchased by the late Thomas
Harris, Esq., who erected the present handsome
mansion, surrounded by fine grounds, and commanding a pleasing view of the adjacent country,
which is richly wooded, of the lofty hill called Troed,
near Tàlgarth, and of part of the range of the Black
Mountains. Tredustan, a commodious mansion, was
for many years the seat of Selina, Countess of Huntingdon, and, after her death, was converted into an
academy for young men intended for the ministry
among her ladyship's connexion. The seat named
The Hermitage is beautifully situated in a retired
spot.
The village stands within a mile of the turnpikeroad leading from London to Brecknock, through
Hay; and the Brecknock and Hay tramroad, in its
course through the parish, passes close to it. A
new turnpike-road through Tàlgarth forest to Crickhowel and Abergavenny has been formed, diminishing by three miles the distance between Tàlgarth and those two places. The various bridges
in the parish are kept in repair by the inhabitants,
with the exception only of Pont-y-Tŵr, or "the
tower bridge," over the river Llynvi, in the village, which is repaired by the county; this bridge
takes its name from a square tower, forming at present part of a small farmhouse, noticed by Leland,
who supposes it to have been the ancient borough
gaol. Fairs, which are numerously attended by
dealers from all parts of the country, and at which
great numbers of horses and cattle are sold, are held
annually on February 2nd, March 12th, May 31st,
July 10th, September 23rd, November 2nd, and
December 3rd.
The living is a vicarage not in charge; patrons, the Dean and Canons of Windsor, to whom,
after the dissolution of the priory of St. John at
Brecknock, the advowson and tithes, which had previously belonged to that establishment, were granted
by Henry VIII. The tithes of the parish have been
commuted for £895, which sum is thus apportioned.
From the hamlets of Trevecca, Pwllywrach, and
Forest, £40 are received by the Bishop of Gloucester
and Bristol. Out of the same hamlets, those of
Grwyne Vawr and Grwyne Vechan, and the borough
of Tàlgarth, £590 are derived by the dean and
canons, who have also a glebe of 22 acres, valued at
£22 per annum, and called Tîr-y-Prior, or "the
prior's land," from having been possessed by the
priory. The vicar receives from the borough, and
the hamlets of Grwyne Vawr and Vechan, £285, and
likewise has a glebe of 22 acres, valued at £22 per
annum. The church, which stands in the higher
part of the village, and from all parts of the surrounding country presents a very respectable appearance, is dedicated to St. Gwendeline, or Gwenvrewi, and is a spacious and ancient structure, with
a handsome square embattled tower surmounted with
turrets. The interior consists of a nave and south
aisle, separated by a series of five obtusely pointed
arches, springing from octagonal pillars with plain
capitals; the windows at the east end are in the later
English style. From the churchyard, which is ornamented with numerous yew-trees, is a delightful
prospect over a richly cultivated tract of country,
embracing a great portion of the counties of Hereford and Radnor. The Independents and Calvinistic
Methodists have places of worship: one belonging
to the former, at Tredustan, possesses a small endowment, arising from the sum of £170, raised, as is
supposed, by subscription, and secured on a bond from
the late Lewis Williams, of Pentwyn, in the parish of
Gwenddwr, bearing interest at 4½ per cent., and
dated January 1st, 1797. Two day schools are held,
one of them in connexion with the Established
Church, and the other conducted on the British and
Foreign system; also five Sunday schools, one of
which is a Church school, three belong to the Calvinistic Methodists, and one to the Independents.
Trevecca House, in the hamlet of Trevecca,
was built by Howel Harris, the friend and disciple
of the Rev. George Whitefield, whose tenets he
adopted; and it became the seat of a religious community founded by this gentleman, to whose zeal may
be ascribed the prevalence of Calvinistic doctrines
among the dissenters in Wales. He was born at
this place in 1714, and entered as a student at
St. Mary's Hall, Oxford, in 1735; but, continuing
there only one term, he quitted the university, became immediately an itinerant preacher, and, after
experiencing considerable persecution, settled in his
native place, where he was highly respected, and
laid the foundation of a community, similar in some
respects to those of the Moravians. For this purpose he built the house of Trevecca, and inclosed a
sufficient quantity of garden-ground and land, for
the accommodation of a large number of inhabitants, whom he invited to invest their property in
one general fund, for the equal benefit of all. A
portion of the day was spent in religious exercises
at the chapel, in which service was performed three
times in the day; and, during the intervals, the
members were employed in cultivating the land
belonging to the institution, the produce of which,
after supplying the wants of the immediate locality,
was sent to market, and the money added to the
common fund. A woollen manufacture was also carried on by the members, who thus supplied the
adjacent country, and even distant places, with some
of the finest flannel made in the principality. The
society flourished greatly, and at one time consisted
of a hundred and fifty efficient members, exclusively
of children; but after the death of Mr. Harris, who
was both chaplain and treasurer, the number declined considerably, and the establishment is now
rapidly hastening to decay. Mr. Harris, a short
time prior to his death, settled the house and
grounds, together with several leasehold farms, in
trust for the use of the community; the leasehold
property has long since fallen in, and there now
remains only the house, with about seven acres of
ground. The building is of singular appearance,
combining the Grecian, early English, castellated,
and Elizabethan styles of architecture; and being
much too large for its very few proper inmates, it is
let in tenements to different families: the chapel is
opened regularly every alternate Sunday for public
worship.
Walter Williams, of Neuadd-Vâch, bequeathed
£10, the interest of which he appropriated to the
instruction of one poor boy; and the parish is entitled to share in the benefit of the Boughrood charity
at Brecknock, for apprenticing children, under the
liberal endowment of Rice Powell. Near the church
are four almshouses, with a garden to each, erected
at the expense of John Gunter, Esq., who died in
1689; they have no endowment, and are kept in repair by the parish. Thomas Harris, Esq., of Tregunter, in 1782, bequeathed the interest of £200,
for clothing ten men yearly, which is accordingly
carried into effect under the superintendence of Mrs.
Madocks, of Tregunter. Thomas Bennet, of Pen-yrWrlodd, in 1727, left a house and garden, called Tŷ
Bâch, in the parish, the rent to be distributed among
the poor of Trevecca; the house was pulled down
many years since, and the ground pays 10s. per annum, which is divided among widows of the hamlet.
Mrs. Sybil Williams, of Trêvithel, bequeathed £20
in money, now secured on Capel-y-Fin, in Llanigon;
and Thomas Watkin Probert, by deed, in 1663, gave
to the poor £10 per annum, charged on estates in
Tàlgarth and Llangorse: both which charities are
distributed on Good Friday.
