Pendoylan

Pendoylan (Welsh: Pendeulwyn pronounced [pɛnˈdəi̯lui̯n] meaning 'head of two groves'[2]) is a rural village and community (parish) in the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales. The village has won many awards in Best Kept Village competitions and contains 27 entries in the Council's County Treasures database, 13 of which are listed buildings.[3]

Pendoylan
Pendoylan
Location within the Vale of Glamorgan
Area5.8 sq mi (15 km2)
Population464 (2011)[1]
 Density80/sq mi (31/km2)
OS grid referenceST060767
 Cardiff7 miles (11 km) East
Civil parish
  • Pendoylan
Community
  • Pendoylan
Principal area
Ceremonial county
  • South Glamorgan
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCOWBRIDGE
Postcode districtCF71
Dialling code01446
UK Parliament
Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament

Location

The area of the community of Pendoylan, some 15 km2 (5.8 sq mi), is situated between the A48 road and the M4 motorway in the Border Vale. It slopes down from an escarpment in the west, the site of Hensol Forest, and is bounded in the East by the River Ely. Tredodridge lies to the northwest.

History

The area is rich in history. There is evidence of prehistoric activity in two cooking mounds in the east and there is a motte with possible signs of a bailey in the north. The parish church, which is dedicated to St Cadoc (born circa 497), may well have been founded in his lifetime and there is a well named after him and one after St Teilo. The fertile land at Caerwigau was acquired by the Norman de Bonvils and in the twelfth century, 40 acres (160,000 m2) were granted to the Knights Hospitallers who rented it out to the monks of Margham.[4] They later acquired further land and erected a chapel in the 12th century. There is a well-preserved moat from a 13th- or 14th-century homestead at Caerwigau. In the 14th century a family known as “Llewelyn of Caerwigga” were established. The old manor house was founded in Tudor times and stands today as Caerwigau Isaf, a Grade II listed building. The first record of a priest of Pendoylan is early in the 13th century. He is one “Urban” “Sacredos de Pondewelin” but there is a fairly complete list of incumbents from Elizabethan times.[2]

The estate at Hensol dates at least from the early 15th century and Hensol House (now Grade I listed Hensol Castle)[5] was built in the 16th century.[6] It has been home to a succession of eminent people including Judge David Jenkins (1582–1663) the staunch royalist who nearly lost his head in the civil war,[7] Charles Talbot (1685–1737) who served in Walpole's government becoming Lord Chancellor in 1733 and taking the title Baron Talbot of Hensol,[8] Benjamin Hall (1778–1817),[9] whose son became Baron Lanover[10] and may have given his name to the Palace of Westminster's “Big Ben”, the “Iron King” of Merthyr Tydfil William Crawshay II (1788–1867) who later built Cyfarthfa Castle,[11] another ironmaster, Rowland Fothergill (1794–1871) of Abernant who in 1853 commissioned David Brandon to rebuild Pendoylan Parish Church and his sister Mary (1797–1887) who built and endowed a new school building for Pendoylan in his memory in 1873.

Pendoylan Church and Pub (November 2011)

Following Pendoylan having won the Environment Category in the 2004 Calor Village of the Year for Wales competition, Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, visited the village and met residents on 14 July 2005 .[12] He presented a plaque and said in his speech "It is a real joy to see such a wonderful functioning village with such a sense of community".[13]

Amenities

The parish church is dedicated to Saint Cadoc. It contains some interesting features which can definitely be assigned to pre-reformation times, the chancel arch being in the early perpendicular style of the 14th century. Other features are of 14th-, 15th- and 16th-century perpendicular with 19th-century alterations.[2] There is a row of six cottages just to the north of the church that were built in 1817 as almshouses from a bequest of £50 from Earl Talbot of Hensol and £50 from one Philip John. They were of very basic one up one down plus kitchen construction with a fireplace stair. No. 1 was subsequently rebuilt as a school.

The village school is a Church in Wales Primary School[14][15] It was under threat of closure in the 1980s, the roll having fallen from 103 in 1981 to 74 in 1986.[16] Since the arrival of a new head teacher in 1994, it has become much more popular, with up to 220 pupils, many of whom travel from outside the parish. Old temporary buildings are being replaced with permanent structures in 2011/12. Inspectors in 2008 said the following.

