Wednesday, 18 November 2020

The Lost Cottages - Brwynog Uchaf, Llyn Cowlyd, Llanrhychwyn Parish

Brwynog Uchaf occupies an elevated position above Dyffryn Conwy, at the end of the winding road which connects Trefriw with Llyn Cowlyd. A lack of rubble and a rather uniform height to the ruined walls suggests the place has been deliberately demolished, perhaps with the stone being robbed out for other projects, rather than a slow decay after abandonment. The weather for this visit was bad, verging towards atrocious, and it gives one a picture of what it might have been like living up here year-round. Summers might have been idyllic in some ways, but winters would have been marked by cloying mud, rain, cold, and occasionally snow. Keeping a house like this warm through the winter would have been hard work, and I don't envy the people who had to gather in the fuel - whether that was peat, wood, or coal - or those who had to keep the fires going.
 
Brwynog Uchaf will necessarily be a short post because there's so little left of the property. Its sister house, Brwynog Isaf, a few hundred yards away, is much more complete.
 

Brwynog Uchaf sits at 330 metres above sea level, just to the east of the road to Llyn Cowlyd, on an elevated but quite level area of land between Moel Eilio and Cefn Cyfarwydd. 'Brwynog' means 'abounding with rushes,' and 'uchaf' means 'higher'. (Brwynog can also mean 'sorrowful,' but I'm hoping in this case the house was named for the former, not the latter.) Just a look at the foreground of this picture will show the property was well named.

The house can be found at Ordnance Survey grid reference SH 7463 6410.


From a little way to the north, Brywnog Uchaf can be see to nestle into a slight rise of land in the middle of this shallow valley that leads to Cowlyd, with a few pine trees marking the site of the house.


On the 1888-1913 map the house is shown describing an L shape with the top of the L in the north, but this doesn't quite tally with what's seen on the ground now. 


The house as seen from above on the current Ordnance Survey app. It seems likely that the flat area to the left of the house was built up when the road to the lake was improved, erasing some aspects of the footprint. Perhaps some of the building rubble is under this area, which is now a parking spot. 


Brwynog Uchaf as seen on the 1888-1913 map. It is possible to trace this building footprint over what remains today, which helps to make sense of the ruin.


What appears to be a doorway in the southern face of the house or outbuilding. All that can be told from the 1888-1913 map is that the whole L shape was roofed, not which part of the building was a house and which may have been outbuildings.
 
A little research online shows that the house played an interesting part in the history of Christian worship in the area. An entry on the Genuki website from the Hanes Eglwysi Annibynnol Cymru (History of the Welsh Independent Churches) by Thomas Rees & John Thomas, in 1871, speaks about the use of the house as a chapel before a dedicated chapel was built. I include the extract in full below. 

BRWYNOG

(Siloh chapel, at Dolgarrog in Llanbedr-y-cennin parish)

Mewn amaethdai y cyfarfyddir yma i addoli er dechreuad yr achos. Mae mewn llanerch uchel, ryw dair milldir o Drefriw, heb fod yn mhell o lyn Cowlyd. Dechreuwyd cynal moddion crefyddol yma mor foreu a'r flwyddyn 1814, trwy offerynoliaeth Elin Jones, merch Cwmanog, yr hon a briododd รข John Roberts, Brwynog Uchaf. Deuai aelodau Trefriw yma i gynal cyfarfodydd gweddio, ac yn achlysurol deuai rhai o bregethwyr cynorthwyol Bethesda yma i bregethu. Pan y byddai y tywydd yn rhy ystormus i gael pregethwr, nac i neb o Trefriw allu dyfod i fynu i gadw cyfarfod gweddi, cynhalient ysgol ddwywaith y Sabbath, oblegid nad oedd yma etto aelodau crefyddol i gynal y moddion. Yn y flwyddyn 1828 cafwyd yma ddiwvgiad grymus, ac yr oedd Robert Roberts, mab Brwynog Uchaf, a William Griffith, mab y Pant, yn mysg y dychweledigion cyntaf. Mae y blaenaf yn awr yn ddiacon yn Nhrefriw, ac heb golli gwres ei gariad cyntaf. Ffurfiwyd yma eglwys o ugain neu bump ar hugain o aelodau, ac y mae yr achos yn parhau yma hyd yn awr. Symudwyd y moddion o'r Brwynog Uchaf, i'w gynal yn olynol yn y Brwynog Isaf, y Garegwen, a'r Pant; ond yn awr Brwynog Isaf yw cartref mwyaf cyffredin yr arch. Bu y lle yn hir dan ofal Mr. J. Williams, Caecoch; ond wedi iddo ef fethu cyrchu yma, Mr. Griffith, Trefriw, sydd yn gofalu yn benaf am y lle. Bu llawer o siarad am gael capel bychan i'r ardal, a hyderir y llwyddir i'w gael. Mae yma achos bychan siriol iawn; a'r gwanwyn diweddaf cafwyd yr hyfrydwch o dderbyn pedwar o ddynion ieuaingc yn gyflawn aelodau. +

 + Ysgrif Mr. T. Roberts, Llanddeusant.