On the Black Mountains are some imperfect
Druidical remains, and vestiges of military works of
ancient British origin. On a farm called Pendre,
about half a mile from the village, is a very perfect
earthwork, forming the segment of a circle, and
extending for about two hundred yards; it appears
to have been thrown up to cover the retreat of the
natives to the mountains, or it may have been an
outpost of the fortified station of Dinas, which
lies directly in its rear, at the distance of two miles.
This last fortress, once a place of great strength,
occupies the summit of a conical hill, commanding
the mountain pass to Crickhowel, and the eastern
parts of the Vale of Usk; it was formerly of great
importance, and constituted the head of a lordship marcher, conferring upon its possessor the
dignity of a baron of parliament. It is said by most
writers to have been built by one of the lords
marcher; but Camden is of opinion that it had been
previously occupied by the Britons, and identifies it
with the fortress of Brecenanmere, which was attacked
by Ethelfleda, daughter of Alfred the Great, and
Countess of Mercia, who had previously defeated
Hwgan, Prince of Brecknock, and who took his wife
with thirty of her attendants prisoners at Brecenanmere, and sent them into England. According to
Leland, in whose time it was in ruins, Dinas was
destroyed by the inhabitants of this part of the principality, during the reign of Henry IV., to prevent
its falling into the hands of the Welsh chieftain,
Owain Glyndwr. Near the place is a sulphureous
spring, called Dinas Well.
Thomas Harris, who purchased the estate of Tregunter, and was an elder brother of Howel, above
noticed, was born in the parish; in early life he
settled in London, where he realized an ample fortune,
with which he retired to his native place. The eldest
of the brothers, Joseph, according to a tablet in the
church, distinguished himself by his scientific researches; he held a respectable situation in the
Mint, and was the author of several astronomical
and mathematical treatises, which were highly appreciated.
Taliaris
TALIARIS, a chapelry, in the parish and union
of Llandilo-Vawr, Lower division of the hundred
of Perveth, county of Carmarthen, in South
Wales, 5 miles (N. by E.) from Llandilo-Vawr;
containing 178 inhabitants. This place is situated
on the banks of the Dulas river, over which here is
a bridge, called Pont-Rhyd-y-March; and to the left
of the road leading from Llandilo-Vawr to Lampeter.
It consists of the two hamlets of Taliaris and Cwm
Cawlud, which form the chapelry, and occupy the
northern portion of the parish. Some portions of the
surface are rugged, but in other parts, and especially
at the warren and demesne of Taliaris, the scenery is
truly beautiful: the soil is chiefly clay, more or less
tenacious, yielding principally barley and oats; and
black cattle, and sheep, are also reared. There are
three corn and grist water-mills; and some quarries of
rough stones for rubble masonry and road repairs.
Taliaris, the seat of William Peel, Esq., second
cousin of Sir Robert Peel, Bart., occupies an elevated and extensive range of ground, reaching
nearly to the banks of the Dulas, and overspread
with a profusion of full-grown trees, consisting of
very large oak, ash, elm, beech, and fir, all of an
ancient date, with above 100 acres of new plantations. The mansion is a spacious building in freestone, of the Doric order, with a rustic basement, erected in the reign of Charles I.; the estate is exceedingly picturesque, and has a fine sheet of water on
an elevation above the house. It was at one time the
residence of a branch of the Gwynne family.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with
£200 private benefaction, and £1400 royal bounty;
total net income, £103, with a glebe-house; patron,
Mr. Peel, above-mentioned, proprietor of the Taliaris
estate, from which the minister is entitled to an
annual stipend of £11, including £1 for preaching a
sermon under the bequests of William and David
Gwynne, in 1697 and 1713. The chapel is a cruciform structure, exhibiting a mullioned window of the
ancient edifice. It was once a chapel of ease to
Llandilo church, and after remaining in ruins, with
its endowments alienated, was rebuilt by William
Gwynne, Esq., and re-endowed with a portion of its
former property; upon which it was opened by the
celebrated Jeremy Taylor, during his refuge from
political troubles at Golden Grove. The building
contains some monuments of the Gwynne and Seymour families, and will accommodate about 250
persons, the seats being unappropriated, except in the
south transept, which is reserved for the family at
Taliaris. The late Lord Robert Seymour, of Taliaris,
enlarged the chapel, endowed the benefice with eight
acres of glebe, and built thereon a residence for
the incumbent. The repairs of the chapel are
charged upon the estate; and for the education of
the children residing on the property, the late Robert
Peel, Esq., endowed a school. There are, besides,
several benefactions payable from the estate, for
supplying the poor who attend the chapel with bread
and money. On the Gaer-Vawr, near the house of
Maes-y-Castell, is an ancient earthwork.
Talley, otherwise Tàl-Y-Llychau
TALLEY, otherwise TÀL-Y-LLYCHAU, a
parish, in the poor-law union of Llandilo-Vawr,
Lower division of the hundred of Cayo, county of
Carmarthen, South Wales, 7½ miles (N.) from
Llandilo-Vawr; containing 1068 inhabitants, of whom
418 are in the Lower, and 650 in the Upper, division. This place was originally of much greater importance than it is at present, and the seat of one of
the most extensive and venerable ecclesiastical establishments in this part of the principality: the
name signifies "the head of the lakes," and is derived from two large pools near the church, about
fifty acres in extent. The parish is bounded on the
south by Llandilo-Vawr and Llansawel, east and
north by Llansadwrn and Cayo, and north and west
by Llansawel. It is situated upon the river Cothy,
on the turnpike-road from Llandilo-Vawr to Lampeter; and comprises by admeasurement 7167a. 2r.
19p., of which the arable portion may consist of about
two-thirds, nearly 200 acres are woodland, 290a. 8p.
a common, and the remainder pasture. The surface
displays a continued succession of hill and dale, sideland and mountain top, and is rather woody, the
principal timber being oak, ash, elm, fir, alder, &c.
The soil is grey in colour, and tolerably deep and
fertile; the chief agricultural produce is wheat, barley,
oats, &c., with a good and sufficient supply of grass
and hay for the use of the dairies. On the west the
parish is bounded by the Cothy, a tributary of the
Towy river, and several brooks rise in the parish
and unite in the south-eastern part, where the
stream thus formed pursues its course to the Towy.