"This is a good school with many outstanding features. Pupils make very good progress and achieve high standards because of the very good teaching they receive. The provision is of high quality and the school leadership successfully promotes a caring Christian ethos, which is appreciated by parents and pupils alike. Throughout the school, pupils make outstanding progress in their learning and achieve high standards. Pupils succeed regardless of their social, ethnic or linguistic backgrounds and make very good progress towards fulfilling their potential. They are very well prepared for the next phase of their education."

The village pub is called 'The Red Lion'.[17] Records of this inn date back to the early 19th century, when the publican was also a farmer, but it is probably older than that. It closed in July 2010 and re-opened in October 2011, following a complete refurbishment. As well as a bar, there is a 150-seat restaurant with a downstairs and an upstairs dining area, which has a terrace providing views over the Ely valley and beyond.

There is also a Chapel which houses the Bethania Presbyterian Church (originally Calvinistic Methodism) and a Village Hall built in the 1930s as a memorial to those who died in the first world war.

The Vale Resort[18] is located at Hensol in the North of Pendoylan, close to Junction 34 of the M4. It consists of a four star hotel, two championship golf courses and a leisure centre, with a swimming pool and gym.

gollark: Intel actually *only* have open-source drivers, probably because their GPUs are mostly bad anyway and nobody buys them individually, so they can hardly get much out of artificial segmentation like Nvidia.
gollark: AMD and Intel are very good with open source drivers. Nvidia is pure evil, which is why Torvalds famously middle-fingered them.
gollark: You do, however, get nice things like package management, scripting which is actually good, that kind of thing.
gollark: Outside of servers, though, I don't think there's *generally* a huge performance advantage.
gollark: Well, you mostly avoid the random Windows background services messing things up.

References

  1. "Community population 2011". Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  2. Hopkins, T. J. (1973), "The Village and Parish of Pendoylan", in Williams, Stewart (ed.), Vale of Glamorgan Series Volume One: History on my doorstep, Cowbridge: Brown & Sons, pp. 77–86
  3. "Pendoylan" (PDF), Vale of Glamorgan County Treasures, Vale of Glamorgan Council, 2007, retrieved 17 August 2008
  4. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (1991), "Moated Sites: Caerwiga Moat", Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Glamorgan: Medieval Secular Monuments Vol 3, Part II, Stationery Office Books, pp. 94–96, ISBN 978-0-11-300035-7
  5. CADW, Listed Buildings Database: building 13482
  6. The Times, London (43455), 23 September 1923 Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. Randall, Henry John, "JENKINS, DAVID (1582-1663)", Welsh Biography Online, National Library of Wales, retrieved 18 July 2008
  8. Macnair, M. (2004), "Talbot, Charles, first Baron Talbot of Hensol (bap. 1685, d. 1737), lord chancellor", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 19 July 2008
  9. Williams, David, "HALL, BENJAMIN (1778-1817)", Welsh Biography Online, National Library of Wales, retrieved 20 July 2008
  10. "Llanover estate records", Gwent Record Office, Archives Network Wales, retrieved 20 July 2008
  11. Nicholas, T. (1874), The History and Antiquities of Glamorgan and its Families, London: Longines, p. 6
  12. Baker, Mike (2005), Pictures of the occasion when Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and his new consort, Camilla dropped in to see a little of village life, archived from the original on 14 May 2008, retrieved 10 August 2008
  13. The Prince of Wales (14 July 2005), TRH observe two minutes silence for the victims of the terrorist attacks on London during a visit to Pendoylan, retrieved 22 August 2008
  14. Pendoylan C/W Primary School, Vale of Glamorgan Council, retrieved 19 August 2008
  15. Pendoylan Church In Wales Primary School, archived from the original on 25 April 2012, retrieved 31 October 2011
  16. Report by HM Inspectors on Pendoylan Church in Wales Primary School, Wesh Office, 1986, ISBN 0-86348-245-7
  17. The Red Lion at Pendoylan, retrieved 31 October 2011
  18. Vale Resort, retrieved 31 October 2011
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