Whitchurch, Pembrokeshire

Whitchurch (Welsh: Tregroes, lit. "Town of the Cross") is a small village and parish (Plwy'r Groes, lit. "Parish of the Cross") in north-western Pembrokeshire, West Wales.

Whitchurch

St David's Church
Whitchurch
Location within Pembrokeshire
OS grid referenceSM799255
Community
  • Solva
Principal area
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
PoliceDyfed-Powys
FireMid and West Wales
AmbulanceWelsh

Description

The settlement of Whitchurch is 1.2 mi (1.9 km) from the coast and 3 mi (4.8 km) east of St David's, and includes the parish church (also dedicated to Saint David) and a few houses. The largest settlement in the parish, which covers 3,138 acres (1,270 ha),[1] is Solva, whose own church is dedicated to St Aidan.[2] The parishes of Whitchurch and St Elvis make up the community of Solva.

History

By the churchyard gate is a standing stone called Maen Dewi, believed to be the lower part of a large Celtic cross.

Whitchurch was a chapelry in the parish of St David's before becoming a parish in its own right.[3] It is marked on a 1578 parish map held by the British Library.[4] A later, but pre-1850 parish map shows the extensive parish including several smaller settlements, including the village of Solva, in which there were numerous chapels.[5] Much of the land was still unenclosed in the 19th century.[3]

Whitchurch was in the ancient hundred of Dewisland and in the 1830s had a population of 1,028.[2] The population varied from 599 in 1801 to a maximum of 1,252 in 1851, then had fallen to 800 by 1961.[6]

Whitchurch and Solva share a War Memorial, on which the names of 50 parishioners are listed as having lost their lives in two world wars.[7] RAF St Davids was established in 1943, and operated until the 1990s.[8]

There is an unusually large number of listed buildings for such a rural area, many with mediaeval origins, including the Grade II listed parish church, mills, bridges and farm buildings.[3]

Notable people

The farm of Caerforiog, Whitchurch, is claimed as the birthplace of Adam Houghton (or Hoton), a 14th-century Lord Chancellor of England and Bishop of St Davids.[2] In 1856, a small building survived at Caerforiog with an ogee-headed doorway, possibly dating from the 14th century.[9]

gollark: If you define "objective" as "you can test this against reality", then yes.
gollark: Some theories have better evidence than others, they're never *definitely true*.
gollark: Well, I'm fairly sure you're wrong.
gollark: Nothing in real-world-interacting science is "proven" such that it's definitely true forever and ever.
gollark: You can prove that "in some physics model, energy is conserved"; you can't *prove* "this is the physical model the universe obeys", only show it's really really unlikely that it does anything else in the situations you test.

References

  1. "GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth: Whitchurch AP/CP through time: Population Statistics: Area". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  2. "GENUKI: Whitchurch". Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  3. "Dyfed Archaeological Trust: St David's". Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  4. "Penbrok comitat". British Library.
  5. "GENUKI: Parish map 68". Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  6. "GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth, Whitchurch AP/CP: Population Statistics". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  7. "West Wales War Memorial Project: Solva and Whitchurch". Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  8. "Dyfed Archaeological Trust: St David's Airfield". Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  9. W. B. Jones & E. A. Freeman, The history and antiquities of Saint David's (1856), p. 232


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