There are two small villages, named Talley and
Cwmdû; and the mansion of Glanyrannel, pleasantly
situated in grounds well laid out. A small fair is
held on August 6th.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with
£800 royal bounty, and £1000 parliamentary grant;
net income, £127; patron, the Rev. William Thomas
Nicholl, heir of the late Venerable Thomas Beynon,
Archdeacon of Cardigan, who purchased the tithes and
the advowson from the ancient family at Abermarles. The tithes have been commuted for a rentcharge of £299. 15., and there is a glebe attached
of 3½ acres, valued at £11. 3. per annum. The
church, dedicated to St. Michael, having fallen into
decay, was rebuilt in the Grecian style, in 1773, at
the expense of the inhabitants, principally from the
ruins of the ancient abbey of Talley, the nave of which
formed the old church, and of which there are still
some remains within the burial-ground, consisting of
half the tower, and other considerable portions. The
present is a neat edifice, and contains some monumental inscriptions, including a mural tablet to the
memory of Sir Nicholas Williams, an ancestor of
Sir James Hamlyn Williams, Bart. The area, exclusively of the chancel, is fifty feet long by thirty
wide, and being all pewed, contains between 300
and 400 sittings, which belong to the rate-payers,
except two, and the seats of the gallery, which are
free. There were formerly five chapels of ease, but
of none are there at present any remains; memorials
of two are preserved in the names of small patches
of ground, one being called Mynwent Capel Llanvihangel, "the churchyard of St. Michael's chapel,"
and the other, Mynwent Capel Crist, "the churchyard of Christ's chapel." In the parish are places
of worship for Baptists and Calvinistic Methodists,
the poor of the latter of whom participate in the
benefit of Mrs. Mary Griffith's charity at Llangeitho. A day school is held, under the patronage
of Lady Mary Williams; and there are some Sunday
schools.
The abbey was founded prior to 1197, by Rhŷs
ab Grufydd, an ancestor of Lord Dynevor, for Præmonstratensian canons, and dedicated to the Blessed
Virgin and St. John the Baptist: a charter was
given to it by Edward III., confirming a prior grant
by the ancient Princes of South Wales in the time of
Henry III. This establishment flourished until the
Dissolution, at which period it had eight canons,
and its revenue was estimated at £153. 1. 4. The
remains, though much diminished by the appropriation towards rebuilding the church, are still considerable, containing, as already stated, about half
the tower, and some portions of the transept on both
sides, all within the churchyard, and the property of
the owner of the tithes: the large bell that was sold to
assist the parishioners in the erection of the church,
in 1773, is now in Exeter cathedral. The situation of this structure, in a luxuriant vale embosomed
among lofty hills, was peculiarly adapted for devotional retirement and contemplation. From the richness of the endowment, the abbots were little inferior
in power to the bishops of the diocese; and to the influence of one of them, who was confessor and secretary to Rhŷs ab Thomas, has been attributed the
active part which that chieftain took in favour of the
Earl of Richmond, afterwards Henry VII. Near
the abbey, but within the parish of Llansawel, is the
seat of Edwinsford, the property of Sir James Hamlyn
Williams.
Tàl-Y-Cavn
TÀL-Y-CAVN, a detached hamlet, in the parish
of Llanbedr, union of Conway, hundred of Llêchwedd Isâv, county of Carnarvon, North Wales,
7½ miles (N.) from Llanrwst. This isolated spot,
though forming part of the parish of Llanbedr, is
entirely surrounded by that of Caerhên. It is situated
upon the western bank of the navigable river Conway,
across which is a public ferry to Eglwys-Bâch, in
the county of Denbigh. This is the only ferry
between the bridges of Conway and Llanrwst, and
near the approach to it is a small artificial mount,
on which was once a tower, or castle, erected to
defend the pass, but of which there are now not the
slightest vestiges; the fort is said by Camden to
have been called Bryn-Castell, and to have served
as an exploratory tower forming an outpost of the
Roman station Conovium.
Tàlyllyn (Tàl-Y-Llyn)
TÀLYLLYN (TÀL-Y-LLYN), a parochial
chapelry, in the parish of Llanbeulan, hundred of
Llyvon, union and county of Anglesey, North
Wales, 6 miles distant (W. S. W.) from the town
of Llangevni: the population is returned with the
parish of Llanbeulan. This chapelry is situated in
the south-western part of the island, and on the river
Fraw, which falls into the little bay of Aberfraw in
Carnarvon bay. The living is a perpetual curacy,
endowed with £800 royal bounty; net income, £62;
patron, O. M. F. Meyrick, Esq. The parochial
chapel, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, is a small
edifice of no interest, situated near a pool from which
the chapelry takes its name. It consists of a nave
and chancel, with a chapel on the southern side of
the latter: the font, placed against the southern wall
of the nave, belonged to a more ancient edifice on
the spot. Not far from the parochial chapel stands
an old Hall, now used as a farmhouse, dating from
the 17th century; it has been partially destroyed
by fire, but still shows traces of having been once
the residence of a gentleman. Hugh Wood, in the
year 1611, bequeathed a messuage and garden in
the town of Newborough, and a farm of 12½ acres
in the liberties of that place, for the perpetual endowment and repairs of Tàlyllyn chapel: the premises in the town were let on a 99 years' building
lease, that expired some years since; the farm of
12½ acres in the liberties produces a rent of £15
per annum, which is paid to the curate, who keeps
the chapel in repair.
Tàlyllyn (Tàl-Y-Llyn)
TÀLYLLYN (TÀL-Y-LLYN), a parish, in
the union of Dôlgelley, hundred of Estimaner,
county of Merioneth, North Wales, 8 miles
(S. by W.) from Dôlgelley, on the turnpike-road to
Towyn; containing 1069 inhabitants. This parish
derives its name from the situation of its church, at
the head of a beautiful lake called Mwyngil. It
extends eight miles in length and four in breadth,
and includes a large portion of the lofty mountain
Cader Idris. The area is about thirty-six thousand
acres, of which only about six thousand are under cultivation, the remainder consisting chiefly of barren
rugged hills, merely affording pasturage to sheep
and goats. In the lower grounds the soil, though
shallow, is enriched by several small rivers, which
descend from the hills in various parts. The scenery
is strikingly romantic, and derives much beauty from
two lakes within the limits of the parish; one, called
Llyn Cae, at the foot of Cader Idris, about a quarter
of a mile long and nearly of equal breadth; and the
other, called Mwyngil, which is the principal, more
than a mile in length, and something less than half a
mile broad. The latter abounds with excellent trout
and eels: the vale in which it is situated is so contracted as to leave, for a considerable part of its
length, only a very narrow road on each side of the
water, and the clear surface of the lake reflects the
precipitous acclivities on each side. Towards the
extremity of the vale, the lake contracts gradually
into the form of a river, rushing with rapidity
through a stone arch into a very narrow pass,
having on one side the church, and on the other
the small cluster of houses which form the village,
embosomed in trees, and assuming a romantically
beautiful appearance. At the distance of a mile or
two beyond the church, the hills almost meet, and
present a sterile and rugged aspect; they are broken
into numberless crags, of which some are vertical
and sharply pointed, but the greater number project
horizontally, and impend with threatening gloom
over the vale beneath. One of these precipices,
from its resemblance in form to a harp, has been
called Pen-y-Delyn; and another, from a tradition that it was formerly the practice to throw
thieves from its summit, has been denominated Llamy-Lladron, or "the thieves' leap." There were formerly some ancient seats in the parish, the principal
of which were Aberlleveni and Maes-y-Pandy; but
they have been abandoned by their proprietors, and
are now occupied by tenants. Slate is found in the
parish, and some quarries of it are worked, employing a considerable number of inhabitants.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with
£400 royal bounty, and £1400 parliamentary grant;
net income, £84; patron, the Bishop of Lichfield,
whose tithes here have been commuted for a rentcharge of £250. The church, dedicated to St. Mary,
and beautifully situated within a few yards of the
lake, is an ancient building in the early English style
of architecture. There are places of worship for
Independents and Calvinistic and Wesleyan Methodists. A school on the British and Foreign
system was established in the year 1845; and eleven
Sunday schools are held, nine of them belonging to
the Calvinistic Methodists, one to the Independents,
and one to the Wesleyans. The Rev. John Owen
gave £20; Catherine Hugh, £40; Elizabeth Edwards, £5; and Hugh Pugh, in 1812, £10; the
interest of which sums is distributed among the poor
at Christmas.
