Penparcau

Penparcau

infobox UK place
country = Wales
welsh_name=
constituency_welsh_assembly= Ceredigion
official_name= Penparcau
unitary_wales= Ceredigion
lieutenancy_wales= Dyfed
constituency_westminster= Ceredigion
post_town= ABERYSTWYTH
postcode_district = SY23
postcode_area= SY
dial_code= 01970
map_type=
os_grid_reference= SN5880
population= 3,088 (2001) [http://www.aberystwyth.org.uk/fea02.shtml]

Penparcau within Ceredigion UA

Penparcau is a suburb of Aberystwyth in Ceredigion, Wales.

Location & Amenities

The original village was a small hamlet, one mile east of Aberystwyth town centre, but the building of extensive Art Deco style semi-detached social housing from the 1920s on transformed the village. The village lies in the shadow of the Celtic Iron Age hill fort of Pen Dinas, and between the River Ystwyth and the River Rheidol.

There is an Anglican church, Roman Catholic church, two Methodist chapels and a Quaker meeting house. The "Tollgate" pub is named after the original tollgate that stood on the old toll road at the top of Penparcau and is now in St Fagans National History Museum near Cardiff.

Penparcau has its own woodland, Coed Geufron [http://www.wt-woods.org.uk/coedgeufron] run by the Woodland Trust and its own police station. [http://www.dyfed-powys.police.uk/en/ceredigion/neighbourhoods/penparcau/] Other amenities include a post office, two small supermarkets, a garage, holiday park and hotel and until recently two fish and chip shops, one of which has a reputation as one of the best in the area. It also, until recently, had its own travel agent, which closed down in late 2007.

Penparcau recently hosted an "Alternative Energy and Transport Festival" in Neuadd Goffa, attended by the local MP and mayor. At the bottom of the valley, despite being just below Penparcau, a new Welsh Assembly Government office is being built, which will house more than 750 staff. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/4292133.stm] [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/mid/6224769.stm]

History

People have lived in and around Penparcau for over two thousand years. The Iron Age hillfort is believed to have been occupied for some 300 years up to and including the 1st century BC. Pen Dinas is the largest Iron Age hillfort in Ceredigion. Estimated to have been first built around 400 BC, the outline of the ancient ramparts is still evident.

A distinctive memorial to the Duke of Wellington in the shape of an upturned cannon was built on the hilltop in 1858. The hilltop comprises a twin summit system and the mounded defences divide into three systems. Archaeological excavations in the 1930s demonstrated at least four phases to the defences. [http://www.gtj.org.uk/en/blowup1/1199] [http://www.gtj.org.uk/en/blowup1/1198] Pen Dinas is now more popular as a tourist attraction for walkers and used in a more sedate manner for paragliding. [http://www.flymidwales.org.uk/site.php?site=pen-dinas]

Penparcau in 1841 was spelled as spoken; Penparke, Penparciau, [http://www.gigaflop.demon.co.uk/aber/abermap1868f.jpg] Penparkie or even Pen Y Parciau [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/mapsheet.aspx?compid=55182&sheetid=1321&ox=2217&oy=2807&zm=1&czm=1&x=353&y=167] ("on the 1890 OS map") and stretched on both sides of the turnpike road from Trefechan to Southgate. The population of the hamlet was 239, most of whom were workers in agriculture and related rural industries. There were three agricultural labourers and only one farmer; the next most important occupation was that of stonemason of whom there were eight. There were three shoemakers, two tailors and two shipwrights as well as the following: rope-maker, joiner, tanner, carpenter, gardener, sawyer, wheelwright, weaver and saddler.

In the 18th century, smuggling was a key part of the economy, with tea, salt, rum and tobacco being some of the things smuggled into the local area. There are records in the national archive showing an extensive smuggling ring run by the Powell and neighbouring Stedman families. The smuggled goods were bought into Penparcau to avoid the excise men stationed in Aberystwyth.

There is also interesting domestic architecture that can be assigned to Richard Emrys Bonsall [http://www.llgc.org.uk/ardd/pensaeri/arch013.htm] such as the Ebeneser Chapel, still in use today. The plans for many of these buildings can be found at the National Library of Wales.

