Cathays Explained

Cathays should not be confused with Cathay.

Country:Wales
Coordinates:51.496°N -3.182°W
Static Image Name:Cathays Library (2010), Cardiff.jpg
Static Image Caption:Cathays Library, a Carnegie library built in 1906
Welsh Name:Y Waun Ddyfal
Official Name:Cathays
Community Wales:Cathays
Unitary Wales:Cardiff
Lieutenancy Wales:South Glamorgan
Constituency Westminster:Cardiff Central
Population:20,121
Population Ref:(2011)[1]
Post Town:CARDIFF
Postcode District:CF10
Postcode District1:CF24
Postcode Area:CF
Postcode Area1:CF
Dial Code:029
Os Grid Reference:ST181780

Cathays (; standardised Welsh: Cathays;[2] sometimes Welsh: Y Waun Ddyfal, 'the constant meadow') is a district and community in the centre of Cardiff, capital of Wales. It is an old suburb of Cardiff established in 1875. It is densely populated and contains many Victorian terraced houses. The area falls into the Cathays ward. It is the third most populous community in Cardiff, having a population of 18,002 in 2011.

Etymology

The area that is now Cathays was formerly known in Welsh as Welsh: Y Waun Ddyfal and in English as Little Heath (to distinguish it from Great Heath).[3] The name Cathays first appeared in 1699 as Catt Hays and originally denoted a tract of common land north-east of Cardiff, now represented by Cathays Park. The second element is a derivative of Old English English, Old (ca.450-1100);: haga, meaning 'park or enclosure', while the first element has been variously traced to the Welsh word Welsh: cad, meaning 'battle', and the Old English word English, Old (ca.450-1100);: catt, meaning 'wildcat'.[4] [5]

History

By the medieval period farmland outside the old Cardiff Castle, Cathays takes in the northern limit of mediaeval Cardiff — marked by the crossroads of Fairoak Road and Crwys Road.

After John Stuart, 1st Marquess of Bute, married Charlotte Hickman-Windsor (daughter of Herbert Windsor, 2nd Viscount Windsor) on 12 November 1766, he inherited great further lands, including in Cathays to the north of his existing estate which he had partially developed. He then bought other properties and farms to the north and east, including what became Cathays Park. There he built Cathays House at a cost of £40,000 and at further cost landscaped Cathays Park. After his son took over the title he preferred to live in Cardiff Castle, so demolished the house in 1815, and turned Cathays Park into purely enclosed parkland for grazing.

Suburb of Cardiff

Following the 2nd Marquis' development of Cardiff Docks, and the resultant number of new workers flocking to Cardiff, in 1875 the then rural Cathays became a suburb of Cardiff. At that time, a few streets led off Woodville Road and Cathays Terrace. By 1900 the urbanisation of Cathays was virtually completed. Allensbank and Wedal farms survived briefly. In 1914 they became no more than local place names.[6]

Maindy Barracks opened in 1871. With United States Army troops temporarily stationed in transit in Cardiff during both World War I and World War II, the footpath between Gelligaer Street and New Zealand Road became known as " Road" (from the phrase "Be Undressed and Ready My Angel"), as they came to meet prostitutes.[6]

Governance

Cathays does not have a community council.

The electoral ward of Cathays includes both the Cathays and Castle communities and elects four councillors to Cardiff Council.

Buildings and structures in Cathays

From 1840, the Taff Vale Railway company developed a railway line through Cathays, where they also developed the Cathays railway works. A major carriage and wagon construction and maintenance facility, it and the associated locomotive depot were taken over and maintained by the Great Western Railway. After nationalisation in 1946, British Railways sold the business and leased the site to the Pullman Company Ltd, where they maintained their carriages until the 1970s. The depot was closed from the late 1960s, and was later redeveloped for buildings now used by Cardiff University. The carriage and wagon works was redeveloped in the early 2000s, and now houses a Lidl store and a student accommodation block. Cathays railway station opened in 1983, adjacent to the students' union building which encloses the railway tracks.