A mineral spring here, called the Bishop's Well,
was formerly much resorted to for its efficacy in the
cure of rheumatism. At a place designated Llwyn
Dôl Ithel was found, in 1684, while digging for turf,
a coffin made of deal, seven feet in length, and carved
and gilt at both ends: two skeletons were deposited
in it, the feet of the one lying by the head of the
other; they were of uncommon size, and the bones
moist and tough. Within a few yards of the coffin
were two other skeletons of the same size, lying
on the clay, and near them a grave in which was a
skeleton of the ordinary size. Along the grave and
coffin were laid hazel rods, with the bark remaining,
and perfectly pliable. The high state of preservation in which these relics were found is attributed to
the bituminous quality of the turbary in which they
were deposited.
Tavolog
TAVOLOG, with Bryn-Uchel, a hamlet, in
the parish of Cemmes, union and hundred of Machynlleth, county of Montgomery, North Wales,
9½ miles (N. E. by E.) from Machynlleth; containing
420 inhabitants, of whom 91 are in Tavolog. It is
situated on the right bank of the river Tavolog,
which falls into the river Dovey near Mallwyd; and
forms the northern portion of the parish, which borders on Merionethshire.
Telbenny, or Talbenny
TELBENNY, or TALBENNY, a parish, in
the union of Haverfordwest, hundred of Rhôs,
county of Pembroke, in South Wales, 6 miles
(W. S. W.) from Haverfordwest; containing 257 inhabitants. It is situated on the south side of St.
Bride's bay, on a ridge overlooking which the village is chiefly built. Goldtop Road, off the coast
of the parish, forms the south-westernmost recess
of the bay, and affords safe anchorage for vessels
during gales from certain quarters. According to
Mr. Morris' account, in his survey of the Welsh coast,
it might be made a very safe roadstead, in three or
four fathoms water, by the construction of a pier on
Burrow Head, in the erection of which the beach
might be cleared of the large stones that now encumber it. This improvement of the haven, it is
thought, would make it a place of some trade, as
there are several mines of stone-coal in the neighbourhood. At the western extremity of the parish
is the small inlet of Mill Haven, and at the eastern
that of Little Haven. The living is a discharged
rectory, valued in the king's books at £9. 12. 6.;
patron, Sir John Owen, Bart.: the tithes have been
commuted for a rent-charge of £150; and there is
a glebe of 25 acres, valued at £30 per annum. The
church, dedicated to St. Mary, is situated near the
coast, below the village. A small school is supported
by the rector.
Telych
TELYCH, a hamlet, in that part of the parish
of Llandingat which is in the higher division of
the hundred of Perveth, in the union of Llandovery, county of Carmarthen, South Wales,
2 miles (E. by S.) from Llandovery; containing 218
inhabitants. It comprises a district through part of
which flow the rivers Brân and Gwdderig, and exhibits some well-wooded inclosures, occupying the
vales and sides of the hills.
Tenby (Dynbych-Y-Pyscod)
TENBY (DYNBYCH-Y-PYSCOD), a parish, including the In-Liberty and the Out-Liberty,
the former constituting the borough, and comprising
the sea-port, market-town, and fashionable wateringplace, of Tenby; in the hundred of Narberth,
union and county of Pembroke, South Wales;
10 miles (E.) from Pembroke, 20 (S. E.) from Haverfordwest, and 245 (W.) from London; containing
2803 inhabitants, of whom 2512 are within the limits
of the borough. This place was at a very remote
period occupied by the ancient Britons as a fishingtown, for which its situation on the coast rendered it
extremely favourable; and from this circumstance it
obtained its Welsh name, of the first part of which
its modern appellation of Tenby is an obvious modification. According to George Owen, an eminent
antiquary of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, whose
manuscript history of Pembrokeshire is now in the
library of the British Museum, the origin of the
present town is attributable to the settlement of the
Flemings in this part of the principality by Henry I.,
who placed them under the protection and control of
Gerald de Windesor, governor of Pembroke Castle,
whom he ordered to provide them with habitations,
on condition of their garrisoning the castles the king
then had in Wales, erected by the Normans for the
security of the territories which they had usurped by
conquest. In order to protect themselves from the
repeated attacks of the native Welsh, and to maintain possession of the lands that had been assigned
to them, they soon found it necessary to build the
towns of Tenby, Pembroke, and Haverfordwest,
which they fortified with strong and lofty walls; and
from that time Tenby began to assume a high degree
of importance as a strongly fortified military post,
and progressively to enjoy, from its advantageous
situation, considerable prosperity as a maritime and
commercial town.
In the year 1150, Cadell, eldest son of Rhŷs ab
Grufydd, Prince of South Wales, being on a hunting excursion in the neighbourhood, was suddenly
attacked by a party of the inhabitants of Tenby,
who lay in ambush for the purpose, and who, rushing from their concealment, soon put to flight the
unarmed retinue by which he was attended: but
Cadell resolutely defended himself against the assailants, of whom he killed several; and, though
severely wounded in the conflict, ultimately effected
his escape. Two years afterwards Meredydd and
Rhŷs, brothers of Cadell, in order to avenge this
outrage, assembled all their forces, and advancing
to Tenby, scaled the walls of the town, surprised the
castle, and put most of the garrison to the sword.
