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Treforest
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Treforest (Welsh: Trefforest) is a village in the south-east of Pontypridd, in the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales. It is situated in the Treforest electoral ward, along with the village of Glyntaff (or Glyn-Taf). It is part of the Pontypridd Town community. Treforest runs along the west bank of the River Taff (Welsh: Afon Taf), while Glyntaff runs along its east bank.
Key Information
Treforest extends from immediately south-east of Ynysangharad Park, where the A4058 link from the A470 joins the A473 Broadway (south of the adjoining wards of Graig and Trallwn), all the way to join the Tonteg ward in the south (part of the community of Llantwit Fardre).
The village is historically connected with the Crawshay family, who established a major tinplate works in 1835. Treforest is now known for its association with the University of South Wales, originally established as the Newport Mechanics Institute in the 1840s,[2] the campus in Treforest was established as the School of Mines in 1913.[3]
Treforest Industrial Estate is not part of Treforest or its electoral ward, most of which is not even within Pontypridd. Instead, this falls partly within the area of Upper Boat (Pontypridd), but mostly within the Willowford area of Ton-Teg (Llantwit Fardre) and Nantgarw (Taffs Well ward).
Transport
[edit]Treforest has one railway station, Treforest (Treforest Estate is in the Willowford area between Tonteg and Nantgarw). The railway station is located on the Merthyr and Rhondda lines, between Pontypridd and Treforest Estate railway stations.
Education
[edit]Treforest has two primary schools; Parc Lewis, and St. Michael's; though a third school, Trefforest Primary, closed in 2006 despite the petitions from parents, governors and local councillor, as a result of a process commenced by the 1999–2004 administration on the Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council. The University of South Wales' Trefforest campus (previously the University of Glamorgan) is located in the village.
Culture
[edit]The population of Treforest consists substantially of students living away from home, who often leave the village during the summer months, and return in the new academic year.
Treforest is home to association football team Treforest F.C.: this mid-sized Club currently runs teams from Under 8 level to Seniors. The Senior teams play in the South Wales Alliance League and Taff Ely and Rhymney Valley Leagues. Treforest has a purpose-built stadium and club facilities with two bars. Treforest F.C. is affiliated to the South Wales Football Association and is a full member of the Football Association of Wales.
Governance
[edit]Treforest has been an electoral ward to Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council since 1995, electing one county borough councillor. It has been represented by the Labour Party, Plaid Cymru and the Liberal Democrats at various points since 1995.[4]
Treforest is also a community ward to Pontypridd Town Council, electing three town councillors.[5]
It is part of the South Wales Central region in the Senedd and there is one directly elected member from the Pontypridd constituency and four additional regional members.
In the Westminster parliament it is part of the Pontypridd constituency.
Treforest Estate
[edit]
The Treforest Trading Estate, later renamed Treforest Industrial Estate, originated with the formation of the 'South Wales and Monmouthshire Trading Estates Ltd.' in June 1936. This non-profit making company aimed to establish one or more trading estates in Wales, and the first sod was cut on 29 December 1936. By the end of 1937, three small factories had been completed and occupied. The first building contract awarded was a large factory for the British Coated Board and Paper Company Ltd (Wiggins Teape).
During the Second World War, the factories on the estate played a major role in the war effort and national economy; many buildings were requisitioned by the government, and their occupants re-housed in makeshift buildings away from the estate. Extensions and new factories were built by government departments.
Many of the companies on the Estate were established by businesspeople who had arrived as refugees from German-occupied Europe. They had often been able to bring money and equipment with them.
By 1944, almost 16,000 people were being employed on the estate. In 1960, the estate came under the control of the 'Welsh Industrial Estates Corporation', and later, the Welsh Development Agency.
Companies which have operated factories on the Estate include: BOAC, Aero Zip, Metal Alloys Ltd, Afon Tinplate Ltd, Finetex Ltd, Ford, South Wales Switchgear, Standard Telephones and Cables, Fram Filters and KLG Spark Plugs.[6]
In December 2023 a fire broke out on the estate. At around 19:00 on 13 December there was an explosion followed by a fire at Rizla House, a building housing multiple businesses, killing one person.[7]
Notable people from Treforest
[edit]Sir Tom Jones
[edit]Treforest is the birthplace of singer Sir Tom Jones, who was born on 7 June 1940 at 57, Kingsland Terrace.[8] Jones had a telephone box from Pontypridd at his Los Angeles home, imported as a souvenir of his home town.
