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Penllwyn Tramroad bridge at Nine Mile Point


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Nine Mile Point by Stuart, on Flickr

 

This early tramroad bridge at Nine Mile Point was constructed in 1824 to carry Penllwyn Tramroad over the Sirhowy River to it's junction with the Sirhowy Tramroad. The Sirhowy Tramroad had obtained the third Act of Parliament in Britain for a railway in 1806 and had built their tramroad down the opposite side of the valley to this point. From here to Newport the tramroad was built by the Monmouthshire Canal Co, whose own Act allowed compulsory purchase of land to built feeder tramroads of up to eight miles. The 'missing' mile was owned by Lord Tredegar who built and maintained the 'Park Mile' where the line crossed his estate, and extracted a lucrative toll for the priviledge until finally bought out by the GWR many years later.

 

Following conversion to an edge railway in the 1860s, the Monmouthshire Railway & Canal Co section of the Sirhowy line was sold to the GWR. The Sirhowy Railway was expected to follow suit, but upon receipt of a lower than expected offer from Swindon in 1876 the Sirhowy Railway sold their line to the LNWR instead, who were only too pleased to gain a foothold in the valleys. Nine Mile Point therefore became a remote end-on junction between the LNWR (later LMS) and the GWR until Nationalisation.

 

The lower two miles of the Penllwyn tramroad to Ynysddu was vested in the Sirhowy tramroad on completion, and the line continued as the privately owned Llanarth tramroad as far as Blackwood. Horse drawn traffic on the line is thought to have continued until the 1860s, and from 1887 to the early 1900s a wagon was passed over the line once a year to maintain the right of way.

 

In 1902 the sinking of Nine Mile Point colliery began near Cwmfelinfach and the bottom end of the Penllwyn tramroad was relaid and brought back into use for access; the brick reinforcing of the bridge is assumed to date from this period. Initially coal was exported over the tramroad link but as part of the development a new double track bridge was built slightly further north and opened in 1908. In 1905 the Penllwyn line was further relaid up the valley to Ynysddu and goods depots provided at Ynysddu, Cwmfelinfach and Wattsville (passengers being carried by the Sirhowy line on the opposite side of the valley).

 

In 1914 the line across the tramroad bridge was no longer required and was lifted, Wattsville goods being accessed by back-shunting from Nine Mile Point colliery thereafter. From then on the bridge was used as pedestrian access from Wattsville to the station at Nine Mile Point, there being no other access except for the ancient road which fords the river below the bridge. Twenty years ago I can remember a line of old lamposts still crossing an open field towards the bridge from the houses at Brynawel on the valley road!

 

When my father first took me to see the bridge as a young child it was in a very sorry state, with one parapet missing completely and the other with large holes. A double line of GWR spear railings constrained a narrow footpath to the centre of the span. Fortunately the bridge received Grade II listing in 1999 and has recently been restored by the local council.

 

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2013 04 16 01 nine mile point 070a by Stuart, on Flickr

The Penllwyn tramroad through Cwmfelinfach past Babell Chapel and Babell Row in the 1920s. Many of the industrial revolution-era settlements in the valley were built along the tramroads.

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This is a very interesting post for me - whilst I have never been to Wattsville or Nine Mile Point, my Grandma was born and spent her childhood there. Apparently her father was the local methodist preacher in the years leading up to  and after WW 1, and she at age 12 ran the local Temperance League.

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That is interesting. Wattsville never had a pub as Lady Llanover was a temperance type and refused to allow it. There is still only a 'club' today.

The village is also unfinished as the pit failed - to this day there are some houses on a stub of a street that only have pavement access, as the road never reached them.

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 Lady Llanover was a temperance type and refused to allow it.

 

Wife of Benjamin Hall - M.P. for Monmouth and after whom 'Big Ben' was named , he is remembered for championing the right of people in Wales to have religious services in Welsh

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Lady Augusta Llanover was also responsible for 'creating'  what most people now picture as traditional Welsh female dress e.g. shawl, stovepipe hat etc.

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Brian R  

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Wife of Benjamin Hall - M.P. for Monmouth and after whom 'Big Ben' was named , he is remembered for championing the right of people in Wales to have religious services in Welsh

.

Lady Augusta Llanover was also responsible for 'creating'  what most people now picture as traditional Welsh female dress e.g. shawl, stovepipe hat etc.

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Brian R  

 

Indeed she was - see my posts in the Creative photography thread here and here for some pictures of the remains of Hall's Road.

 

I had forgotten about the Welsh dress though...

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  • 2 weeks later...

My grandfather was an LNWR signalman at Nine Mile Point before the grouping. From what my mother told me it was not a happy place especially not for an honest railwayman. 

 

Really? How so...?

 

It's also interesting how many people here have links to this out-of-the-way place!

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  • 3 weeks later...

Lady Llanover also closed the public houses down in the village of Llanover (between Pontypool and Abergavenny).  The remaining establishment was the Goose and Cuckoo, half way up the hill.   

 

I've always thought that NMP would make a good model, the WTT for the line shows considerable movement from the colliery going south, as well as coal movements from Aberdare to Newport using running powers from Sirhowy Junction on the VoN.  If you model it pre-WWI you can run a GWR autocoach through as well.

 

On the matter of Penar Junction, there are some good photos in one of Michael Hale's volumes on the railways of south Wales. Used to play around the trackbed between there and Penmaen as a kid watch Cl37s on their way to and from Oakdale.  Halls Road south of Penar Junction had an on-off use.

 

regards

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