During the minority of Isabel, Countess of Pembroke, the several castles in her earldom were entirely neglected, and that of Tenby, being unprovided with a sufficient garrison, was attacked by
Maelgwyn and Hywel, who coming against it with
an overwhelming force, destroyed the fortress, burned
the town, and slew many of the inhabitants. It was
a considerable time before Tenby recovered from
the devastation it suffered upon this occasion: the
castle was repaired, and its fortifications strengthened,
by William Marshall, who, espousing Isabel, was
created Earl of Pembroke; but the town remained
for a much longer time in ruins. William had five
sons, who all succeeded in turn to the palatinate:
of these, Walter, the fourth son, gave orders for
restoring the town and building a new church and an
almshouse; but dying in 1246 before his intentions
were carried into effect, Warren de Mountchensy,
who married one of his sisters, and eventually succeeded in her right to the earldom, completed the
plans of his predecessor, and made to the church a
valuable present of plate and jewels.
During the wars of the houses of York and Lancaster, the fortifications were repaired and strengthened by Jasper, Earl of Pembroke, who, in the 36th
of Henry VI. (1458), caused the platform along the
summit of the walls to be widened, for the greater
facility of posting soldiers on the battlements, and
the moat by which they were surrounded to be much
increased in depth and breadth. Henry, Earl of
Richmond (afterwards Henry VII.), and his mother,
sought shelter in the castle of this place, to which
they were brought by David ab Thomas, one of the
brothers of Sir Rhŷs, a zealous adherent of the house
of Lancaster, from Pembroke Castle, where they
had been besieged. Here they received due attention from the mayor of the town, and embarked for
Brittany under the protection of Jasper, Earl of
Pembroke, uncle of Henry, who accompanied them
to the continent. In the reign of Elizabeth, a memorial was presented by the Bishop of St. David's,
and the principal persons of the county, praying that
fit persons might be sent to inspect the castle and
fortifications of Tenby, &c., preparatory to putting
them into a state of defence against the threatened
invasion of the Invincible Armada of Spain. The
walls were consequently restored by order of the
queen, whose initials, with the date 1588, are still
visible.
At the commencement of the civil war in the reign
of Charles I., the castle and the town were garrisoned
for the king; and in 1644, Colonel Laugharne, with
a strong body of parliamentary forces, laid siege to
the place, which was resolutely defended by Colonel
Gwyn, the governor, for three days, when, a breach
being made in the walls, it was taken by storm, and
the governor, the high sheriff, and three hundred
men were made prisoners. In 1647, the castle and
town were seized for the king by the same Colonel
Laugharne, who, in conjunction with Colonel Poyer
(governor of Tenby for the parliament) and Colonel
Powell, had abandoned the parliamentarian cause,
and embraced the royal interests. From the strength
of the garrison, composed of three hundred men, with
twenty-five pieces of ordnance, and from the abundant store of provisions and ammunition with which
it was supplied, it proved a formidable obstacle to
the entire subjugation of the country to the authority
of the parliament. Cromwell, who soon after came
into South Wales with an army of eight thousand
men, sent a detachment of twelve hundred, under the
command of Colonel Read, to besiege this place;
while he himself proceeded to obtain possession of
Pembroke, then held by the three royalist commanders in person. For five days it held out against
all the efforts of the united forces of Colonels Read
and Constable, by the latter of whom the former had
been joined, until the suburbs were at length taken
by storm, and a breach made in the walls; the garrison was then compelled to surrender at discretion,
and among the prisoners were numerous gentlemen
of the surrounding country.
The town is romantically situated on the eastern
and southern sides of a rocky peninsula, stretching
out into the Bristol Channel, and rising a hundred
feet above the level of high water. It consists of one
principal street, and several smaller streets diverging
from it, which latter are in some instances inconveniently narrow. The houses are in general well
built and of respectable appearance, and some of them
command fine views over the sea. Considerable improvements have been made of late years, among
which may be noticed the erection of a new markethouse by the corporation, in 1829, and the formation, at a cost of £900, of a line of road, by which
the approach to the town is greatly facilitated, and a
steep and dangerous descent from Narberth and the
eastern parts of the adjacent country avoided, and
which was opened to the public in 1831. In the
session of 1837-8 an act was passed for the improvement of Tenby, and the regulation of its harbour.
The main street is well paved, and lighted, and the
town is amply supplied with water, brought to the
different houses, at the expense of the corporation,
for which the occupiers pay from 10s. to 30s. a year,
according to the value of their houses. The surrounding scenery is beautiful: the majestic masses
of rock, of various forms and hues, that line the
coast; the numerous bays and distant promontories
stretching into the sea; the receding coasts of
Carmarthenshire, with the projecting headland of
Gower, inclosing the great bay of Carmarthen,
on the western boundary of which the town is
situated; and the small islands of Caldey and
Lundy, with the shores of Somerset and Devon,
combine to impart a high degree of interest, variety, and beauty to the sea-view, which is also
pleasingly enlivened by the frequent passing and
repassing of vessels navigating the Bristol Channel.
On one side of the town is a drive of ten miles
to the ancient town of Pembroke, through a fine
champaign country, studded with churches, old castles, villages, and gentlemen's seats surrounded with
plantations and pleasure-grounds. On the other
side, the country is agreeably diversified with swelling eminences clothed with verdure, and small valleys
richly wooded. The beautiful situation of the town,
the fine beach and firm and smooth sands, extending
two miles in length to the south, and one mile to the
north, the transparency of the sea-water, and the
pleasant walks and rides in the vicinity, have rendered
Tenby a fashionable place of resort for bathing, and,
since the close of the last century, raised it from the
decline into which it had for many years previously
fallen, to a high rank among the most favourite
watering-places. Many good lodging-houses have
been built for visiters, and a number of respectable
private houses are also appropriated during the season to the reception of families.
Baths, provided with every convenience, were
erected by the late Sir William Paxton under the
castle hill, and are supplied from a capacious reservoir filled from the sea at every tide. The establishment comprises two spacious pleasure-baths, one for
gentlemen and one for ladies, four small cold-baths,
and also warm sea-water and vapour baths, with
apparatus for heating them to any degree of temperature required: the same building contains lodgingrooms for the accommodation of such invalids as may
find it inconvenient to be at a distance from the
baths, and a general room as a promenade, and for
taking refreshments. The exterior of the edifice is
neat, though without any pretension to architectural
style; and an excellent carriage-road has been made
to the house, which commands a fine view over the
sea, on one side, and, on the other, of the shipping
in the bay. A small theatre was erected about the
year 1810; but dramatic performances not being
much encouraged here, it has been converted into
dwelling-houses. A literary and scientific society
was established in September 1847, which has a
well-supplied reading-room; and in the High-street,
opposite the church, is a good subscription library
and reading-room. There are two billiard-rooms,
and balls are held every fortnight during the season
under the direction of a master of the ceremonies:
races take place in the middle of August. The sands
afford delightful promenades, and abound with shells
of various descriptions, not less than one-half of the
British collection of six hundred varieties having
been found on this coast, on which many valuable
shells commonly esteemed foreign have also been
found.
