Pontllanfraith (Welsh: Pontllanfraith [ˌpɔntɬanˈvraiθ]) is a large village and community located in the Sirhowy ValleyinCaerphilly County Borough, Wales, within the historic boundariesofMonmouthshire. It is situated adjacent to the town of Blackwood, with the Sirhowy River passing through both locations. The village includes the communities of the Penllwyn, Springfield and The Bryn. The population of the community at the 2011 census was 8,552.[1]
Location within Caerphilly
Population
8,552 (2011)
United Kingdom
BLACKWOOD
01495
The name of the village is a combination of pont "bridge" + llyn "lake" + fraith "speckled", "the bridge of the speckled lake". Although a masculine noun in Modern Welsh,[2] llyn "lake" was feminine in the medieval language of the south, hence the mutated feminine form fraith, rather than unmutated masculine brith as would be found today. The word fraith probably refers to speckled sunlight on the water of a pool in the Sirhowy River.
The modern name acquired the change from llyn "lake" to llan "church", a common element in Welsh toponymy, somewhere around the eighteenth century and led to the belief that there was a saint called Braith, whose mutated form Fraith was similar to Ffraid, Welsh for Saint Brigid.[3]
The Penllwyn Manor, an old stone building which is now a public house, was originally part of the Tredegar Estate, and is believed to be the original home of the family of the pirate Henry Morgan.[4]
In 1912, at the 17th-century mill in Gelligroes amateur wireless operator Artie Moore picked up a distress signal from the RMS Titanic using wireless receiving equipment.[5]
Pontllanfraith was home to a Welsh coal mining community during the early to mid 20th century, providing homes for men working in a number of local pits such as Wyllie, Penallta, and Oakdale. In 1874 and 1875, Gelligroes Colliery was established, striking the Mynyddislwyn Red Ash vein, although the pits were later abandoned in 1875 due to water problems. In 1914, Lloyd's Navigation Steam Coal Co. Ltd. restarted work at the colliery, but World War I caused it to stop again. The colliery was abandoned for a second time in 1915. The colliery was used for a final time in 1917 after being acquired by the Tredegar Iron & Coal Co. Ltd., but was abandoned again in 1918.[6]
Following the 2011 census, Caerphilly County Borough Council published a profile for each ward.[7] This profile covered population, age structure, economic activity and inactivity, ethnic groups, national identity, marital status, hours worked, car/van ownership, lone parents, health and provision of unpaid care, qualifications, household spaces and accommodation types, household tenure, industry of employment, household composition, occupation groups and knowledge of Welsh. Notable findings include:
In 1926, Pontllanfraith Secondary School opened. In 1944, under the Tripartite System, it became Pontllanfraith Grammar School, and in 1959 it became Pontllanfraith Grammar Technical School (incorporating Pontllanfraith Technical School). In 1975, it became known as Pontllanfraith Comprehensive School, after incorporating Ynysddu Secondary Modern School (which existed from 1948 to 1975).[8]
Pontllanfraith Comprehensive School closed in 2016. As part of the Welsh Government's 21st Century Schools Programme, Pontllanfraith Comprehensive School and Oakdale Comprehensive School were merged together to form Islwyn High School.[9] Due to construction being incomplete, pupils remained on the Pontllanfraith and Oakdale sites until 2017 before moving to the new building located on the former site of Oakdale Colliery. On 28 September 2017 the then First Minister Carwyn Jones officially opened Islwyn High School.[10]
Pontllanfraith has several primary schools: Bryn Primary School, Penllwyn Primary School and Pontllanfraith Primary School.
Pontllanfraith is a Caerphilly County Borough Council ward, comprising three seats. The current councillors are Mike Adams, Patricia Cook and Colin Gordon.
