The 1842 tithe map and schedules of Llanwonno Parish
shows Ynysybwl to be a small village consisting of a few
cottages and farms. It was located in the centre of the
parish at the point where the Ffrwd flowed into the Clydach
river. According to the 1841 census around 200 people inhabited
the village and surrounding farms. The majority of them
earned their livings as farmers, agricultural labourers
or female servants. Other villager's occupations included
a blacksmith, timberman, mason, shoemaker, tailor, miller
and publican of the Ynysybwl Inn. Very little change occurred
over the next forty years apart from the building of the
odd cottage.
The old village of Ynysybwl
Indeed the 1881 census showed that the population of Ynysybwl
and its surroundings had only increased to about 270 inhabitants.
Another striking feature of the 1881 census is that not one
collier was listed among the villagers.
An ordnance survey map published in 1884 shows Ynysybwl on the verge of a transformation.
Mynachdy coal level is shown on the map but it was the sinking of Lady Windsor
Colliery on June 16th 1884 that was to give birth to new coal town.
Pugh's Drapers shop - the family emigrated
to Canada during the 1926 strike
One of the old inhabitants of Ynysybwl who was witnessing
this period of incredible change was William Thomas 1843-1890
or Glanffrwd as he was known in literary and eisteddfod circles.
Appearing in serial form in the Darian, he wrote Hanes Plwyf
Llanwynno in 1888. It provided an excellent description of
Llanwonno parish, its natives and their way of life.
The Old Mill, Ynysybwl
He reminisces about Ynysybwl's eisteddfodau and sporting
events many of which were held at Ynysybwl Inn. We sense
that his heart is heavy as he mourns the arrival of the coal
industry.
Colliery blacksmiths, Ynysybwl
Lady Windsor Colliery, Ynysybwl
During the 1880s, David Davies of Llandinam (Davies the
Ocean) arrived in the village of Ynysybwl, convinced there
were large deposits of deep coal to be mined. Tests at ‘Graigddu'
(Black Rock) proved positive and the first sod was cut
on the 16 th June 1884. By September of that year 200 men
had been employed to work in the new colliery, many of
them from David Davies' hometown of Llandinum.
Two years after the first sod was cut The Lady Windsor
Colliery was producing large quantities of first class
coking coal, a luxury hotel ‘The Windsor Hotel' had already
been completed and work had commenced on 300 cottages for
miners. New roads and a railway station followed and in
a very short time Ynysybwl became a hive of industrial
activity.
Miners wages were low, in 1886 colliers earned between
3s 6d and 5s 0d a week poverty and hunger was rife, yet
the shareholders of Lady Windsor were taking a massive
50% dividend. Grand managers houses were built, Tynywern – 1888
and Glynderwen – 1904.
Conditions underground remained poor with oil lamps still
in use after the 1921 strike. It wasn't until 1930 that
the colliery owners began to consider the working conditions
and welfare of the miners who worked for them and in 1931
the Lady Windsor was among the first collieries in Wales
to provide a pithead baths and first aid/medical treatment
room. Residents of the village were also allowed to use
the baths for a small fee (3d to 6d).
Nationalisation took place on 1 st January 1947 and by
the 1950s more people were being employed at the nearby ‘Treforest
Trading Estate' resulting in a shortage of manpower at
many collieries in South Wales. Displaced and stateless
Europeans were offered work in the pits with special allowances
but even this did not fulfil the labour needs of the mines.
By 1956 The Lady Windsor was in need of deeper exploitation
with almost all the reserves in the Upper Seams being exhausted.
Miner's traditional unity was put to the test as smaller
mines were closed throughout the country and their miners
offered work in Ynysybwl. Mobile homes at Buarth-y-Capel
were built for the miners and their families and on 10
th April 1964 many from County Durham arrived at Ynysybwl.
A strike in 1972 stopped production for 2 months but in
1973 The National Coal Board launched a ‘Plan for Coal'
with over £100,000,000 being set-aside for South
Wales alone. In 1974 the Lady Windsor was linked to Abercynon
Colliery by two underground parallel tunnels – one 1,000
metres and the other almost a mile. This link-up led to
the NCB stating in 1977 that The Lady Windsor/Abercynon
Colliery was the least likely colliery to close in Wales.
However following a twelve-month strike in 1984 the LadyWindsor/Abercynon
Colliery closed in 1988 with over 25 years of workable
coal left.