Dinas Powys

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Dinas Powys
Dinas Powys (United Kingdom)
Dinas Powys

Dinas Powys shown within the United Kingdom
OS grid reference ST154716
Principal area Vale of Glamorgan
Ceremonial county South Glamorgan
Constituent country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CARDIFF
Postcode district CF64
Dialling code +44 29
Police South Wales
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
European Parliament Wales
List of places: UKWalesVale of Glamorgan

Coordinates: 51°26′N 3°13′W / 51.43, -3.22

Dinas Powys (previously Dinas Powis) is a large village and a community in the Vale of Glamorgan in South Wales. The village is 4.5 miles (7.3 kilometres) south-west of the centre of Cardiff and conveniently situated on the A4055 Cardiff to Barry main road. It is generally regarded as a pleasant dormitory village for Cardiff's commerce and industry commuters since the city has expanded with widespread development around the Cardiff Bay area.

Despite the addition of several housing developments over the past fifty years, the old village centre of Dinas Powys still has a mostly unspoiled and almost rural feel, retaining a large village common and a traditional village centre complete with a range of small independent shops, public houses, restaurants and community facilities. In addition there are shops, garages, small supermarkets and doctors' surgeries on the main Cardiff Road and a small parade of shops on the Murch estate in Eastbrook.

According to recent electoral rolls the population is in the region of 8,800. This establishes the village as the fourth largest settlement in the Vale of Glamorgan and larger than many chartered towns in the UK.

The village is known colloquially and affectionately across the area, mostly by younger people, as ' Dinky Pooh '.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] The Neolithic and the Middle Ages

The Dinas Powis area has been populated since prehistoric times. The most ancient artifact found in the Dinas Powys area is a Neolithic stone age axe-head, which was discovered by P. W. Brooks in 1949 and is now displayed in the National Museum Cardiff.

The village features the substantial remains of a Norman castle and the adjacent Cwm Gorge was the site of the celtic hill fort from which the village apparently takes its name. The hill fort site was excavated in the 1950s and was found to contain evidence of major wooden structures and a large quantity of high-status metalwork and jewellery. There was also glass items and imported pottery dating from the sub-Roman period of between the 5th and 7th centuries. The castle was originally the seat of a Norman noble called Baron de Sumeri, but the structure went into decline around 1322 when the de Sumeri male family line came to an end.[1]

According to the historian John Davies, the name Dinas Powys (and its earlier spelling 'Dinas Powis') is derived from the Latin "Dinas Pagus" - meaning "city of pagans". Another more likely theory is that at some stage in the castle site's development it was either built or refortified by a Prince of Powys (Dinas Powys: "The city of Powys").

In the 11th century Dinas Powis was under the control of Sir Reginald de Sully, one of the Twelve Knights of Glamorgan. In 1591 Sir Edward Mansel of Margam wrote his historical document recording 'The winning of Glamorgan' and recorded:

"To Sir Reginald de Sully he (Sir Robert Fitz Haymon) gave the castle and town to be called Sully with the Manor of it, and the Manors of St Andrews and Dinas Powys for his Granary and provisions. This Sir Reginald bestowed much land in fee frankliege to his men and came to be a man of wealth and fame. He had at Sully besides his Castle a fair Manor house built after a new manner, where he did live the most of his time, which house as well as the Castle was broke down by Owain Glendowr"[2]
Later in 'The winning of Glamorgan' Mansel records:
"The Lordship of Llantwit is described as so fertile that as Glamorgan was called the Garden of Wales was this Lordship called the Garden of Glamorgan ... and it is the flower of all the Country ... and it was very full of goodly villages and Courtly houses, most of them still in remaining. The Lord had in this Lordship a noble Castle at Dinas Powys and one at Barry, with his Court house of Llantwit and Grange house of Boverton, so that in the whole it is a most Goodly Country."

Dinas Powis was included in the original medieval Welsh political sub-division called the Cantref of Brenhinol (The Royal Hundred) which later became the commote known as the Hundred of Dinas Powis, which also encompassed St Andrews Major, Michaelston-le-pit, Westra, Penarth, Cogan, Sully, Lavernock and Llandough.

