Groes-faen

Groes-faen is a village approximately three miles south of Llantrisant in the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales. It is in the historic county of Glamorgan.

Groes-faen
Groes-faen
Location within Rhondda Cynon Taf
Principal area
Ceremonial county
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
PoliceSouth Wales
FireSouth Wales
AmbulanceWelsh
UK Parliament

The village began as a hamlet in the 1860s near a trade route from Cowbridge to Cardiff.

History

Dynevor Arms, Groes - faen.

The opening of the Bute & Mwyndy iron ore works during the 1850s had a huge impact on the small hamlet of Groes Faen. The census of 1861 shows that Groes Faen had become a village. Its population was 83 people in 17 households, of these 83 residents 17 were iron ore miners, meaning that on average each household had 4.9 residents with one being an iron ore miner. The village centre was the pub The Dynefor Arms, and the cottages surrounding it.

In the seventies, the nearby Brofiscin Quarry was used as a dump for toxic chemicals. The site was described by The Guardian in 2007 as "one of the most contaminated places in Britain".[1] In 2007 research began to assess the potential environmental impact of seepage from the Quarry.[1]

gollark: ircsysmon, my trivial nim program for IRC-based system monitoring (it made sense at the same time), takes about 10 seconds at most to crosscompile.
gollark: That is quite a while.
gollark: Half of them seem to be clientside things for GH Pages and such?
gollark: https://github.com/valeriansaliou/vigil looks nice apart from the lack of historical uptime data.
gollark: Is there *non*-awful software doing this?

References

  1. "The wasteland: how years of secret chemical dumping left a toxic legacy". The Guardian. 12 February 2007. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
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