Ystrad Aeron Explained

Country:Wales
Official Name:Ystrad Aeron
Static Image Name:Ystradchurch.jpg
Static Image Width:250
Static Image Caption:St Michael's Church, Ystrad Aeron
Static Image 2 Name:Ystrad Aeron geograph-3878481-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg
Static Image 2 Width:250
Static Image 2 Caption:View of the village showing the Vale of Aeron Inn
Unitary Wales:Ceredigion
Lieutenancy Wales:Dyfed
Constituency Westminster:Ceredigion Preseli
Post Town:LAMPETER
Postcode District:SA48
Postcode Area:SA
Dial Code:01570
Os Grid Reference:SN525565

Ystrad Aeron is a small village west of Felinfach on the A482 between Lampeter and Aberaeron, Ceredigion, Wales. It is part of the constituent community of Llanfihangel Ystrad.

Facilities

The church, St Michael's, is in the centre of Ystrad Aeron. It survived as a medieval church until 1877, when it was entirely rebuilt. Theatr Felinfach is located just outside the village, as is the Felin Fach Creamery.

Other facilities in the village include a garage, a shop, a farmers’ co-op, a caravan park, and a pub, The Vale of Aeron.[1] Neuadd Goffa Felinfach Memorial Hall serves both Ystrad Aeron and Felinfach villages.

The Lampeter, Aberayron and New Quay Light Railway line ran through the village. Felin Fach railway station closed in 1951 to passenger services. Initially it was named Ystrad. General freight ceased in 1963, and milk traffic in 1973.[2]

Dylan Thomas

The Vale of Aeron pub was frequented by Dylan Thomas and his wife, Caitlin Thomas, when they lived at Plas Gelli in nearby Talsarn in the early 1940s. The landlord then was Thomas Vaughan, whose son has described how Dylan and Caitlin used to walk across the fields to visit the pub.[3] Dylan and Caitlin’s Pub Walk: Talsarn to Ystrad Aeron is published in the Dylan Thomas Trail.[4] The pub, now run as a village cooperative, received a £300,000 grant in 2023 to enable renovations and support its long-term future.[5]

John Davies

The bookbinder and poet, John Davies (Shôn Dafydd y Crydd) 1722–1799, is buried in St Michael's graveyard. His grave is directly behind the wooden bench by the church door. The inscription on the grave reads:"Beneath this stone lies John aloneCordwainer, scribe, Musician,Poet sublime in blank and Rhime,Devine and Politician."

John Davies’ diary with poems for 1 January 1796 to 19 December 1799 is in the National Library of Wales. It is available online.[6] There is also a summary of its contents available,[7] as well as two newspaper reports [8] and a journal article.[9]

External links

52.187°N -4.159°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Old pubs in Ystrad Aeron Ceredigion A Pint of History, Please. pint-of-history.wales.
  2. M.R.C. Price (1995) The Lampeter, Aberayron and New Quay Light Railway, Oakwood Press
  3. D.N. Thomas (2000) Dylan Thomas: A Farm, Two Mansions and a Bungalow, pp61-62, Seren.
  4. D.N.Thomas (2002) The Dylan Thomas Trail, p91-92, Y Lolfa
  5. Web site: Historic Welsh pub loved by Dylan Thomas receives £300,000 grant. Jem. Bartholomew. The Guardian. 25 September 2023. 25 September 2023.
  6. Web site: National Library of Wales Viewer. hdl.handle.net.
  7. Web site: John Davies Diary. archives.library.wales . PDF. 2021-06-03.
  8. Cledlyn Davies (1936) Sion Dafydd y Crydd, Welsh Gazette, 27 February, and A Cobbler Diarist, Cambrian News, 1 May.
  9. M. Freeman (2016) “Wife on the Moor Raising Turf”: The Diary of John Davies, Ystrad Aeron, 1796-1799, Ceredigion vol.17. no. 4.