Soon after the settlement of the Flemings at this
place, the small harbour was greatly improved
for the convenience of the shipping employed at
the port. The trade, from that time, progressively
increased; and a very considerable part of the population was engaged in carrying on the woollen manufacture, which was introduced by these settlers,
and continued to flourish here for many years.
From what cause the commercial and manufacturing
importance of the town first began to decline, has
not been clearly ascertained, but its manufactures
have been neglected for a great length of time.
The trade at present chiefly consists in exporting
to the western and southern coasts of England the
coal, culm, and limestone raised in the Out-Liberty
of the parish, and which are shipped from Saundersfoot, in the parish of St. Issel's, three miles to the
north; and in the importation of shop-wares from
Bristol, between which city and Tenby a regular
communication is maintained by means of steampackets. Considerable benefit will be derived from
the Tenby and South Wales railway, authorized by
act of parliament in 1846, and which will have a
short branch to Saundersfoot; the total length being
seven miles and a half. The works of this line,
however, have not yet been commenced, as their
construction depends on the progress made in the
great South Wales railway, which is not yet brought
into this part of the country. According to the
custom-house regulations, the harbour is a creek to
the port of Milford. It is dry at low water, and is
sheltered from the south and west winds by the lofty
peninsula on which the town is situated: on the east
it is protected by the castle hill; and on the north
by a small but handsome pier of ancient erection,
which, stretching north-westward from the castle
hill, in an irregular curve, terminates in a kind of
circular bastion, the whole forming a remarkably
picturesque object. The mouth of the harbour is
daily cleared by a body of water retained each tide
by flood-gates. The adjacent bay of Carmarthen
abounds with almost every species of fish; there are
several fishing-smacks belonging to Tenby, and the
bay is also frequented by vessels from the neighbouring and opposite coasts.
The market-days are Wednesday and Saturday,
and the fish-market, which is plentifully supplied
with excellent fish, is opened daily. Poultry, to the
value of £100 a week, and large quantities of fish,
are sent to Bristol by steamer. Fairs are held on
May 4th, Whit-Tuesday, July 1st, October 2nd, and
December 4th: that called St. Margaret's may, by
charter, continue for three days; but since the
establishment of the fair at Narberth, in the reign of
Charles II., in consequence of the more central
situation of that place, the fairs of this town have
been on the decline, and are now but very thinly
attended. A new market-place, as noticed above,
was constructed in the High-street, at the expense
of the corporation, in 1829, on a site purchased
for £450; it is commodiously arranged, and has
a handsome façade, with the arms of the borough sculptured in relief, on a shield of white
marble, in the tympanum of the pediment above
the entrance. A new fish-market was opened at the
end of Belle Vue, near the top of Quay Hill, in the
year 1847.
The inhabitants were first incorporated by
William de Valence, with the consent of his consort
Johanna, by whose right he had succeeded to the
palatinate. This nobleman's charter, which is still
extant, ordains that the burgesses should choose
annually from among themselves two portreeves,
and that they should have free common over all his
lands from mowing and reaping times until the feast
of the Purification. It was acknowledged and enlarged by his son, Aymer de Valence, also Earl of
Pembroke; and, in the 16th of Edward III., by
Laurence de Hastings, Earl of Pembroke. The
latter earl's charter was confirmed by Edward himself in the 49th year of his reign. Humphrey,
Duke of Gloucester and Earl of Pembroke, extended the privileges of the burgesses, and made the
mayor an independent justice; and all the charters
granted by the earls, as well as those bestowed by
the reigning sovereigns, were ratified by their
successors from the time of Edward III. to that of
Elizabeth. Henry IV., by charter conferred in the
year 1402, first placed the government in a mayor
and two bailiffs, to be elected annually; and in
the 23rd of Henry VI., the crown granted to the
mayor, bailiffs, and burgesses, that they should be
free from all murage, pontage, &c., at the port of
Bristol. Elizabeth, in the 23rd of her reign, confirmed all preceding charters, and incorporated the
inhabitants under the designation of the "Mayor,
Bailiffs, and Burgesses of the borough of Tenby,"
granting them power to elect a second justice of the
peace from among the aldermen, who, with the
mayor, should hold courts of quarter-session, with
authority to punish for all felonies, trespasses, and misdemeanors, not affecting life or limb. Charles I.,
in his 6th year, added a third justice of the peace,
and two serjeants-at-mace, one to be nominated by
the mayor, and the other by the bailiffs, whom he
made keepers of the common gaol and house of correction, and also charged with the execution of all
writs. Under these various charters the control was
vested in a mayor (who was also coroner), two bailiffs, two justices, and an indefinite number of common-councilmen and burgesses, assisted by a townclerk, two serjeants-at-mace, and other officers.
By the act 5th and 6th of William IV., c. 76,
the corporation is now styled the "Mayor, Aldermen, and Burgesses of Tenby," and consists of a
mayor, four aldermen, and twelve councillors, together
forming the council of the borough, of which the
municipal and parliamentary boundaries, including
about 600 acres, are the same. The council elect
the mayor annually on Nov. 9th, out of the aldermen or councillors; and the aldermen sexennially
out of the councillors, or persons qualified as such,
one-half going out of office every three years, but
being re-eligible: the councillors are chosen annually on Nov. 1st, by and from among the enrolled
burgesses, one-third retiring every year. Aldermen
and councillors must each have a property qualification of £500, or be rated at £15 annual value. The
burgesses consist of the occupiers of houses and
shops who have been rated for three years to the
relief of the poor. Two auditors and two assessors
are elected annually on March 1st, by and from
among the burgesses; and the council appoint a
town-clerk, treasurer, and other officers, on Nov.
9th. The income of the borough in the year 1810
was £287, in 1820 £572, and in 1830 £616; and
according to the report of the Municipal Commissioners in the year 1834, it then amounted to £801,
of which £622 were derived from lands and houses,
£64 from tolls, £10 from water-rents, and £105
from harbour-dues. Some opinion may be formed
of the importance of the property belonging to the
corporation, from the circumstance, that during the
period of twenty-two years commencing in 1810,
about £7300 were expended in general improvements; namely, £1700 for the erection of a market;
£1297 for supplying the town with water; £309
for paving and repairing the streets; and about
£4000 for improving the place, removing obstructions, and for labour. Of the sum paid for obtaining
a due supply of water, £100 were for a reservoir, and
£700 for pipes.
