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Latitude: 51.745 / 51°44'42"N
Longitude: -3.3915 / 3°23'29"W
OS Eastings: 304023
OS Northings: 206063
OS Grid: SO040060
Mapcode National: GBR HN.17M0
Mapcode Global: VH6CY.5DCM
Plus Code: 9C3RPJW5+29
Entry Name: No 10 Upper Colliers Row
Listing Date: 22 August 1975
Last Amended: 19 December 2002
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 80765
Building Class: Domestic
ID on this website: 300080765
Location: Situated SE of Heolgerrig, some 500m W of the remains of the Ynysfach Iron Works and just W of the A470.
County: Merthyr Tydfil
Community: Cyfarthfa
Community: Cyfarthfa
Locality: Ynysfach
Traditional County: Glamorgan
Tagged with: Building
Cottage in a row of early C19 industrial workers'' houses with catslide roofs to rear, typical of industrial housing of the period. Since 1975 all have been thoroughly altered, but they remain one of the very few early rows to survive in the Merthyr region. The row is shown on surveyors'' drawings of 1814 and 1826 and detailed on subsequent 6" OS maps from 1875 onwards. The cottages were part of the Dynevor Estate during the C19, housing colliers working the Cyfarthfa mines but the roadway before the houses originally lead to the Ynysfach Iron Works (established in 1801) and it is possible that some of the inhabitants worked there. Certainly, it was conveniently located adjacent to both the Cyfarthfa Canal basin at Llwyn-celyn and the Cyfarthfa Tramway.
Originally the cottages were of stone with stone heads to openings, stone-slab roofs and stone chimneys, one-window and door (Nos 2 and 7 are now 2-window) with small upper windows and probably sash glazing. The upper window heads were under the eaves. The interiors had joisted floors rather than beams with thin joists, the fireplaces had winding staircases adjacent, of stone or timber.
No 10 is altered to match No 9. C20 render and wide late C20 window each floor to left, late C20 porch to right. Stone stack shared with No 11.
Not available for inspection. It is said that the interior has joisted floors, fireplace to right with winding stone staircase adjacent.
Included notwithstanding modern alterations as part of one of the last surviving rows of industrial workers'' houses in the Merthyr region.
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