David Rees (Y Cynhyrfwr)

For other persons named David/Dai Rees, see David/Dai Rees
David Rees

The Reverend David Rees (14 November 1801- 31 March 1869) was a Welsh Congregational minister of Capel Als chapel Llanelli, Carmarthenshire, and an editor of a radical Welsh language Nonconformist periodical titled Y Diwygiwr ("The Reformer"). He was best known as ‘Y Cynhyrfwr’ ('The Agitator'), his firm political views, and his opposition to the relationship between the Established Church and the state.

Early life

Rees, son of Bernard and Anna Rees, was born and raised on the Gelli Lwyd farm in the parish of Trelech, Carmarthenshire. Whilst a child he worked on his family’s farm as well as spending some time with the local blacksmith, as an apprentice.

Rees did not have any formal education as a child but was instructed at the Sunday school and participated in the Christian worship that took place regularly at his home with his family.

In 1818 he became a member of Tre-lech Congregationalist church under the ministry of the Calvinistic minister Morgan Jones, and in 1822 with the aim of becoming a preacher, he enlisted as a student in a school in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire and later moved on to another school in Carmarthen.

Rees started preaching in 1823 at the age of 22 and after spending some time at a school in Newtown, Montgomeryshire, in 1825 he joined the Congregationalist academy, also in Newtown. Rees studied at the academy for four years and became familiar with some of the most notable Welsh Congregationalists of his time. One of these was the young Samuel Roberts, Llanbrynmair (S.R.) who was later to become a Congregational minister and editor of the radical Welsh publication Cronicl y Cymdeithasau Crefyddol ("Chronicle of Religious Societies").

Personal life

Rees married Sarah Roberts, the daughter of a successful shop owner who was a deacon with the Baptists, in 1832 and they had five children: Bernard, Elizabeth, John Calvin, Luther and Frederick. The last two drowned in an accident when they were in their early teens. His wife Sarah also died in 1857, and Rees remarried in 1858, to Mrs Phillips, a widow from Carmarthen.

Ministry

After spending four years at the academy in Newtown, Rees became the minister of Capel Als in 1829 and remained their minister until his death in 1869.

As well as leading many campaigns to renovate and enlarge the chapel, Rees also had a big influence in establishing four other Congregationalist chapels in the vicinity: Park English Chapel, Capel y Bryn, Capel y Doc and Siloa, Llanelli.

At the start of Rees' ministry it is said that the chapel had around 250 members. This had increased to 589 by 1850 even though many members had left to form the chapels mentioned above.

By Rees' own account in the 1851 Religious Census, the chapel was nearly always full for the Sunday night service, with the numbers present calculated to be around 850 most Sundays.

Y Diwygiwr

Rees established the Diwygiwr in 1835 as a direct result of the Congregationalist ministers' disapproval of the increasingly conservative nature of the Efangylydd ("Evangelist"), another publication geared towards the Congregationalists of south Wales, edited by David Owen (Brutus) who was later to become Rees' arch-rival.

Through his editing of Y Diwygiwr, Rees lucidly disseminated the principles of Nonconformity and his pseudonym was developed from a quote in which he paraphrased Daniel O'Connell's famous "Agitate! Agitate! Agitate!" quote by writing "Cynhyrfer! Cynhyrfer! Cynhyrfer!"

Y Diwygiwr developed during his thirty year editorship into an influential instrument in the battle against the alleged injustices felt by the Nonconformists, and was used to openly encourage them to stand up for their rights against the oppressive power possessed by the combination of state and church. In addition to promulgating Nonconformist principles, the Diwygiwr also voiced its support for such movements as the Rebecca Riots, the Chartists, the Liberation Society and the Anti Corn Law League, but did not always advocate the methods they used, especially the most violent.

Rees' rise to prominence was also due to the long-standing feud between him and David Owen ("Brutus") who edited the church's Welsh publication Yr Haul ("The Sun"). In the literary exchanges between them, Brutus' satirical and vitriolic attacks on both Rees personally and Nonconformism in general were answered by an unequivocal and passionate defence in favour of the Nonconformists' Christian and political principles which were embedded in Rees' ideology.

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