Here is an example of some of the New Year’s Eve treats from 80 years ago as advertised in the Merthyr Express.

The Melting Pot – Merthyr Tydfil's History and Culture
In Association with the Merthyr Tydfil & District Historical Society
Here is an example of some of the New Year’s Eve treats from 80 years ago as advertised in the Merthyr Express.

Carrying on with the requested look at Merthyr’s lost chapels, here is the final batch – the lost chapels of Treharris and District.
TREHARRIS
Bethania Welsh Calvinistic Methodist Chapel
Penn Street, Treharris
Built 1880. Demolished 1970
No photo
Forest Road Pentecostal Mission
Forest Road, Treharris
Built ? Demolished ?

Saron Welsh Wesleyan Chapel
John Street, Treharris
Built 1895. Demolished ?

Trinity Forward Movement Presbyterian Chapel
Perrott Street, Treharris
Built 1894. Rebuilt 1914. Demolished 2001.

Wesleyan Chapel
John Street, Treharris
Built 1883. Rebuilt 1900. Demolished ?

Zion Primitive Methodist Chapel
Williams Terrace, Treharris
Built 1887. Rebuilt 1890. Demolished 1978

EDWARDSVILLE
Seion Welsh Independent Chapel
Cardiff Road, Edwardsville
Built 1902. Demolished ?

TRELEWIS
Ebenezer Welsh Independent Chapel
High Street, Trelewis
Built 1875. Rebuilt 1889. Demolished ?

Trinity English Baptist Chapel
Richards Terrace, Trelewis
Built 1909. Demolished 2016

BEDLINOG
Gosen Welsh Calvinistic Methodist Chapel
High Street, Bedlinog
Built 1877. Rebuilt 1910. Demolished ?

QUAKERS’ YARD
Ebenezer Primitive Methodist Chapel
Built ? Demolished ?

Horeb Welsh Wesleyan Chapel
Mill Road, Quakers’ Yard
Built 1833. Rebuilt 1839. Demolished ?
No Photo
Libanus Welsh Independent Chapel
Leigh Terrace, Quakers’ Yard
Built 1833. Rebuilt 1859. Demolished ?

Soar Welsh Independent
Pentwyn Deintyr, Quakers’ Yard
Built 1831. Demolished ?
No Photo
If anyone call fill in any of the dates in this article, or if anyone has photographs of the three chapels that I don’t have photos of, any information would be greatly appreciated.

From the Merthyr Telegraph 170 years ago today….


80 years ago today….

by Alison Davies
With the proposed water treatment works at Dan y Castle Farm I have been inundated with messages asking for the history of the farm.
Dan y Castle , Llwyn Molgoch.
Dan y Castle Farm – or, to give it, its original name Llwyn Molgoch is a farmstead below Pontsarn Road, it nestles in the summer shadows, southwest of the Brynar and Morlais Castle hill.
With the building of a new road alongside the heads of the valleys, the land it is now visible from the roadside.

There has been a farmstead on this site since at least the 1500s, with earliest records naming it as Tir Llwyn Molgoch as part of the original Tir y Gyrnos Farm in 1640s with it eventually being sold in the early 1700s.
The original name Llwyn Molgoch was translated as ‘Bush of the red summit’, by Charles Wilkins, 1904.
Wilkins wrote, that, ‘tradition at the farm was, that Molgoch was a warrior, who, when escaping his enemies, sort shelter in a bush, where he was captured and killed’.
While, John Griffiths, writing about The Farms in the Merthyr Valley in 2011 gave two possible explanations, one, of Molgoch as, either, meaning’ Red Hill’ or secondly ‘the farm at ‘Molgoch Grove’ where he gives Molgoch as a name, or nickname. Griffiths further questioned, that, in some Welsh directories Moloch meant terror or dread.
There are a variety of spelling variations for Llwyn molgoch.
Lloyne moyle Goch – 1756 Gyrnos sale
Llwynmoelgoch – 1839 Merthyr Telegraph.
Glamol Yoch – 1850s Tithe map.
While, I am neither able to prove, or disprove its early origins, we will look at its significance and growth as one of the most important estate farm lands throughout the 1800s in Merthyr, and, how it became an integral piece of Merthyr’s history.
By the early 1800s Llwyn Molgoch had been separated from the original Gyrnos farm and was now part of the Penydarren Ironworks Estate land.
It was here at Llwyn Molgoch on May 13th 1813 that David Davies was born. He would grow up to be one of the most influential businessmen in 19th century South Wales.
While of interest is that his father, Thomas, rolled the first Iron rail at the Penydarren Ironworks and in South Wales.
David began work at Penydarren iron works firstly as a door boy at a young age, then training as a cutter man. Through his skill as a cutter, he was noted to have improved the manufacture of nail iron at Penydarren.
David left Penydarren works to take on the College Lock Ironworks in Llandaff, Cardiff.
By the early 1860s, he had then become the general manager at Gadlys Ironworks until 1863, when, he was drawn back to his native Merthyr. With his business partner, Thomas Williams he purchased the Penydarren estate and its works where he lived until 1884. From there, he became a partner, and later sole proprietor of the famous Beaufort Tinplate Company in Morriston, and Alderman, JP Swansea.
David Davis died September 1894 aged 81 years. The newspapers of the day ran extensive tributes to his achievements.
He is buried alongside his first wife in Cefn Cemetery.
By the 1830s Llwyn Molgoch was now in the ownership of the Crawshay family, and part the Cyfarthfa Estate. In the farmhouse where David Davies was born, now lived one of the first gamekeepers to the Crawshay family Thomas Havard who later moved to the newly built Gurnos Model Farm.
A succession of gamekeepers went on to live at Llwyn Molgoch. There was an ongoing problem with poaching on the Cyfarthfa Estate. From the front door, just two fields away, stood a folly, a stone tower known as the ‘keepers Tower’. It still stands today but is now surrounded by houses in New Gurnos, near to Pen y Dre School.