A famous feature that existed in Penparcau was the toll house. It was built in 1771 and stood at the southern junction of Penparcau (hence the name Southgate). It was built of local slate stone and was roofed with Pembrokeshire slates. David Jones of Dihewyd was appointed as the first gatekeeper in November 1771, and the first tolls were charged on 23 March 1772. The building contains just one room, one end being used for the collection of tolls. A single fireplace at the opposite end of the house was used for heating and cooking. Toll houses were very unpopular with people in rural areas who had to pay to travel along the roads. At St Fagans the house has been furnished in the style of 1843, the period of the Rebecca Riots when many tollgates were destroyed in Wales. Turnpike Trusts were eventually abolished in 1864 with county councils taking over responsibility for building and maintaining the roads but the Penparcau toll house remained a residence until the 1960s.

Culture

The Welsh language is a thriving language and an integral part of the culture of Penparcau. The United Kingdom Census 2001 reported that over 40% of the residents of Penparcau spoke Welsh and used Welsh daily, which shows Penparcau to have the largest amount of Welsh speakers in the local Aberystwyth area (in terms of population size). [http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadDatasetList.do;jsessionid=ac1f930cce6af34f13ff34f426199aed311ef0416eb.e38Qa3mPbh4Kai0LahyTbxaRaxaMe6fznA5Pp7ftolbGmkTy?a=0&b=5939261&c=SY23+1RB&d=14&g=415743&i=1x1003&m=0&enc=1&domainId=16&bhcp=1]

The area has a long literary tradition. The famous bard/academic writer D. Gwenallt Jones (David James Jones) lived in the area. [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s2-JONE-JAM-1899.html] More recently another resident, Ifan Morgan Jones, [http://www.eisteddfod.org.uk/english/content.php?nID=3&newsID=69] won the Daniel Owen Memorial Prize for his novel at the National Eisteddfod of Wales in 2008.

Myth, Folklore and Legend

One of the more unusual residents is the headless dog of Penparcau. The myth tells of how a giant, going to his father's rescue, rode at such a rate that his dog could not keep up with him and its head came off in the leash. The dog now roams, mournfully crying and looking for its long-lost owner. [Jones, T. Gwynn (1930) "Welsh Folklore and Folk-Custom" London: Methuen & Co Ltd. ] Other local stories relate to the discovery of ancient gold in Penparcau, thought to have once belonged to the druids (Celts) living around the Penparcau and Pen Dinas area. There may be some truth to this as early coin hoards have been found, that suggests some of the earliest religious activity in Wales took place on this site. [http://www.museumwales.ac.uk/walespast/article-print.shtml?id=41] It has also been theorised that the original inhabitants were the same people that made the Banc Tynddol sun-disc [http://www.museumwales.ac.uk/walespast/article.shtml?id=8] in nearby Cwmystwyth. There are also many stories relating to the pirates that used this part of the coastline such as Bartholomew ‘Black Bart’ Roberts the Pirate.

During one winter in the late 19th century, villagers woke to find mysterious footprints in the fresh snow. It soon became apparent that these had not been made by any human as they were hoofprints made by a creature who walked on two legs and not four. Villagers followed these hoofprints and found that the creature had walked through fields, roads and even managed to walk over walls and roofs in one uninterrupted path. It was believed that the Devil had walked through Penparcau that snowy night and has never been seen back since.

References

External links

* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/mapsheet.aspx?compid=55182&sheetid=1321&ox=2217&oy=2807&zm=1&czm=1&x=353&y=167/ 1890 Map of Penparcau]
* [http://www.coflein.gov.uk/pls/portal/COFLEIN.REP_CATLIST_B.show?p_arg_names=pnumlink&p_arg_values=6028832 Archives of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales 1]
* [http://www.coflein.gov.uk/pls/portal/COFLEIN.REP_CATLIST_B.show?p_arg_names=pnumlink&p_arg_values=6028864 Archives of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales 2]
* [http://www.coflein.gov.uk/pls/portal/COFLEIN.REP_CATLIST_B.show?p_arg_names=pnumlink&p_arg_values=6028918 Archives of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales 3]
* [http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=3091249 www.geograph.co.uk : photos of Penparcau and surrounding area]

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