Morfydd Llwyn Owen
[edit]The composer Morfydd Llwyn Owen (1891–1918) was born in Treforest, and educated at the Royal Academy of Music in London.[9] She wrote hymns, choral music and orchestral works, often inspired by Welsh literacy and folk songs. In 1917, she married psychoanalyst Ernest Jones, but she died the following year at the age of 26.[10]
Meic Stephens
[edit]Meic Stephens (1938–2018), the literary journalist, translator, poet and author, who was professor of creative writing and journalism at the University of Glamorgan, was born in Treforest.[11]
Tourist attraction
[edit]World of Groggs is on the Broadway in Treforest, celebrating the ceramic figurines.
Television series Doctor Who, Torchwood, and The Sarah Jane Adventures were filmed at Upper Boat Studios on Treforest Industrial Estate, before moving to Roath Lock studios in Cardiff Bay in 2011.
Places of worship
[edit]Treforest has been/is home to a number of Places of Worship:
- Calvary English Baptist Chapel, Cliff Terrace. Founded 1849. Closed. Building Sold in 2021.
- English Independent (United Reformed Church), Castle Square. Founded in 1905.
- Libanus Welsh Baptist Chapel, Fothergill Street. Founded in 1841. Now the Cornerstone Pentecostal Church, as of 2010.
- Park Presbyterian Church, Princess Street. Founded in 1909. Closed.
- Pontypridd Synagogue, Cliff Terrace. Founded in 1867, Closed 1978. Converted to apartments..
- Saron Welsh Calvinistic Methodist Chapel, Saron Street. Founded in 1832, closed in 1992. Later, the All Nations church from about 2010, since closed.
- St Dyfrig's Roman Catholic Church, Broadway. Founded in 1868.
- Treforest English Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Cyrch-y-Gwas Road. Founded in 1852. Closed.
- Treforest Gospel Hall, Broadway
- Treforest Spiritualist National Union Church, Cyrch-y-Gwas Road.
References
[edit]- ^ "Ward population 2011". Archived from the original on 19 November 2015. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- ^ "Our History". University of South Wales.
- ^ The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. John Davies, Nigel Jenkins, Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch (2008) pg896 ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6
- ^ "Rhondda Cyon Taff County Borough Council Election Results 1995-2012" (PDF). The Election Centre (Plymouth University). Retrieved 22 June 2022.
- ^ "Councillors". Pontypridd Town Council. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
- ^ Ellis, Chris (1989). K.L.G. From Cars to Concorde. UK: Smiths Aerospace and Defence Systems Ltd. p. 49. ISBN 0-904811-13-1.
- ^ Barker, Miriam; Thomas, Alun (14 December 2023). "Treforest Industrial Estate: Explosion leaves one unaccounted for". BBC News. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
- ^ FamousWelsh.com. "Tom Jones. Singer from Pontypridd, Wales". famouswelsh.com. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
- ^ The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. John Davies, Nigel Jenkins, Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch (2008) pg639 ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6
- ^ Davies, Evan Thomas (1959). "Owen, Morfydd Llwyn". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales.
- ^ Adams, Sam (5 July 2018). "Meic Stephens obituary". The Guardian. London.
