Taigwynion

Taigwynion is a hamlet 1 km ENE of Llandre in Ceredigion, Wales.[1] It has 11 houses and a postcode of its own, SY24 5AG.

Taigwynion
Taigwynion
Location within Ceredigion
Population27 
OS grid referenceSN632871
Community
  • Genau'r Glyn
Principal area
Ceremonial county
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Postcode districtSY24
Dialling code01970
PoliceDyfed-Powys
FireMid and West Wales
AmbulanceWelsh
UK Parliament

Toponymy

Taigwynion has no English name and is formed as a compound name from the Welsh word 'tai', plural of 'ty' (house) and 'gwynion' (white). The English translation of Taigwynion is 'White Houses' which suggests that the original houses were whitewashed. The hamlet was well-established prior to the first census records in 1841.

Geography

Borth, Ynyslas and the north end of Llandre are the only immediate habitations visible from Taigwynion. The Llŷn Peninsula from Mynydd y Rhiw to Criccieth is visible on the horizon. As an inhabitation it is well connected by a series of footpaths to Llandre, Glanfread to the north and by a bridleway eastwards to Pwllglas. It is located on the 75 m contour and faces the northwest.

A stream arising on land belonging to Pwllglas farm above Taigwynion runs through Taigwynion and Llandre to join the River Ceiro at Aberceiro, south of Llandre. It is piped under the road for most of its course through Llandre and only reappears immediately south of Llandre itself alongside the railway.

History

Historically it was populated by agricultural labourers, weavers and carpenters.

The poet and former Archdruid John James Williams was born in Taigwynion.

Dwellings

The houses are a mix of relatively new and older houses. The last new house was occupied in 1993.

Decade builtHistorical1900191019201930194019501960197019801990
No dwellings2-2----1312

Events

  • Riverside Caravan Park, 0.5 km north of Taigwynion, was flooded after the June 9, 2013 rain and received widespread coverage in the media.[2]
  • Farmbox Meats Ltd, 0.5 km northwest of Taigwynion, was raided in the horsemeat scandal.[3]

References

  1. Location details https://streetmap.co.uk/idgc.srf?x=263268&y=287100
  2. BBC Wales flooding: Residents left devastated by floods https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18378978
  3. BBC Wales Horsemeat row: Slaughterhouse and meat firm raided https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21434077


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