From this tower the gamekeepers would patiently wait for the poachers and their dogs, this elevated view allowed the gamekeepers to track the poachers across the land. Looking at Ariel photos today you can still see a well-trodden pathway leading from Llwyn Molgoch to the tower.
The land here is a pre industrial landscape undeveloped.
The history of the Cyfarthfa Estate is too important to be brushed aside, too important to be ignored, forgotten and built over. The act of preserving or preservation isn’t for the here and now . It’s for the future, a gift of preservation of our heritage for a generation or generations to come.
In 2025 , to mark the 200th year of Cyfarthfa Castle, Merthyr Historical Society and Cyfarthfa Castle produced a book called Cyfarthfa Castle and Park 1825 -2025. A people’s History. Here on page 41 is an article by Christine Trevett. This article, titled Class, clashes and Crawshay Land. The article formally acknowledges the history, and the importance of the Cyfarthfa estate and its lands. It was chosen, I’m sure by the author for its weight of significance.
In writing about it, she shows how very important this landscape is.
Now acknowledged in print, its history stands for the future. Its future should be preserved, therefore, now is the time, time for, Merthyr Historical Society, Cyfarthfa Castle, Cyfarthfa Foundation and Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council to stand up for our history, and Heritage.
To see more of Alison’s fantastic research about Pontsarn and Vaynor, please follow this link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/747174317220437
By Carolyn Jacob
The story of modern Italian immigration began with a tide of economic migrants in the 19th century. The majority coming from the mountain villages of the North, often as seasonal workers walking overland to French ports. Gradually more stayed and either saved enough to bring their families here or married local women and started families here. They encouraged other family members and friends from their villages to join them in a classic pattern of chain migration. The 20th century saw another wave of immigration, predominantly from the South of Italy and Sicily. A significant number passed through London and branched out to establish communities in South Wales.
Charlie Speroni wrote that leaving the family farm and vineyards in Italy was a major upheaval. As a child in 1927 he arrived in Wales unable to speak a word of English but he was made to feel very welcome. As well as attending school he was expected to work in the family business. During the depression the family rented a fish and chip shop in Penydarren and Charlie was in full time employment working on the chip carts in the winter and the ice cream carts in the summer months. He worked in London for a few years but always returned to Merthyr. Charlie never returned again to Italy and said that “The sky may not be so blue in Wales, but the friendliness of its people make it home.”

The Galleozzie family are a Merthyr family! They have been living in Merthyr Tydfil for over 130 years, since Luigi moved here in the 1870s. Martyn Galleozzie, a former Welsh ABA featherweight champion in the 1970s was definitely Welsh.

Dominico Basagelao arrived in South Wales in the early 1860s and finding himself in Pantywaun on a snowy winter’s evening he took lodgings with Mr and Mrs Thomas of the Royal Arms Public House. He found work in as a colliery in the South Tunnel Drift Mine. Although a poor Italian and a stranger, he married into the rich Jones (Ceffyl Gwyn) family who were Welsh speaking chapel people. John Martin Basagelao born in 1868 became a wealthy man. He was the landlord of the Tredegar Arms and the former Red Lion public houses at Dowlais Top.
At the start of World War II Italian nationals were interned as enemy aliens, which many felt to be extremely harsh treatment as they themselves were fiercely anti-Fascist. Just prior to the Second World War a number of Italian residents in the Borough decided that the time had come to make important decisions and a number made the big step of applying for and achieving British citizenship. Among their number was Giovanni Bracchi from Troedyrhiw, Giovanni and Giuseppe Opel from Treharris and lastly Cesare Cordani, Merthyr Tydfil in April 1940.
From the 1880s the Berni family had a café in Pontmorlais, and then John Berni had a temperance bar and high-class confectionery at 91 High Street.

Mr Barsi was at one time an electric tram driver but later he ran a fish and chip shop in Penydarren. He was thankfully not interned during the Second World War, having served his adopted country well during the First in the Welsh Regiment.

