Full Report for Listed Buildings


The list description is not intended to be a complete inventory of what is listed: it is principally intended to aid identification. By law, the definition of a listed building includes the entire building (i) and any structure or object that is fixed to the said building and ancillary to it and (ii) any other structure or object that forms part of the land and has done so since before 1 July 1948, and was within the curtilage of the building, and ancillary to it, on the date on which said building was first included in the list, or on 1 January 1969, whichever was later.

Summary Description


Reference Number
80771
Building Number
21  
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
01/06/1989  
Date of Amendment
19/12/2002  
Name of Property
21 Gelli-deg  
Address
21 Gelli-deg  

Location


Unitary Authority
Merthyr Tydfil  
Community
Cyfarthfa  
Town
 
Locality
Gelli-deg  
Easting
303438  
Northing
206736  
Street Side
 
Location
Situated to the N of Swansea Road some 200m NW of its roundabout junction with the A470. The site is some 400m W of the site of the Cyfarthfa blast furnaces.  

Description


Broad Class
 
Period
 

History
Cottage in one of 2 rows of early industrial workers'' housing complete by 1797, and thus, although altered since, among the earliest surviving in the region. The site is some 400m W of the site of the Cyfarthfa blast furnaces, built 1765. Ty Issa farmhouse is mentioned in a lease of 1794 to Anthony Bacon of the ironworks and it was to this house that the cottages were added. Thomas James was paid £298/9/6d (£298.48) for new houses in Gelli-deg in 1797 but this may refer to the second row Nos 23-28 and Nos 15-21 could be earlier. It is suggested that No 15 is the pre-industrial farmhouse, perhaps mid C18 and that 6 industrial cottages were added in 2 stages. No 15 itself may be a composite of a single room cottage to right to which a larger house 2-storey 3-bay farmhouse was added (but the continuous rear stonework does not support this). The farmhouse was later subdivided into 2, the one-bay upper end with entry from the back becoming one cottage (now part of No 16). To this were added 3 one-room 2-storey cottages, now Nos 16 and 17 (No 17 now including No 18), internally of a single-room each floor, perhaps with a partitioned pantry to the rear, marked by small rear opening. Then a further 3 were added, now Nos 19 and 21, as 21 includes No 20, these had 2 small partitioned spaces at the back and thus 2 small rear windows. None of these houses had the typical catslide roofs over outshuts noted in Welsh industrial workers'' housing of the early C19, though the altered row Nos 23-28 did. In 1930 it was said that No 15 had once been a public house.  

Exterior
The upper row of 3 cottages are painted rendered with imitation slates and same eaves but higher ridge line than row to right. Nos 19 & 20 (the latter now part of No 21) were a mirrored pair with end stacks and a cottage on the end, No 21, slightly larger, with stack shared with No 20. The chimney between 20 and 21 has gone. The mirrored pair 19-20 had doors to inner bays and window each floor to outer bay, but door to No 20 has gone. Widened openings to first floor of No 20. Left end cottage (the original No 21) has C20 windows to right and C20 door to left, both window openings widened. Rear has C20 wide window to upper floor left of original No 20 and 3 ground floor windows, one C20 broad opening to No 20 and 2 small ones to right, possibly original openings, all plastic.  

Interior
Interior not available for inspection. The original Nos 20-21 were surveyed in 1988 and they contained oak trusses with collars raised when upper rooms had been ceiled. The trusses were on seating blocks and the roof was thought to have been stone-tiled. Each house had a ground floor plan of kitchen, sleeping-room and pantry and single upper room. There were quarter-turn timber stairs with cupboard beneath and handrail at top in the front corners. The floor joists were cross-axial and the ground floors had flagstones.  

Reason for designation
Listed as part of the oldest industrial workers'' housing surviving in the Merthyr area, which includes a range that predates the nearby Cyfarthfa ironworks.  

Group Description
Cottage in a terraced row, 2-storeys, much altered. The row comprises an C18 3-bay house with small service range set back to right, mainly No 15 but left bay of house part of No 16, and 6 added cottages in 2 blocks (now the rest of No 16, No 17, No 19 and No 21).  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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