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History The town was founded as a colliery village in 1857. Until the beginning of the 1950s it had two collieries (Ferndale Nos. 1 and 5) producing steam coal: the pit-head workings were still extant in the early 1960s, but now they have been removed.
Until Dr Beeching wielded his axe on British Railways the village and its nearest largish town of Ferndale was served by a branch line from Pontypridd and Porth. The line was still operating as a mineral railway until the closure of the last of Rhondda’s collieries, Maerdy, by the government of Margaret Thatcher in the late 1980s.
The sites of both railway and colliery have been ‘landscaped and where a slag and spoil tip, called the ‘Banana tip’, because of its shape, once stood now a cricket and sports ground stand.
Geography Blaenllechau is typical of its kind for the topography of the Rhondda Fach Valley (Cwm Rhondda Fach), or small Rhondda. Three or four rows of stone houses cling to the mountainside.
Blaenllechau is well-known for its waterfall.
The village has a park, a community centre and a working men’s club called the Blaenllechau Radical Club, or the ‘Rad’. The village used to have an infants school, but due to a lack of pupils attending, it has been closed since July 2006.The village also has a youth club known to the people of blaen as the mission or drop in.
Round the Top...again! A loop through the local woods I do on my mountain bike :?) ... Ferndale Maerdy Llanwunno Blaenllechau
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