In 1875, Nazareth House was opened to provide accommodation for orphans and the elderly. A popular local charity, one of its many benefactors was the boxer Jim Driscoll, who, since his burial in Cathays cemetery in 1925, has had his grave tended by the nuns of Nazareth House.

In 1898, John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute sold a large piece of land to Cardiff Council for the building of a new City Hall, imposing strict conditions regarding its purpose and where development could take place. As a result, City Hall was built as far south in the purchased block of land as possible, and the residual area to its north used for civic, cultural and educational purposes only. City Hall cost £129,000 to build, and was completed in 1905 when Cardiff was awarded city status.

The land purchased by the council to the north of the city hall now houses:

Maindy Pool was a clay pit that had gradually filled with water. After the death by drowning of ten children and adults, it was filled in by using it as a rubbish tip. In 1948 the building of Maindy Stadium began on the same site, completed in 1951, which held cycling races in the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games. When the stadium was closed and replaced with a leisure centre, part of the site became a swimming pool.

Cathays Library is a Carnegie library built in 1906 and refurbished in 2009–10.

Companies House, which holds the registration records of all companies registered in England or Wales, has its headquarters in Cathays.

Today

The area of Cathays, given its proximity to most of Cardiff University's teaching sites and the University Hospital of Wales, has seen a dramatic fall in owner-occupation, with a high proportion of houses in multiple occupation (HMOs) which are let through private landlords and letting agencies to the large student population. 2012 figures available under the Freedom of Information Act show that over 70% of the houses in Cathays were then HMOs. The buy-to-let market has deterred young couples, families and first-time buyers from setting up home in the area.

Cathays High School is an 11–18 mixed comprehensive school that started as a boys' grammar school in 1903 and became a comprehensive high school in 1973.[7]

Despite the urbanisation of Cathays, there is extensive parkland around the civic centre, including Gorsedd Gardens, Queen Alexandra Gardens, Bute Park and Blackweir.

Of more than 8570 wards in the 2011 census across England and Wales, Cathays ranked 8th lowest in the number of retired people and second lowest in Wales (behind Menai, a ward associated with Bangor University).[8]

Transport

The area is served by Cathays railway station in the east, with frequent services south to Cardiff Queen Street and Cardiff Central or north to Aberdare, Merthyr Tydfil and Treherbert via Pontypridd. Cardiff Bus provides many services in the area.The following bus services run along North Road (in the west), going to the city centre in the reverse direction:

Likewise, the following services run north along Crwys Road and/or Whitchurch Road (in the east):

The area is close to the busy Gabalfa Interchange, connecting it with the A48 and the M4 motorway.

External links

NWHeathRoath Park
PontcannaCathaysRoath
RiversideCity centreAdamsdown

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ward population 2011. 8 April 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20181212215727/http://www.ukcensusdata.com/cathays-w05000857#sthash.lYH7QYzH.dpbs. 12 December 2018. dead.
  2. Web site: List of Standardised Welsh Place-names – Cathays . . https://web.archive.org/web/20180914132528/http://www.comisiynyddygymraeg.cymru/english/commissioner/placenames/Pages/Details.aspx?pnid=8975&keyword=Cathays . dead . 14 September 2018.
  3. Book: Cymdeithas Enwan Lleoedd Cymru . Ar Drywydd Enwau Lleoedd. . 2021 . Y Lolfa . 9781800990883 . Welsh.
  4. Book: Matthews . John Hobson . Schedule of place names: A–F . Cardiff Records: Volume 5 . 1905 . British History Online . Cardiff . 337–369 . 2 September 2021.
  5. Book: Mills, David . A Dictionary of British Place Names . Oxford University Press . 2011 . 978-0-19-960908-6 .
  6. Web site: Cathays. cardiffians.co.uk. 2008-11-30.
  7. Web site: Cathays High School / Ysgol Uwchradd Cathays.
  8. UK Government statistics https://www.nomisweb.co.uk Data Downloads [or on-screen generation] - Query - KS106EW: Households with Adults in "Employment" in wards in England and Wales