Merthyr’s Lost Buildings: Lost Chapels of the Treharris District

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 ?

Photo courtesy of the Alan George Archive

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 ?

Photo courtesy of the Alan George Archive

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 ?

Ebenezer Chapel in the centre of the photograph. Photo courtesy of the Alan George Archive

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.

Quakers’ Yard – A Potted History

In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson’s Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Quakers’ Yard like this:

“QUAKERS-YARD, a village in the E of Glamorgan; on the river Taff at the influx of the Bargoed, adjacent to the Taff Vale Extension railway, at the junction of the branch to Hirwain, 7½ miles S S E of Merthyr-Tydvil. It took its name from an old burying-place of Quakers; stands in a fine curve of the valley, engirt all round by hills; and has a station with telegraph at the railway junction.”

The village of Quakers’ Yard was originally known as ‘Rhyd y Grug’ or ‘The Ford of the Rustling Waters’, grew up at the confluence of the Taff Bargoed River and the River Taff, and the name was derived from the fact that the Taff was quite shallow here and there had been a ford crossing the river at this point. The village later became known by its more usual name because of the Quaker burial ground that was erected in the village (see previous article – http://www.merthyr-history.com/?p=5069).

Quaker’s Yard was, until the second half of the 19th century, a quiet rural spot. There was a corn mill, Melin Caiach and a small woollen mill on the banks of the Taff Bargoed, as well as a small scattering of houses. With the building of a bridge across the Taff to replace the ford, the village could even boast two inns – the Quakers’ Yard Inn and the Glantaff Inn.

Quakers’ Yard Bridge and Quakers’ Burial Ground. Photo courtesy of the Alan George Archive

The Industrial Revolution, of course, changed all that. Soon the coal trade totally revolutionized the nature of the environment, creating booming and burgeoning communities like nearby Treharris and Trelewis. The link to Quakerism remained strong. Treharris was named after William Harris, a Quaker businessman whose family owned a fleet of steam ships, while streets in the new towns were named after famous Quakers such as William Penn and George Fox.

Religion in the village wasn’t confined to Quakerism. In 1831, members of Groeswen Chapel in Caerphilly broke away from their chapel and built and Welsh Independent Chapel called Soar in the village, The Welsh Independents also built Libanus in 1833 and the Welsh Baptists built Berthlwyd in 1841. There was also a Welsh Wesleyan chapel – Horeb, and a Primitive Methodist chapel – Ebenezer. Finally, in 1862, the Anglicans opened St Cynon’s Church at Fiddler’s Elbow.

In 1858 the Quaker’s Yard High Level station was opened. Together with the village’s Low Level station this created a lively and bustling railway junction where passengers could embark for places like Merthyr and Aberdare and coal could be dispatched down the valley to the docks at Cardiff. In 1840 the engineer – and guiding force behind the Great Western Railway – Isambard Kingdom Brunel began work on a six-arched viaduct across the River Taff. While the High Level station closed in 1964, the viaduct is still there, carrying traffic from Merthyr to Cardiff.

Quakers’ Yard Viaduct and Truant School. Photo courtesy of the Alan George Archive.

As the village grew so schools were built here or in the surrounding area. In 1894, the borough’s infamous Truant School was built in Quakers’ Yard, and in 1906, the Woodlands Junior School was built along the river Taff; 70 years later the building was used for a Welsh Medium Junior School, Ysgol Cymraeg  Rhyd y Grug. After the First World War, Merthyr Tydfil acquired some prefab buildings for a new secondary school and on the 2 May 1922 Quakers’ Yard Grammar School officially opened by Mayor David Davies, although this wasn’t actually situated in the village, but in Edwardsville.

Perhaps the most famous man to emerge from Quaker’s Yard was the world flyweight boxing champion Jimmy Wilde (right) who was born in the village in 1892. Known as ‘the ghost with a hammer in his hand’, Wilde fought an amazing 864 bouts, losing only four of them, and reigned as champion between 1916 and 1921 (see previous article – http://www.merthyr-history.com/?p=150).