
It was consecrated in 1850. Today it has a plaque in memory of Sir T.S. (Sam) Evans, Liberal M.P. for Mid Glamorgan and close friend of Lloyd George. He was born in Skewen's main street and his parents had kept a grocery shop there. He was responsible for obtaining a grant to build the Carnegie Hall in 1905. He became President of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division (the highest judge in the country) but died in 1918.
The Neath Abbey area has had a long association with
copper-smelting since the 17th Century. There was a Mines Royal Copper works
on the right bank of the Clydach river at a spot where this river joins the
Neath River and Sir Humphrey Mackworth is known to have been concerned with
the smelting furnaces there in 1707. In 1694, too, a copper battery mill had
been erected at Cwmfelin in the Clydach valley on land leased from the family
of Philip Hoby, lord of Cadoxton manor, and this was still working in 1780.
Next, Dr. John Lane, a Bristol chemist, set up a new mill for smelting copper
and lead ores at Neath Abbey but it was abandoned in 1716. Under the Mines
Royal Society in the last decade of the 18th Century there were thirty eight
furnaces for smelting and refining, and it is recorded in 1796, "Ores
smelted this week, one hundred and thirty six tons. Copper made seventeen
tons, coal burnt three hundred and fifteen tons". In January 1798 the
Workmen came out on strike for better wages. The Mines Royal continued to
operate here until about 1862. But today at Neath Abbey the remains of the
Mines Royal copperworks have vanished beneath the foundations of a modern
motorway.
As we again approach Neath Abbey gateway,
we pass the site of Ebenezer Chapel on our right. Like The Wesley, this
too was demolished in the early 2000s. The first Chapel was built on the site
in 1832, and was replaced in 1881 by a larger establishment.
Having reached the junction of Taillwyd Road and eventually the Cwrt
Herbert roundabout and the Neath Abbey ruins, we have completed our circular
tour of the Community of Dyffryn Clydach.