This borough, with Wiston, was, in the 27th of
Henry VIII., made contributory to Pembroke, in
the return of a parliamentary member: by the act
of 1832 to "Amend the Representation," Milford
was added to the district of boroughs. The elective
franchise, until the passing of that act, was vested
in the burgesses at large, in number nearly 400, of
whom about 130 were resident. It is now exercised by the old resident burgesses, and the £10
householders: the number of houses within the
limits of the borough, of value sufficient to qualify
their tenants, is 220. Tenby is one of the places at
which the poll is appointed to be taken at county
elections.
The corporation formerly held quarterly courts of
session for the borough, on the Friday after the
county-sessions were held, for the trial of all offenders, of whom the punishment did not affect life
or limb; a court of record for the recovery of debts
to any amount above the sum of forty shillings,
called the monthly court, which was held on the first
Thursday in every month, and had power to issue
process to hold to bail in actions for debt; and a
court every fortnight, on Monday, for the recovery of
debts under forty shillings. The jurisdiction of these
courts extended over the entire In-Liberty of the
parish, constituting the borough, in which neither the
county magistrates nor the sheriff had any authority.
By the Municipal act of the reign of William IV., the
borough was deprived of its exclusive jurisdiction,
and other privileges, such as exemption from county
rates, the ballot for the militia, &c.; the county
magistrates have now concurrent jurisdiction with
the borough magistrates, and all cases of moment are
referred to the general or quarter sessions at Haverfordwest, the county town. The town prison is used
only as a place of temporary confinement, or prior
to the committal of prisoners to the county gaol at
Haverfordwest.
The living consists of a consolidated rectory and
vicarage, in the gift of the Crown; the rectory rated
in the king's books at £26. 10. 10., and the vicarage,
which is discharged, at £13. 6. 8. The tithes have
been commuted for a rent-charge of £236; and there
is a glebe of fifteen acres, valued for the poor-rate at
£52 per annum, with a house, valued at £42 per
annum. Tenby church, dedicated to St. Mary, is a
venerable and spacious structure, principally in the
early style of English architecture, with a square
embattled tower surmounted by a lofty spire, 152
feet in height: being situated in the centre of the
town, it forms a prominent feature in the view of it
from the sea and the surrounding country. The
present edifice was erected in the year 1250, by
Warren de Mountchensy, Earl of Pembroke, after
the destruction of the town by the sons of Rhŷs ab
Grufydd. The body consists of a nave, north and
south aisles, and a chancel; and the church is richer
in sepulchral monuments than any other in South
Wales, excepting the two cathedrals. Of these, the
most remarkable are the monuments of John and
Thomas White, brothers, and eminent merchants of
the place, which are sumptuously embellished and
elaborately sculptured; each has the effigy of the
deceased, in the costume of the time, and in each
also are four compartments, containing effigies of
other members of the family, of whom was Griffith
White, mayor of the borough when Henry Earl of
Richmond embarked here for the continent, and to
whom, after his accession to the throne, that monarch,
in recompense for his services, granted a lease of all
the crown lands in the vicinity of the town. An
altar-tomb is still remaining, to which a brass representing a bishop was formerly affixed, supposed to
have been the memorial of Tully, Bishop of St.
David's. The western entrance to the church is
beneath an arch surmounted with the inscription, in
characters of the 13th or 14th century, "Benedictus
Dominus in Domis Suis." The ceiling of the nave is
of neatly carved wainscot, and that of the chancel is of
wainscot much more richly ornamented; it is divided
into square compartments with a knot of curiously
carved work in the angle of each panel, the ribs resting
on figures rudely carved holding escutcheons for arms.
Some repairs were effected in the building in 1847,
partly by a rate, partly by subscription, and partly
by the aid of Mr. and Miss Tuder. According to
Mr. Fenton, three chantry priests were appointed
to officiate in the church, one at the altar of Jesus,
another at that of St. Anne, and a third at the "Rood
of Grace;" for which services, lands producing at
that time £13. 3. per annum, together with thirteen
shillings and fourpence for lamps, were settled on
the church. There are places of worship for Wesleyan Methodists, Independents, and Baptists; and a
building on the pier, said to have been dedicated to
St. Julian, and used as an oratory, in Roman Catholic times, by seamen, prior to their setting out on
a voyage, has been occasionally used by the dissenters as a marine chapel. National schools for
boys and girls were built in 1831, on the castle hill;
an infants' school is held, and there are several
Sunday schools. A dispensary was established in
1843 for the benefit of the poor, supported by subscriptions, under the management of the medical
practitioners of the town.
An hospital in the town, dedicated to St. Mary
Magdalene, was founded at a very early period, but
by whom is unknown: about the year 1236, it was
endowed by Gilbert Marshall, Earl of Pembroke,
with lands for the relief of the lepers therein; and
its revenue at the Dissolution was valued at £3. 5.
Queen Elizabeth, in the 23rd year of her reign,
vested the lands in the corporation, in trust for the
benefit of the poor; and in the 43rd of the same
reign, by an act of parliament for the better regulation and support of the poor, these estates were
transferred from the former trustees to the overseers
and churchwardens of the parish of St. Mary, Tenby.
The present income is only about £14 per annum;
but on the expiration of the leases, which were
granted many years since, the revenue will be much
increased. Two marks, or £1. 6. 8., per annum, are
paid to the poor in a monthly gift of bread, by the
proprietor of the estate of St. Botolph's, in the parish
of Steynton; being a bequest made about the year
1633 by Richard Budd, in consideration of his having
been saved from shipwreck by taking refuge within
Tenby pier. William Risam, in 1633, bequeathed
£50, and £200, to be lent without interest to, and
to provide coal for, the poor; and to be employed in
putting out apprentices: these sums are now lost,
having been improvidently lent; as was likewise a
bequest of £10, left by Thomas Barret, in 1623.
Dr. John Jones left in trust to his brother, the Rev.
