Clwt-y-bont

Clwt-y-bont
Caledffrwd Terrace, Clwt y Bont
Clwt-y-bont is located in Gwynedd
Clwt-y-bont
Clwt-y-bont
Location within Gwynedd
OS grid referenceSH574630
Community
Principal area
Preserved county
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCAERNARFON
Postcode districtLL55
Dialling code01286
PoliceNorth Wales
FireNorth Wales
AmbulanceWelsh
UK Parliament
Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament
List of places
UK
Wales
Gwynedd
53°08′42″N 4°07′58″W / 53.14503°N 4.13287°W / 53.14503; -4.13287

Clwt-y-bont is a village in Gwynedd, Wales, lying just to the south of Deiniolen. The two villages form one urban unit. Both were built in the early 19th century to house workers in the Dinorwig slate quarry, and both suffered when the quarry was closed in 1969.

Foundation

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The Welsh word clwt means "patch" and bont means "bridge".[1]

Both Clwt y bont and Deiniolen were built in the early 19th century to house workers in the Dinorwig slate quarry. Houses include single houses and terraces from the 1830s. Clwt y Bont seems relatively unplanned, and has the short terraces built into the slope typical of early Gwynedd industrial settlement. The plan was dictated by the line of the 1825 Dinorwic Railway.[2]

History

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After the 1860s, few new buildings were erected until social housing was built in the 1940s.[3] In 1870, the village was part of the parish of Llanddeiniolen. Most of the inhabitants were employed by the Dinorwig-slate quarries.[4] The novelist Ann Harriet Hughes (1852–1910) married a doctor in Clwt-y-bont, where she lived for a period.[5] The large Pentre Helen Housing Estate was built in the late 1930s, and had the effect of linking Deiniolen and Clwt y Bont into one village.[2] The economy suffered badly when the Dinorwic Quarry was closed in 1969.[3]

The locations of some of the mills are still visible, and some of the larger ones are still in use as workshops.[3] There are limited shops and other facilities in the village.[6] The Libanus chapel, and its sister chapel Sardis, are affiliated to the Baptist Union of Wales and are under the pastoral care of the minister of Capel Penuel in Bangor.[7] There are many sites for boulder climbers on the hillside between the Fachwen road and Clwt y Bont.[8]

Notes

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Sources

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  • "Clwt y Bont", Gwynedd Housing, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Deiniolen and Clwt y Bont, Gwynedd Archaeological Trust, 100017916, 2005, archived from the original on 7 April 2016, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Glossary of Welsh origins of place names in Britain: C, Ordnance Survey, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Jones, Eric (23 December 2006), "Capel Sardis – the highest chapel in Wales", geograph.org, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Jones, Eric (17 February 2007), Looking across Ffridd Gel towards the Pentre Helen Estate, archived from the original on 4 April 2016, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • "Schoolboy Error, Schoolboy Traverse", North Wales Bouldering, 20 June 2015, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Williams, Richard Bryn (1959), "HUGHES , ANNIE HARRIET", Dictionary of Welsh Biography, National Library of Wales, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Wilson, John Marius (1870–72), "Llanddeiniolen", Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales, retrieved 25 March 2016