Treforest
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins and early settlement
The area encompassing Treforest formed part of the rural Taff Valley in Glamorgan, characterized by sparse farmsteads and limited human activity prior to the late 18th century. Its position at the junction of the Rhondda, Taff, and Cynon valleys, along with the River Taff's gentler flow compared to upstream sections, provided natural advantages for accessibility and early resource extraction, distinguishing it from the more isolated Pontypridd. These geographic factors laid the groundwork for Treforest to emerge as the primary local settlement hub before broader industrialization shifted focus elsewhere. Significant early development accelerated with the opening of the Glamorganshire Canal in 1794, which linked inland coal and iron resources to Cardiff docks and featured key wharves at Treforest for transshipment.[1] Concurrently, proto-industrial ventures took root, including tinplate production initiated through land acquisitions by the Crawshay family, who established rolling mills tied to emerging metalworking operations.[1] These activities, building on small-scale milling, drew initial laborers and merchants, fostering hamlet-scale clustering around transport nodes. Pioneering infrastructure further catalyzed settlement, as evidenced by Dr. Richard Griffiths' 1790 initiative to lease coal levels at Gyfeillon and construct a tramroad connecting them to Treforest's canal basin, complete with a Taff-crossing bridge.[11] This engineering feat, among the earliest documented links into the Rhondda's coal seams, supported modest extraction and haulage, attracting workers and laying transport precedents that predated Pontypridd's rise.[11] By the early 19th century, such integrations had elevated Treforest from peripheral agrarian outpost to a viable satellite village, poised for subsequent expansion.Industrial expansion in the 19th century
The industrial expansion of Treforest in the 19th century was dominated by iron and tinplate production, fueled by the entrepreneurial efforts of the Crawshay family, whose investments transformed a sparsely settled area into a burgeoning industrial hub along the River Taff. The Taff Vale Iron Works, established in the early 1800s, specialized in wrought iron plates and operated under local designations such as "Y Gwaith Bach," providing foundational employment until its closure around 1875 and subsequent dismantling.[12][13] Concurrently, the Forest Iron Works, later evolving into the Forest Iron and Steel Works, emerged as a major employer; by 1856, under Francis Crawshay's ownership, it featured three blast furnaces each approximately 40 feet high, and by 1859, two were fully operational with a third partially built, leveraging high-quality local coal to produce pig iron efficiently.[12][13] Central to this growth was the Treforest Tinplate Works, initially rooted in late-18th-century operations but substantially rebuilt and modernized in 1834–1835 by William Crawshay II, achieving status as Britain's largest tinplate facility by 1836 after further expansions under Francis Crawshay, who assumed control in 1835 and resided at nearby Forest House.[1][13] The works integrated casting, rolling, and tinning processes, capitalizing on proximity to Glamorgan's coal seams and the Taff Vale Railway, which facilitated raw material transport and product export; a tram road connected it to Rhondda Valley coal supplies, enhancing operational scale.[1] This surge in heavy industry spurred demographic and infrastructural changes, drawing migrant workers and prompting the Crawshays to construct housing rows such as Long Row and Forest Row, alongside commercial developments including multiple public houses and shops documented in 1884 directories.[1] The Taff Vale Railway's extension reached Treforest station in 1847, further integrating the locality into broader South Wales networks and amplifying trade in iron, steel, and tinplate products destined for global markets.[1] By the late 19th century, facilities like the Forest Iron and Steel Works were yielding around 250 tons of Bessemer pig iron weekly per active furnace, underscoring Treforest's role in Wales' metallurgical boom before coal dependency vulnerabilities emerged.[13]Post-industrial decline and modern regeneration
The decline of heavy industries in South Wales from the mid-20th century onward severely impacted Treforest, which had relied on coal mining and ironworks since the 19th century.[4] By the 1970s and 1980s, national deindustrialization trends, exacerbated by the 1973 oil crisis and competition from abroad, led to widespread factory closures across the Welsh valleys, including on the Treforest Industrial Estate established in 1938 to counter earlier slumps.[14] Regional unemployment peaked at around 15% in 1990 following the collapse of mining and steel sectors, contributing to persistent economic deprivation in areas like Rhondda Cynon Taf.[15] Regeneration initiatives began with the interwar creation of the Treforest Trading Estate under the Special Areas Act of 1934, which attracted light industries and refugee factories during World War II, providing short-term employment boosts.[5] Post-1980s efforts focused on diversifying the economy, with the estate evolving to host manufacturing, distribution, and service tenants; for instance, Greggs Plc expanded operations there in recent years.[16] In 2017, Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council introduced Wales' first Local Development Order for Treforest and adjacent Parc Nantgarw, permitting businesses to expand by up to 50% or construct new buildings up to six storeys without full planning permission, as part of the £1.2 billion Cardiff Capital Region City Deal to reduce vacancies and streamline development.