[edit] A sudden expansion

By 1833, the community of Dinas Powys barely existed, but was still larger than nearby Penarth, until Penarth amalgamated with Cogan and Llandough to form a new Town Board. However, St. Andrews Major was at the time substantially larger than Dinas Powis, but even added together their population was still only 474 in total.

The village population had remained almost static at about 300-400 people until the second half of the 19th century when there was an influx into this thriving rural community, including a large contingent from the West Country. The growth of the coal industry saw the first passenger train arrive in Dinas Powys on Sunday, December 20, 1898, and thereafter the population increased rapidly. The new rail link was laid at the bottom end of the Dinas Powys valley and provided a rapid link to the new docks that had been built in Cardiff, Barry and Penarth to handle the expanding coal trade from the South Wales valleys. At that time the only features below St Andrews Major were the small hamlet of Dinas Powis, the rail line, Cadoxton Brook and a number of small farms.

The new rail link provided far better communication and transport to the area making it a more attractive residential prospect and many workers from Barry and Cardiff moved into the Dinas Powys area. As quickly as 1891, the village population had already more than doubled to 1,149 and by the turn of the century ten years later, had expanded to over 2,000. The village expanded in two ways as from the railway link towards St. Andrew's Major many imposing and fine houses were built, in contrast to the 'railway suburbs' that grew up along the railway, near the current area of Eastbrook, where the new housing was of more modest proportions.[3]

Just a few years after the railway was constructed, the main Cardiff Road was developed over the previous unmetalled trackway that followed the route of the railway line. This provided a further burst of population growth and house building.

[edit] In the 20th Century

A corner of the village common land was sold to the Barry Docks and Railway Company for the sum of £160. The then Lord of the Manor and ex-military survivor of the First World War, Major General Henry Lee donated an additional sum of £30 and in 1935 the combined fund was used to upgrade the small green in the centre of the village, known locally as the Twyn, with a War Memorial.[4]

[edit] Governance

Uniquely for this part of Wales, the village is notable for having a community council that has been dominated by the Welsh nationalist party Plaid Cymru, for over two decades. The most recent (May 2008) elections saw this dominance reduced slightly, as the Conservative party won three additional seats on the Community Council, all at the expense of Plaid Cymru.

Dinas Powys falls within the Vale of Glamorgan parliamentary constituency and is currently represented by John Smith MP, a member of the Labour Party (UK). John Smith is also a resident of Dinas Powys

Jane Hutt, a resident of Barry, represents the Vale of Glamorgan in the National Assembly for Wales (Labour Party).

Ward representatives to the Vale of Glamorgan Council are: Val Hartrey, Keith Hatton, Margaret Randall and Chris Williams - all are members of Plaid Cymru.

[edit] Geography

The Westra, Dinas Powys
The Westra, Dinas Powys

Dinas Powys village is spread across the full width of a traditional wooded valley, with the River Cadoxton running in the river valley.

The surrounding soils within the village bounds are mostly a strong, brown, dry earth, well adapted for arable farming and the growing of grains of all kinds that contributed to the area being a mostly farming community until the modern era. The substratum under the whole area is a limestone that was likely laid down under a warm ocean at some stage in the distant past.

The village has not been able to spread northwards, because there were (and still are) golf courses and protected woodlands between the village and Michaelston-le-pit. The freeholders of Cwrt-yr-Ala Estate prevented the two from merging. More recent housing development has taken place in a linear fashion either side of the main Cardiff road and in the direction of Cadoxton and Barry.

It is obvious by comparing variously aged maps that over the last hundred years Penarth and Dinas Powys have spread and grown closer together. In many places the two communities are only separated by a few hundred yards and a couple of fields, although no direct road connections have been added entailing a roundabout car route of several miles via Llandough. The only existing direct road is the medieval and winding single track 'Cross Common Road'. Another traditional lane crossing that existed between the current site of The Malthouse pub and the current Erw Delyn school at Redlands Heights was closed to through traffic following extensions to the Murch estate in the 1970s.