Translation by Eleri Rowlands (Feb 2010):

From the beginning of the cause people would meet in farm buildings to worship.  It is in a high glade, about three miles from Trefriw, not far from Llyn Cowlyd (Cowlyd Lake). Religious services started here as early as 1814, Elin Jones, a daughter of Cwmanog was instrumental in arranging this, she married John Roberts, Brwynog Uchaf. The members of Trefriw came here to hold prayer meetings, and occasionally some of the lay preachers from Bethesda would come here to preach. When the weather became too stormy for a preacher to come, or for anyone from Trefriw to come to a prayer meeting, they held a school twice on the Sunday, since there weren't yet any members to hold the services. In 1828 a powerful revival took place, and Robert Roberts, the son of Brwynog Uchaf, and William Griffith, the son of the Pant, were amongst the first to return. The former is now a deacon in Trefriw, but hasn't lost the heat of his first love. A church of twenty or twenty five members was formed, and the cause continues up to now.  The services were moved from Brwynog Uchaf, to be held in Brwynog Isaf, Garegwen, and Pant; but now Brwynog Isaf is the usual home of the membership. The place was under the care of Mr. J. Williams, Caecoch for a long time but when he failed to travel here, Mr. Griffith, Trefriw, generally takes the care. Many talk of building a small chapel for the area, and we are confident they will be successful. There is a small, very cheerful cause here; and last spring they had the joy of accepting four young men in full membership. +

  + Document from Mr. T. Roberts, Llanddeusant.

 

I'm not quite sure of the period this extract refers to. The book is dated 1871, but the Siloh Chapel at Brwynog - just a few hundred yards away from the house - is mentioned by Coflein as being first built in 1824, and again in 1890. Is it possible that Coflein are confusing services held in the houses with the origin of the chapel? Aneurin Hughes from the Trefriw Historical Society, on a BBC page, mentions only that the chapel was built in 1890 and was closed by 1923, and it sounds as if services were held in the local houses at least up to 1828. If Coflein has got it wrong it makes sense for Rees and Thomas, in 1871, to be speaking as if a chapel still has not been built. It seems rather sad that the small chapel built may only have had a life of 33 years.

Two current photographs of the ruined Siloh Chapel are included near the end of my Siglen post.


Inside there are no obvious domestic features surviving, with the walls too low to show anything like joist holes. On the hill behind the silver ribbon of the road can be seen climbing upwards. This leads over and down into Trefriw, and is the only way to approach by car, despite the house being in Dolgarrog community. A number of footpaths are marked on the 1888-1913 map in the area as well as the path of what has become the modern road.


An area to the side appears to be the low wall of a pen rather than a building wall.


Looking north west, and the land is banked up behind the walls. It's hard to tell if the face of the wall at back centre is interior - the western wall of the north-south range - or exterior - the eastern wall of that range with the rest of the building buried under the land behind. It does, however, appear to have a corner running back into the land behind. It seems possible that this was the house building, and the building in which I am standing is an outbuilding.


On a subsequent visit, when the rain wasn't torrential, I took the chance to look more closely at the flat parking area that I believe buries the house. This sharp right angle of a thick stone built wall, level with the car park at the top but about six feet in height to the ground below, convinces me that the building with its long sides facing east and west - the upright of the L shape - is buried here.


Standing at the corner of the buried building, looking east. It seems more likely to me that this was the house because of the lack of an apparent fireplace in the unburied range, and simply because it seems more likely to me that on this relatively flat patch of land the front of the house would face east, not north or south. There isn't much behind this supposition beyond a sense that it would be that way. Brwynog Isaf, a little way further east, has its front facing east, as does a little stable or barn not far off. The nearby Siglen faces south, but orienting that house to face east would mean building it sideways into the hill.


Back in the probable barn, it's possible that this is another doorway in the centre of the photograph, leading into a cell.


This cell is largely filled with rubble. There may be a window at centre left in the back wall.


The window mentioned previously, this time viewed from outside, with the possible doorway opposite.


After passing through the wooden gate onto the footpath, this is looking back at the end wall of the building. It's hard to tell from this aspect if this were part of the house or barn.


Just past the gateway a stream cuts across the land, with a simple bridge made of impressive stone slabs. There had been so much rain, however, that the bridge was under about two inches of water.


Near the house was a small sheepfold or pen. The map shows other structures, probably pens, on the other side of the road.


On the other side of the road, a small rectangular structure lies in ruin. This and the subsequent two photos were taken on my later visit.


The rectangular structure on the other side of the road.


It's possible that there is another enclosure or building up on the hill on this western side of the road. Limited time meant I couldn't investigate.


A surprise on a visit to St Mary's Church in Trefriw, a church of thirteenth century origin but mostly dating from the 15th and 16th centuries. This aged gravestone right by the path caught my attention, and I saw that it was the marker for John Roberts of Brwynog Uchaf, who died 6th December, 1847, at the age of 64.


The grave also remembers John's wife Elin, who died January 21st, 1862. The age may be 70, or at least seems to start with 7.

This must be the Elin who was instrumental in arranging Independent religious services up at Brwynog Uchaf, mentioned along with her husband earlier in this post. 



2 comments:

  1. Yes, the house was where the carpark now is. Re Siloh, I have a photo taken in 1923 just before it was closed of a Sunday School celebration with children from Siglen, including my father.
    dave roberts

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    Replies
    1. That's a wonderful thing to have! I'd love to see more photos of the area before the houses and buildings became so ruined.

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