[17] Further revitalization includes the University of South Wales' Treforest campus, which supports local jobs and skills training; construction of a new academic building commenced in September 2024, engaging regional subcontractors for economic stimulus.[18] Complementary infrastructure like the South Wales Metro, backed by £800 million in investments, aims to enhance connectivity and attract higher-wage sectors, addressing ongoing challenges such as low productivity and out-migration in the valleys.[14] Despite these measures, critics note that decades of targeted regeneration have yielded mixed results, with manufacturing now comprising only about 10% of regional employment.[19]Geography and Environment
Location and physical features
Treforest is a village located in the southeastern outskirts of Pontypridd, within the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taf in southern Wales, United Kingdom.[2] It occupies a position in the upper Taff Valley, part of the broader South Wales Valleys system characterized by northwest-to-southeast trending river valleys including those of the Taff, Rhondda, Cynon, and Ely rivers.[20] Geographically, Treforest lies at coordinates 51°35′37″N 3°19′29″W.[21] The settlement sits at an elevation of approximately 62 metres (203 feet) above sea level, reflecting its position in a relatively low-lying valley floor amid the hilly terrain of the region.[2] The physical landscape features undulating terrain shaped by the geology of the South Wales Coalfield, with surrounding low scarps and ridges composed of sandstones from the lowest Coal Measures and underlying Millstone Grit formations.[22] To the north, Treforest Mountain rises, providing elevated moorland and hiking routes with gains exceeding 500 metres in the vicinity.[23] The River Taff flows nearby, influencing local hydrology and contributing to the valley's narrow, steep-sided morphology typical of post-glacial fluvial carving in the area.[20]Climate and natural surroundings
Treforest lies within the temperate oceanic climate zone prevalent in southern Wales, featuring mild temperatures moderated by the Atlantic influence, high humidity, and consistent precipitation. Average annual temperatures hover around 9.8 °C, with July highs typically reaching 19–20 °C and January lows dipping to about 3–4 °C. Annual rainfall averages approximately 1071 mm, distributed fairly evenly but with peaks in autumn and winter, contributing to frequent overcast skies and around 150–170 rainy days per year. Winters are prolonged, cold, and windy, often with storms, while summers remain cool and partly cloudy, rarely exceeding comfortable levels.[24][25] The area's natural surroundings are defined by its position in the South Wales Valleys, a dissected upland landscape of steep, narrow valleys carved by rivers amid carboniferous coalfield geology. Treforest occupies the floor of the Taff Valley, with the River Taff forming its eastern boundary and flowing southward through the community, draining a catchment that includes upland sources in the Brecon Beacons. This riverine setting supports riparian habitats, though water quality has been impacted by historical industrial pollution and urban runoff, prompting remediation efforts that have restored fish populations like salmon and trout in downstream sections.[26][27] Elevations rise quickly to surrounding hills, such as Mynydd Eglwysilan to the east, offering open moorland and trails amid grassland and scattered woodland remnants shaped by past mining and agriculture. The valley confines create a microclimate with sheltered lower areas prone to fog and frost pockets, while higher slopes experience stronger winds and heavier winter snowfall during rare cold snaps. Local biodiversity includes wetland species along the Taff and moorland birds on the uplands, though invasive species and flood risks from intense rainfall events—exacerbated by climate trends toward wetter winters—pose ongoing environmental pressures.[28][29]Demographics
Population trends and statistics
The population of Treforest ward, as enumerated in the 2021 United Kingdom Census, stood at 5,171 residents, marking a slight increase from 5,073 recorded in the 2011 Census—a growth of 98 individuals, or roughly 1.9% over the decade.[30] This modest uptick occurs amid broader stagnation or minor declines in parts of Rhondda Cynon Taf county borough, where post-industrial depopulation has persisted since the mid-20th century coal and steel downturns; Treforest's relative stability is attributable to its role as a higher education hub, with the University of South Wales's Treforest campus drawing transient students who constitute 55.48% of the resident population, far exceeding national averages.[31][32] Spanning 3.775 square kilometers, the ward exhibited a population density of 1,370 persons per square kilometer in 2021.[30] Household data from the same census indicate 1,765 occupied dwellings, with a gender distribution of 2,708 males (52.4%) and 2,463 females (47.6%).[33] Earlier ward-level boundaries prior to 2011 limit direct comparability for longer-term trends, though 19th-century industrial expansion—driven by tinplate works and rail links—historically swelled local numbers through migrant labor inflows, a pattern reversed by 20th-century out-migration as heavy industry waned.[12]| Census Year | Population | Change from Prior Census |
|---|---|---|
| 2011 | 5,073 | - |
| 2021 | 5,171 | +98 (+1.9%) |