William Jones, certain property, to be applied to
such charitable uses as he might think proper; and,
in 1703, the latter gentleman appropriated £413, to
be vested in the purchase of land, now producing
£63 per annum, for apprenticing children, and
towards the maintenance of such persons as cannot
support their families by their own labour; to which
purpose is also applied the interest of a bequest of
£40, by Anne Hitchings, in 1813. Of the charities
until lately administered by the corporation, the principal are a bequest of £250, by Abra Bowen, in
1679, another of £40, by Mrs. Anne Lloyd, and a
third of £6, by Mrs. Hunt; with which certain lands
were purchased, now yielding £27 per annum, the
chief part of which is divided among three aged
natives of the town, and the residue among the poor
generally; together with the produce of £50, left by
Mary Lewis, in 1783, in money and bread. The
charities till lately under the control of the churchwardens, exclusively of Budd's gift, noticed above,
consist of donations in bread, arising from some small
bequests for the purpose. Among what were the
overseers' charities, besides the hospital lands, are
some fields in Knowle Park, purchased many years
since with a bequest of £50, by Thomas Wyatt, in
1644, and now let at £15 per annum; and a rent of
£2. 16. from Upper Cwm Park, bought with bequests of £10, by Elizabeth Pint, in 1656, and £45,
by Anthony Williams, in 1696. Since the passing
of the Municipal act, the public charities have been
under the control of nine charity-trustees appointed
by the lord chancellor. Some of the charities
have been lost, and the principal of others laid out
in the purchase of land; the whole of those still
in existence are now comprised under three heads,
Dr. Jones's, Almshouse, and Abra Bowen's, and
their gross annual value is about £190. There is
also property for the repair of the church, consisting
chiefly of land, and producing from £60 to £70 per
annum: and besides the harbour-dues, there are
certain funds for the maintenance of the quay, pier,
and harbour, consisting of nominal rents for houses,
stores, and pieces of land, near the shore and other
parts of the town.
The remains of the castle are very considerable,
though mostly in a dilapidated condition. The fortress once comprised within its defences the whole of
the little rocky peninsula which, projecting eastward
from the eastern extremity of the town, forms the
southern limit of the small bay of Tenby; but the
only portions now sufficiently entire to convey any
idea of its original strength are, a bastion and a
square tower, in tolerable preservation, some portions
of the walls, and the principal gateway entrance.
The state apartments may still be traced among the
ruins, and they exhibit the appearance of a splendid
baronial residence, rather than the features of a
military fortress. On the north of the grand entrance are the ruins of a once stately hall, a hundred
feet in length, and twenty feet wide; and near the
gateway are the remains of another apartment, eighty
feet long, and thirty wide; attached to which are
smaller rooms, that seem to have been offices and
barracks for the garrison. A portion of the keep
also remains, occupying the most elevated part of
the castle hill, and presenting an appearance of
great antiquity. The ancient walls by which the
town was surrounded are still in some places entire:
the path along their summit, from the northern extremity of the fortifications to the south gate, may
be traced; and the pointed arches by which the
platform for manning the battlements was supported,
are also discernible. There yet remain two of the
towers by which they were defended, the battlements
of the towers being supported by corbels; and likewise the south gate, surmounted by a low semicircular
bastion of great strength: and besides these, some
other towers of smaller dimensions, chiefly circular,
and a square turret near the eastern extremity, are
in tolerable preservation. Several of the towers are
richly mantled with ivy, and the whole convey an
imposing idea of the ancient importance of this
fortress.
Numerous specimens of old domestic architecture,
formerly existing, have been removed for the purpose of widening the streets, and otherwise improving the town; but sufficient yet remain to give
some notion of the style prevailing in Tenby during
its occupation by the Flemings. Several beautiful
engravings, also, of remains of early military and
domestic architecture, now entirely destroyed, are
preserved in the "Etchings of Tenby" by C. Norris,
Esq., published in 1812. Among the ecclesiastical
establishments that existed at the place were, an
hospital or free chapel, founded by William de
Valence, and dedicated to St. John the Baptist,
which, at the Dissolution, had an endowment of
£9. 3. 2. for an officiating priest; and a convent
instituted by John de Swinemor, in 1399, for Carmelite friars, and in honour of St. Mary. Of this
latter, some beautiful doorways may still be traced.
Near the coast to the east of the town are several
gentlemen's seats, some of them of very ancient date;
among which are, Kîlgetty, Hên Castle, Merrixton,
Bonville's Court, and Amroath Castle. To seaward
are some insulated rocks of romantic character, in
which curious natural caverns have been excavated
by the action of the winds and tides; some of these
are accessible on foot at low water, and one, off the
Castle point, called St. Catherine's island, has been
completely perforated by the force of the waves, and
presents a very interesting appearance. About two
miles and a half from the pier at Tenby, is the
extra-parochial island of Caldey, which is described
under its own head: it contains 87 inhabitants; and
the extra-parochial island called St. Margaret's has
22 inhabitants. Robert Loughor, LL.D., distinguished by his literary attainments, and by the
offices which he filled in the university of Oxford,
was born at this town, where he died in 1585.
Robert Record, M.D., also a native of Tenby, is
mentioned by George Owen, as having been renowned for his works on cosmography, arithmetic,
and geometry; he died in the reign of Queen
Mary.
Thomas' (St.)
THOMAS' (ST.), a township, forming that part
of the parish of Swansea which is in the hundred of
Llangyvelach, in the borough and union of Swansea, county of Glamorgan, South Wales, half a
mile (E.) from Swansea; containing 683 inhabitants.
This place, within the last few years, has greatly
increased in population and importance. It is situated on the left bank, and near the mouth, of the
river Tawy, across which is a ferry to the town
of Swansea on the opposite bank, but which, during
the whole of the interval from two hours before till
two hours after the time of low water, is fordable.
Considerable alterations have been made here, by way
of improving the harbour of Swansea: the principal
are, the construction of the eastern pier, extending
six hundred yards across the mouth of the Tawy, and
inclosing a capacious basin, which at high water has
a noble appearance; and the formation of Port-Tennant, the private property of H. T. Tennant, Esq.,
by whom it was projected, and at whose sole expense
it was completed. This latter consists of a dock
capable of receiving vessels of two hundred tons'
burthen, communicating with the Swansea and Neath
Junction canal, formed by the same gentleman, which
extends hence to the village of Cadoxton, about a
mile above Neath, where it joins the Neath canal,
thus providing a cheap means of conveyance between
Port-Tennant and a large district abounding with
coal and culm, which are brought down the canal and
here shipped. The hamlet includes a portion of the
Cremlyn Burrows, an extensive marsh stretching
along the coast, and bounded on the south by Swansea bay. It formerly contained a chapel of ease to
the church of St. Mary, Swansea; but, from the encroachment of the sea on this part of the coast, the
site cannot now be distinguished. The seat Tan-yGraig is pleasantly situated in the township.
Thomas' (St.)
THOMAS' (ST.), a hamlet, in the union of
Haverfordwest, in that part of the parish of St.
Thomas, Haverfordwest, which is in the hundred
of Rhôs, county of Pembroke, in South Wales,
1½ mile (S. W.) from Haverfordwest; containing 160
inhabitants. The road to Herbrandston passes
through it; and on the west it is bounded by a
stream that flows into the Western Cleddy river.