Bedwas

Bedwas
Bedwas
 Bedwas shown within Caerphilly
Population 8,512 
OS grid referenceST175895
Principal areaCaerphilly
Ceremonial countyGwent
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town CAERPHILLY
Postcode district CF83
Dialling code 029
Police Gwent
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK ParliamentCaerphilly
List of places
UK
Wales
Caerphilly

Coordinates: 51°35′33″N 3°12′22″W / 51.5926°N 3.2061°W

Bedwas is a town two miles north-east of Caerphilly, south Wales, situated in the Caerphilly county borough, within the historic boundaries of Monmouthshire.

Bedwas neighbours Trethomas, Graig-y-Rhacca and Machen, and forms a council ward in conjunction with those communities.

Early history

Traditionally a farming community, Bedwas was originally called Lower Bedwas. Maesycwmmer, a small village not far from Bedwas, was called Upper Bedwas. The two villages became known as what we know them today in the 19th century. Bedwas owes much of its own development to the development of the South Wales coalfield and the Welsh coal mining industry . This is depicted in the early Census records. According to the 1811 census, Lower Bedwas consisted of 47 occupied houses and 65 families. 59 of these families were engaged in agriculture and 6 in trade, manufacture and handicraft. There were 254 residents in Lower Bedwas in 1811, 130 males and 124 females. By 1911, the population had risen to 3231 according to the census. In the late 19th century it was home to four coal pits and the construction of a large-scale colliery, Bedwas Navigation Colliery, had been completed by 1913. The colliery had an explosion in 1912.

After coal mining

The former Bedwas railway station in 1962

Bedwas Navigation Colliery, along with other collieries, closed in the Miners' Strike of 1984-85, and did not re-open. Light industry replaced mining as the main local employer. Bedwas House Industrial Estate houses the home of the nationwide brand Peter's Pies, a local depot for Stagecoach Buses, DAS Motor Claims Centre, and formerly a warehouse for General Electric.

Sport

Church Street in Bedwas

The Bridge Field is home to Bedwas RFC who are currently in the Welsh Premier league and also has an active comprehensive school side. There is also a longstanding Junior Football team BTM FC that has served the area for the past 30 years , the club runs girls & boys Mini teams and boys Junior teams and currently plays in the Newport & District Youth League but will next year be back in the Taff Ely & Rymney Valley League. Past players for BTM include former Cardiff City captain and Wales International Jason Perry, Former Nottingham Forest player Christian Edwards and Newport County's David Pipe. The club was also an important part of the Bedwas and Trethomas Community Association which after over 10 years of fighting last year succeeded in getting a community hall built on the clubs site at Bryn Field, Bedwas which allows the club access to the excellent facilities the hall offers.

Parish church

St. Barrwg church

The parish church is dedicated to St. Barrwg, who was a disciple of St. Cadoc, and had a hermitage on what is now Barry (Barrwg) Island. The church is affiliated to the Church in Wales. It has a saddle-back tower, and dates back at least to the 12th Century, first appearing in historical records in 1102.

The current (2009) rector is the Rev. Peter Crocker.

Health research

Men from Bedwas participate in one of the world's longest running epidemiology studies - The Caerphilly Heart Disease Study. Since 1979, a representative sample of adult males born between 1918 and 1938, living in Caerphilly and the surrounding villages of Abertridwr, Bedwas, Machen, Senghenydd and Trethomas, have participated in the study. A wide range of health and lifestyle data have been collected throughout the study and have been the basis of over 400 publications in the medical press. A notable report was on the reductions in vascular disease, diabetes, cognitive impairment and dementia attributable to a healthy lifestyle.[1]

Literary association

George Borrow passed through Bedwas in November 1854. He recorded it in his later book of his travels 'Wild Wales' as Pentref Bettws which he said meant village of the bead-house.

References

  1. The Caerphilly and Speedwell Collaborative Group. (1984 September). "Caerphilly and Speedwell collaborative heart disease studies.". Journal of Epidemiology and Public Health 38 (3): 259–262. PMID 6332166 PMC 1052363.

External links