The Provini’s came to Cefn Coed from Tredegar and kept the Corner Cafe for many years, there was the Provini fish-bar in Georgetown and they also kept the Wellington in Bethesda Street. Frank and Tony Viazzani in the Station Café, John Street were the ticket agents for all local boxing tournaments and the walls of the café are still decorated by many boxing photographs of Howard Winstone.
From the Merthyr Express 80 years ago today….

by Barrie Jones
The following is a transcript of an obituary for Aladdin Gibbs by John Devonald printed in the Merthyr Express on the 23rd of May 1931. The author, John Devonald (Eos Ynysowen), (1863-1936) was a professional singer and musical director who in his later years was a regular contributor of articles for Y Cerddor (The Musician) titled “Notes from Merthyr”, as well as writing pieces for the Merthyr Express[i].
What John Devonald does not mention in the obituary, is that Aladdin was of Romany descent, his parents, Deladdus (Aladdin) Lovele/Gibbs and Pheobe Colin, migrated to South Wales from the Welsh Marches in the mid-nineteenth century. Aladdin senior was also a knife and scissor grinder and may also have been a harpist. The account of Ladin y Telynwr and his son and grandson is an example of the rich contribution Romany harpists made to the long musical tradition of harp playing in both Merthyr and Wales.
Aladdin Gibbs – An Appreciation by Mr. John Devonald
A few weeks ago (23rd April 1931), one of Merthyr’s most notable characters in the last century was buried at Llanfabon churchyard (Nelson)– Aladdin Gibbs (1851-1931). At one time in his career, he was noted as a runner and walker and held the record for the one mile walk for some years. He was known far and wide as “Ladin Gibbs y raswr (racer),” “Ladin Gibbs y cerddor (musician),” or “Ladin Gibbs y telynwr (harpist).” His profession was that of knife and scissor grinder and repairer of umbrellas, and he carried on his trade almost to the end. Last year I saw him at it in Aberfan, although he told me he was 82 years of age. I remember him coming to Aberdare when I was a boy. He was different to all other grinders inasmuch as he had a shaft attached to his machine and a fine pony in it, while it was one mass of glittering brass. He himself was always spick and span. He was supposed to be one of the best built men in Merthyr: indeed, Drs. Ward and Webster, the old Merthyr surgeons, said he was. But what drew me to Aladdin Gibbs was his passion for the harp. He played for years on a harp made by himself and would frequent the fairs in the Glamorgan and Monmouthshire towns, when it was the custom to have a “telyn ymhob tafarn” (a harp in every public-house). He believed in the old triple string harp[ii], and insisted that his son Aladdin, should be taught in that method, that is, playing with the instrument resting on the left shoulder, and not on the right, like the more modern pedal harp, although his teacher was one of the most up-to-date in Wales, Mr. Taliesin James[iii], who is still with us, and the son of Mr. James James, the composer of “Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau.” Aladdin Gibbs would not be considered by Merthyr Eisteddfodwyr as an eisteddfodwr, yet he probably attended more National Eisteddfodau than any other Merthyr man. Be the eisteddfod in North or South, Gibbs would be there with his son. The later competed in the harp solo contests and won more than once. I shall always remember the pride of the old gentleman at the Bangor National (1890), when the boy won and was invested by the then Queen of Romania (Carmen Sylvia)[iv], who kissed him. The last time I saw them was at the Caernarfon National Eisteddfod. The son did not win, and the father, like a true sportsman, did not complain.
Aladdin Gibbs junior was a member of a troupe[v] travelling the United Kingdom and Ireland, of which I was musical director, and the question often came, “What’s the matter with your harpist?” The answer was always the same, “He is playing in the Welsh style.” I mentioned to his father once that his insistence must have been a drawback to the son, but his answer was, “The Welsh way is the correct way.” His name would not suggest that of a Welshman, yet how many of our countrymen are prepared to stick to a Welsh custom with the same tenacity?
Aladdin Gibbs was born in Caerleon in Monmouthshire, came to Merthyr when he was very young, and although an enthusiast in running, walking, boxing – his son-in-law being Patsy Perkins[vi], once well known in the boxing world – and all sport, yet his great passion was the harp. His last conversation with me was concerning his son’s harp, which he described as a beauty. His son[vii] is a harpist of great ability, and he has a son 10 years of age who is coming on very well indeed on the same instrument.
[i] More information on John Devonald can be gleaned from notes compiled by Dr. Fred Holley in the Merthyr Historian, Volume 22 (2011), pp. 87-123.
[ii] Triple harp (telyn deires), commonly known as the Welsh harp, comprising of three parallel rows of strings.
[iii] Taliesin James, also known as “Professor James”, of Aberdare was a renowned music tutor, his father James was a harpist who together with his father Evan composed Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau.
[iv] Elisabeth of Wied, Queen of Romania (1843-1916), she was a prolific writer under the name Carmen Sylva.
[v] Either the “Four Royal Welshmen” or the “Welsh Wanderers”.
[vi] George (Patsy) Perkins, featherweight boxer and boxing promoter was married to Aladdin’s daughter Rhoda Gibbs.
[vii] Aladdin Gibbs (1874-1939) was also landlord of the Rose and Crown, Quar, and later the Brecon House Inn, Brecon Road. His son Reginald (1921-1999) studied music in London and was a professional harpist performing with leading British orchestras.