According to the Environment Agency, in the October floods of 1998 only six properties at Dinas Powys were affected. Flooding was caused by the floodwater overtopping the banks of the Cadoxton River among others and ordinary watercourses, restrictions to flow in channels and surcharging of drains.[5]

[edit] Demography

The United Kingdom Census 2001 records the population as being 8,512. Electoral roll information since that date indicates the village population is now closer to 8,800.

[edit] Economy

There are little in the way of major employers in the village. The majority of the working population commute to Cardiff, Penarth and Barry.

[edit] Landmarks

  • Dinas Powis village Common
  • Dinas Powis Castle
  • War memorial on the village green

[edit] Education

Dinas Powys technically has no secondary school of its own but currently remains home to one half of Penarth’s St Cyres Comprehensive School. The "Dinas Site" is the smaller of the two existing facilities and contains the lower school students from year seven to year nine, representing ages 11 to 13, while upper school for the older children is located on Redlands Heights in Penarth.

However, the St Cyres lower school in the village is currently scheduled for demolition in the near future, to be replaced by a larger single site located in Penarth. This is subject to finance being available in the coming years.

The village also has three other schools - Dinas Powys Infant school, Murch Junior School and St Andrews Major Church in Wales Primary school.

[edit] Religious Sites

St. Peter's church on Mill Road is the main Church in Wales parish church within the village while the Roman Catholic congregation worships at St. Mary's church on Edith Road.

Dinas Powys is also noted for its 14th century Norman architecture parish church, dedicated to St Andrew. The building is located in the hamlet of St Andrews, just under a mile away from the Dinas Powys village centre.

Additionally there is the nearby church of St Michael and All Angels in Michaelston-le-Pit.

There are also a number of active Methodist chapels within the village. Dinas Powys Baptist Church is on Murch Crescent, while Murch Farm Methodist Church is at Wesley Court and Bethesda Chapel is on Fairoaks.

[edit] Sports and Recreation

Cricket on the Common, Dinas Powys
Cricket on the Common, Dinas Powys

The extensive recreation area at the village Common, administered by Dinas Powys Community Council, is home to several established sports teams. The first Rugby Football was played on the Common at Dinas Powys, in 1882. It is said that a group of young farm workers challenged a group of players at the new Gwalia Brickworks and thus history was made.

Organised sports are also played on Parc Bryn-a-don and the Murch Playing Fields within the village.

Dinas Powys Football (soccer) Club has recently become the first in the Vale of Glamorgan to achieve the Club Accreditation Programme Bronze Award set by the Football Association of Wales Trust Technical Department.

Dinas Powys Golf Club was founded in 1914 and is considered to be one of the finest courses in the Principality, with views over the city of Cardiff and Cardiff Bay.

There has been an active branch of the Pony Club in the village since 1975.

[edit] Public Services and Village Facilities

The village has two railway stations, one at either end of the village with Eastbrook station at the Cardiff end and Dinas Powys station at the Barry end. Both stations are on the same Vale of Glamorgan railway line operated by Arriva Trains Wales. Monday to Saturday dayimes there is a fifteen minute frequency northbound to Cardiff Central and beyond. Southbound three trains per hour to Barry Island, plus an hourly service to Bridgend via Rhoose.

There are many voluntary organizations active within the village and available for the active participation of residents.

Several pubs serve the village, mostly in the village centre, and include The Star, The Cross Keys, The Swan and The Three Horse Shoes. Across the other side of the railway lines is The Castle Oak (until 2006 known as The Malthouse) on the Murch estate near a small parade of shops.

[edit] Notable People

John Smith MP - Member of Parliament (Labour Party) lives in the village

Ray Smith (1936 - 1991) - The versatile Welsh actor who most famously played Chief Superintendent Gordon Spikings in TV's Dempsey & Makepeace lived in the village and was a regular at The Malthouse pub until his death.

Dave Edmunds (born 15 April 1944 in Cardiff) - the successful Welsh recording artist, popular singer, rock guitarist and high profile record producer lived near the Common in Dinas Powys with his family during the 1970s and early 1980s.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links