Abercynon
Abercynon maps (2 available)
Map of Mid Glamorgan
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Mid Glamorgan
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Abercynon memories
REMEMBERANCE SUNDAYS
Many Rememberance Sundays were spend at the Abercynon Clock by members of the Abercynon branch of the Glamorgan Army Cadet Force .
Contributed by dai boyce
Mid Glamorgan memories
REMEMBERANCE SUNDAYS
Many Rememberance Sundays were spend at the Abercynon Clock by members of the Abercynon branch of the Glamorgan Army Cadet Force .
A memory of Abercynon contributed by dai boyce
Reminiscence
Yvonne Colwell's notes brought back memories of a few families, but I can't place St John's Lane, even though I lived in Pantycelyn until I moved in the late sixties after the prefabs were demolished.
Both my parents are now buried in Llanfabon Cemetery, and I live in sunny Folkestone, Kent.
I plan to have a few days staying in the Old Police Station, owned by a couple you must have been in school with.
You must remember the gasometer, handball court and Taff Vale Railway running through the centre of the village next to John Jones', or the ironmonger next to Phil's fish bar- Vic Morgan who lived in Llancaiach.
I was in school with his daughter Helen, who ...read more here
A memory of Nelson contributed by Ray Davies
Happy days
I lived in Nelson from the age of 3. I was born in 1954 so I arrived there 1957. I lived in the prefabs at 9 St Johns Lane, until I moved to 27 Brycelyn Ave when they decided they wanted to pull the prefabs down. I went to both schools in Nelson and went on to Lewis Girls' Grammer until I was 16yrs old. I have fond memories of Ricci's cafe where we would go and play pinball machines and drink hot blackcurrant juice. I remember there was a youth club in the school twice a week (I think). We would go to Phil's fish shop for a bag of chips on the way home and sit in the bus ...read more here
A memory of Nelson contributed by yvonne colwell
Extracts From Abercynon & Mid Glamorgan books
The town has an important place in industrial history, for it is the southern end of the railway line on which the first steam locomotive ran in 1804. Richard Trevithick's tramway from Merthyr to Abercynon led the way for the railway boom of the 1840s. This development, of course, meant the demise of the canals.
An extract from from"South Wales Photographic Memories".






