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The feature below was first shown on my website on 5 July 2003

John Ball

Images of Wales



Where's that?? — locate Penwyllt on a map of South Wales.


Penwyllt, Breconshire

Photography (on 7 June 2003)
by John Ball — with a Fuji FinePix S602 Zoom digital camera
and Venita Roylance — with a Kodak DX4900 digital camera

Penwyllt was once a thriving but isolated community near Craig-y-nos at the top of the Swansea Valley. The economy of the area depended on its natural deposits of limestone which supported a number of quarries and a brickworks. Residents lived in rows of workers cottages, drank at a nearby inn, visited the local stores and post office, and caught the train at Penwyllt's own railway station. As the industries declined in the 20th century, the population dropped from well over 300 to around 20. The local stores, post office, inn, and railway are now long gone, but the area is full of fascinating relics of old Penwyllt.

In 1998, I visited Penwyllt and produced two Images of Wales features on the limestone quarry and a row of former quarry-workers. Now, five years later, I have visited the area again to find more evidence of Penwyllt's past. On this occasion I was accompanied by fellow genealogist and photographer Venita Roylance from Utah, USA. This illustrated record of our visit is set out in three sections and is enhanced by the addition of the comments and memories of Alan Doyle, a former resident of Penwyllt.


Page 1: Penwyllt Inn       Page 2: Landscape and Limekilns       Page 3: Brickworks and Railway


Penwyllt Inn

The primary reason for my recent visit to Penwyllt was to find and photograph an old pub, the Penwyllt Inn. My curiosity had been stimulated by an exchange of correspondence with my friend Annie (now of Talybont-on-Usk), whose grandmother and great grandfather had once been licensees of the Penwyllt Inn.

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by Venita Roylance
Above: The Penwyllt Inn, just visible on the horizon.

The building was identified as a public house on Ordnance Survey maps published as recently as the 1970s. The building is shown on the Ordnance Survey Outdoor Leisure map of the Brecon Beacons National Park (sheet 12), published in 1996, but it is no longer identified as a public house. The former inn is reached by following the track across rough grassland through the gate shown in the picture above.

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball
Above and below: Approaching the Penwyllt Inn from the north.

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball

In the two photographs above, note the evidence of quarrying on the hillside behind the inn.
The dry-stone wall is constructed from local limestone.

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball

The building (above) appears to consist of two homes. The home on the left shows signs of recent occupation, while the larger one on the right (see below) is clearly derelict, with its central doorway bricked up. In May 2009, Wealden Cave and Mine Society (WCMS) member Peter Burgess wrote: [The WCMS] . . . is taking out a lease on the Penwyllt Inn from the South Wales Caving Club. We are currently in the process of stabilising and restoring the building for use as a new base for our club.

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball

The census entry below shows the occupants of the Penwyllt Inn on the night of 3rd April 1881.

NAME and Surname of
each Person
RELATION
to
Head of Family
CON-
DITION
as to
Marriage
AGE last
Birthday
Rank, Profession, or OCCUPATIONWHERE BORN
Daniel DAVIESHeadM44Licensed victuallerYstradgynlais, Breconshire
Anne DAVIESWifeM38 Ystradgynlais, Breconshire
Howell DAVIESSonU15BarmanDefynnog, Breconshire
Mary A. DAVIESDau 13ScholarDefynnog, Breconshire
Rachel DAVIESDau 8ScholarDefynnog, Breconshire

(Source: The National Archive microfilm RG11/5457  Folio 40  Page 2)

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball
The back of the Penwyllt Inn (above and below).
Former Penwyllt resident Alan Doyle tells me that the Penwyllt Inn, known locally as the "Stump Inn", closed to customers in 1949.
Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball
  Passageway
Photography by John Ball
 
To the left of the inn is a stone-built roofless outhouse (see below), possibly a privy, separated from the main building by a stone-paved passageway (above right).

Penwyllt Inn
Photography by John Ball
Above: To the east of the inn are a number of rocky outcrops where the earth has been scarred by quarrying activity.

Turn to Page 2 and explore the landscape around the inn.


Page 1: Penwyllt Inn (above)       Page 2: Landscape and Limekilns       Page 3: Brickworks and Railway

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