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Coelbren

Coelbren maps

Historic maps of Coelbren and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Coelbren maps

Coelbren photos

We have no photos of Coelbren, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Abercraf| Craig-Y-Nos| Glynneath| Cwmgiedd| Ystradgynlais| Pontneathvaughan| Clungwyn Falls| Ystradfellte| Ystalyfera| Resolven

Coelbren area books

Displaying 1 of 1 books about Coelbren and the local area.   View all books for this area

Coelbren books
View all 1 Coelbren and West Glamorgan books

Memories of Coelbren

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West Glamorgan memories

The Signal Box

The Viaduct c1955
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My uncle Emlyn Rees was a relief signalman who used to work the box shown in photo in G149038. He lived in Hendy, about 2 hours travel time from Glynneath. My father (his brother) used to take to visit and my uncle used to let me pull the levers, a big  thrill as a ten year old. We lived in Rhigos, the next village up the line.
Robert Rees

Dad's Train

The Viaduct c1955
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My father Hywel Williams was fireman on this line from around the mid 1940s until it was decomissioned in 1965. I wondered if he might just be on the footplate when this photograph was taken.

Childhood Memories

I spent my childhood summer holidays with my Nanny at 7 Crown Row, Cwymtwrch, a whitewashed cottage on the main road. My Aunty Annie lived further up the road, opposite the grocers shop. Next door lived my 'Aunty Molly', she had a son called David. We used to play a game with marbles on a board his dad made him. He also played the organ. I remember all the children used to put on plays in one of the neighbour's sheds, we used to buy crepe paper and make our outfits. My aunty's name was Annie Harris, my uncle was Dae John. My father was Jim Williams, he was a miner and died at the age of 43 as a consequence. I still have a cousin in Cwmfllynfell called Marion and her husband is Tal. My aunty's garden backed on to the railway and I used to rush out to wave to the driver. There was a stream just behind the railway and we used to go on long walks.... Read more

The CWM

As a child we spent many weekends in Cwmtwrch. My grandparents Horrace & Betsy Williams lived there. We spent a lot of time down at the river skipping rocks and cooling off. My grandmother always cleaned the telephone booth across the street from her house - I can still smell the Dettol when I think of it. I have great memories of being there, Dado in his green house taking care of his beautiful flowers, and Mamo carrying buckets of coal into the house for the stove. I remember building a kite and flying it at the top of the hill in a field. We often hopped on the bus to go to Swansea and eat lunch at the Windsor Cafe. This summer I will be bringing my husband and 2 kids to Cwmtwrch for the first time, my Aunt kept the house as a cottage, so I am really looking forward to seeing the place again.

Childhood Memories of Lower Cwm

Sometime in the late 1940s my family moved from Upper Cwmtwrch to the Gurnos Council Estate in Lower Cwmtwrch and lived there for the next nine years. I have many memories of the place. The main source of entertainment was the cinema. On Saturday morning I would get on the bus to Cwmllynfell to attend the cinema in the Workingmen's Hall situated on the Square. Most of them were cowboy films. A shilling was sufficient to buy the bus and cinema tickets and leave enough for a packet of chips! I still attended the primary school in Upper Cwm. On one occasion, after school, I climbed a Yew tree on the bank of the River Twrch to look at a pigeon's nest. When the bus arrived suddenly I slid down the tree quickly. When on board I noticed that one of my jacket sleeves was missing. At first I thought someone had cut it off with a scissors! Then it dawned upon me - it had... Read more

The Chapels

In the 1940s and 50s social life in Cwmtwrch was centred on the chapel and public house. There were eight active chapels, each with its own distinctive architecture, and representative of the major non-conformist denominations in Wales at that time. There were three Welsh Baptist Churches - Beulah, Capel Newydd, and Bryn Seion; two Independent Chapels - Bethel and Ebenezer, and three others - Bethania Welsh Calvinistic Methodist, The Mission Hall, and a Forward Movement Mission. The Roman Catholic and the Church of Wales were conspicuous by their absence. As a child I attended the Mission Hall Sunday School and Band of Hope. The Mission Hall was a wooden structure with a tin roof, in sharp contrast to the fine buildings of the other churches. The highlight of the year was the Whit Sunday procession when all the Sunday Schools in the village marched to the Ffynnon (an ancient sulphurous water spring) in Lower Cwmtwrch for an open-air Gymanfa Ganu (hymn singing festival). The Sabbath was fairly strictly... Read more

Clare Road

I lived on Clare Road in Ystalyfera, and the Wern school was at the end of our street.  I remember having a street party for the Silver Jubilee.  I emigrated to Canada in 1978, but have not forgotten the Wern School and all of my friends there.  I had a favourite teacher named Miss John, and I also remember that we listened to "Morning has broken" by Cat Stevens at the beginning of each school day.  My grandmother ran the newsagent in town, and my grandfather was a coal miner.  My parents worked at the Tic Toc factory as did my other grandparents.  I also remember going to the Ponti pool for swims on a hot day.  It was a beautiful place to grow up.  There was also a wonderful shoe store in town - it was always exciting to go into the store and there were shoes in boxes piled up to the ceiling - it's strange the things that stay in your memory from childhood.  It was a... Read more

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