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
Mike Adams
1,045
19.98%
Elected
Cathrine Clark
373
7.13%
Pat Cook
926
17.7%
Elected
Colin John Gordon
815
15.58%
Elected
Jacob Pearce
210
4.01%
Laura Jane Richards
Independent
782
14.95%
Independent
515
9.85%
Roy Williams
Independent
565
10.8%
2017, Electorate: 6241, Turnout: 36.5%
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
Michael Adams
1,107
18.27%
Elected
Colin John Gordon
1,039
17.15%
Elected
Gez Kirby
966
15.95%
Elected
Jim Criddle
773
12.76%
Zoe Alexandra Hammond
589
9.72%
Andrew Williamson
544
8.98%
Wendy Phillips
533
8.80%
Mike Jackson
507
8.37%
2012, Electorate: 6208, Turnout: 36.07%
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
Mike Adams
1,300
21.04
Elected
Jim Criddle
563
9.11%
John Evans
227
3.67%
Colin John Gordon
1,250
20.23%
Elected
Zoe Alexandra Hammond
429
6.94%
Winifred Margaret Jones
203
3.29%
Gez Kirby
1,158
18.74%
Elected
Anna Lewis
Independent
309
5%
Jane Mclain
205
3.32%
Malcolm George Parker
535
8.66%
2008,[12] Electorate: 6300, Turnout: 36.2%
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
Jim Criddle
984
14.22%
Elected
Malcolm Parker
965
13.95%
Elected
Michael Adams
794
11.48%
Elected
Malcolm Pritchard
776
11.22%
Gwyn Price
748
10.81%
Gerald Kirby
661
9.55%
Teresa Etheridge
Independent
579
8.37%
Ian Chivers
325
4.7%
Pat Lambeth
Independent
308
4.45%
Jane McLain
278
4.02%
Phyllis Hunt
265
3.83%
Piers Langhelt
Independent
235
3.4%
2004, Electorate: 5940, Turnout: 36%
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
Malcolm Parker
1,033
15.56%
Elected
Michael Adams
986
14.85%
Elected
Gwyn Price
904
13.62%
Elected
Malcolm Pritchard
838
12.62%
Ian Rogers
835
12.58%
Gwenfron Williams
760
11.45%
Patricia Presley
Independent
636
9.58%
Ian Chivers
341
5.14%
Jane McLain
306
4.61%
1999, Electorate: 6285, Turnout: 40%
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
M. Parker
1,908
22.56%
Elected
M. Pritchard
1,561
18.46%
Elected
G. Williams
1,493
17.65%
Elected
J. Morgan
1,161
13.73%
R. Saralis
1,154
13.65%
H. Moses
914
10.81%
J. Shillito
266
3.15%
1995, Electorate: 6202, Turnout: 39.3%
Candidate
Party
Votes
%
Notes
J. Morgan
1,652
19.8%
Elected
R. Saralis
1,615
19.35%
Elected
H. Moses
1,367
16.38%
Elected
M. Parker
1,351
16.19%
J. Richards
1,175
14.08%
A. Brookbanks
916
10.98%
D. Pitman
151
1.81%
J. Shillito
118
1.41%
Caerphilly County Borough Council previously had offices at the building named Pontllanfraith House, although they have now been demolished. The land has since been sold to a property developer and construction of a new housing estate has begun.[13] This was regarded as a controversial move, both prior to[14] and following[15] the demolition of Pontllanfraith House, with councilors raising concerns about affordable housing for the existing population.
Pontllanfraith Low Level was a passenger station on the Taff Vale Extension of the Newport, Abergavenny and Hereford Railway. Originally named Tredegar Junction, opened in 1857, it was renamed to Pontllanfraith in 1905,[16] and then to Pontllanfraith Low Level in 1950. The various junctions around the station gave it access to both the Rhymney Railway and the Rumney Railway. The railway closed to most freight traffic on 9 June 1958, and the station was later closed on 15 June 1964.[17][18]
Pontllanfraith is served by the following bus routes:[19]
The 26 and 151 services are run by Stagecoach Gold, and the 901 is a rail linc service.
Pontllanfraith is under the jurisdiction of the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board. Blackwood Medical Group, an approved training practice, runs two centres – Avicenna Medical Centre and Oakdale Medical Centre, with the former being situated in Pontllanfraith.[20] Pontllanfraith Medical Centre is located on the same site and is contracted to provide core services such as immunisations, child health surveillance and limited minor surgery procedures alongside a number of additional services.[21] Pontllanfraith Pharmacy, an independent NHS Community Pharmacy, is situated adjacent to Pontllanfraith Medical Centre.[22]
Pontllanfraith Rugby Football Club run a number of teams, with the first fifteen playing their home matches at Islwyn Park. The club has been in existence for many years and the first entry on the captain's board relates to the season 1958–59. Ponllanfraith Diamonds Cycle Club founded by Roland Morgan in 1958, which spawned a number of successful cyclists until it disbanded in 1968. Pontllanfraith A.F.C. was a football club which operated from 1947 until 1992, when they merged with Fields Park Athletic A.F.C. to form Fields Park Pontllanfraith. The club was dissolved in 2005.
Pontllanfraith Leisure Centre is situated on the same site as the former comprehensive school. Although still operational, Caerphilly County Borough Council has expressed intentions of closing it to invest the £125,000 annual running cost elsewhere. In 2019, a High Court bid to overturn the council's planned closure succeeded under the principle of "public sector equality duty".[23] However, in 2020, the Court of Appeal overturned the decision,[24] and an appeal to the Supreme Court was rejected.[25]
Pontllanfraith is home to two Grade II* listed structures; Gelligroes Mill and Penllwyn Manor. Both were listed on 25 May 1962. There are also a number of Grade II listed structures in Pontllanfraith: [26]