DESCRIPTION OF TALLEY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
While searching the internet for some specific information, I chanced upon an
extract from a book published in 1849 entitled ‘A Topographical Dictionary of
Wales’. Since it made reference to Talley, I thought it might be of interest to
some of our readers. Part of it is reproduced below.
Roger Pike
TALLEY, otherwise TÀL-Y-LLYCHAU, is a parish in the poor-law union of
Llandilo-Vawr, Lower division of the hundred of Cayo, county of Carmarthen,
South Wales, 7½ miles north from Llandilo-Vawr; containing 1068 inhabitants,
of whom 418 are in the Lower, and 650 in the Upper, division. This place was
originally of much greater importance than it is at present; the seat of one of the
most extensive and venerable ecclesiastical establishments in this part of the
principality. The name signifies “the head of the lakes” and is derived from two
large pools near the church, about fifty acres in extent. The parish is bounded
on the south by Llandilo-Vawr, east and north by Llansadwrn and Cayo, and
north and west by Llansawel. It is situated upon the river Cothy, on the turnpikeroad
from Llandilo-Vawr to Lampeter; and comprises by measurement 7167
acres 2 rods and 19 poles, of which the arable portion is about two-thirds,
nearly 200 acres are woodland, 290 acres and 8 poles are common land and
the remainder pasture.
The surface displays a continued succession of hill and dale, sideland and
mountain top, and is rather woody, the principal timber being oak, ash, elm, fir
and alder. The soil is grey in colour and tolerably deep and fertile; the chief
agricultural produce is wheat, barley and oats, with a good and sufficient supply
of grass and hay for the use of the dairies. On the west the parish is bounded
by the Cothy, a tributary of the Towy river, and several brooks rise in the parish
and unite in the south-eastern part, where the stream thus formed pursues its
course to the Towy. There are two small villages, named Talley and Cwmdû;
and the mansion of Glanyrannel, pleasantly situated in grounds well laid out. A
small fair is held there annually on August 6th.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with £800 royal bounty and £1000
parliamentary grant, giving a net income of £127. The patron, Rev William
Thomas Nicholl, is heir of the late Venerable Thomas Beynon, Archdeacon of
Cardigan, who purchased the tithes from the ancient family at Abermarles.
The tithes have been commuted for a rent-charge of
£299 15s, and there is a glebe attached of 3½ acres, valued at £11 3s. per
annum. The church, dedicated to St. Michael, having fallen into decay, was
rebuilt in the Grecian style in 1773, at the expense of the inhabitants,
principally from the ruins of the ancient abbey of Talley, the nave of which
formed the old church and of which there are still some remains within the
burial-ground, consisting of half the tower and other considerable portions.
The present is a neat edifice and contains some monumental inscriptions,
including a mural tablet to the memory of Sir Nicholas Williams, an ancestor
of Sir James Hamlyn Williams, Bart. The area, exclusively of the chancel, is
fifty feet long by thirty wide and, being all pewed, contains between 300 and
400 sittings, which belong to the rate-payers, except two and the seats of
the gallery, which are free. There were formerly five chapels of ease, but of
none are there at present any remains; memorials of two are preserved in
the names of small patches of ground, one being called Mynwent Capel
Llanvihangel, “the churchyard of St. Michael’s chapel,” and the other,
Mynwent Capel Crist, “the churchyard of Christ’s chapel.”
In the parish are places of worship for Baptists and Calvinistic Methodists,
the poor of the latter of whom participate in the benefit of Mrs. Mary
Griffith’s charity at Llangeitho. A day school is held, under the patronage of
Lady Mary Williams, and there are some Sunday schools.
The abbey was founded prior to 1197 by Rhys ab Grufydd, an ancestor of
Lord Dynevor, for Præmonstratensian canons and dedicated to the Blessed
Virgin and St. John the Baptist: a charter was given to it by Edward III,
confirming a prior grant by the ancient Princes of South Wales in the time of
Henry III. This establishment flourished until the Dissolution, at which period
it had eight canons, and its annual revenue was estimated at £153 1s 4d.
The remains, though much diminished by the appropriation towards
rebuilding the church, are still considerable, containing, as already stated,
about half the tower and some portions of the transept on both sides; all
within the churchyard and the property of the owner of the tithes. The large
bell that was sold to assist the parishioners in the erection of the church, in
1773, is now in Exeter cathedral.
The situation of this structure, in a luxuriant vale embosomed among lofty
hills, was peculiarly adapted for devotional retirement and contemplation.
From the richness of the endowment, the abbots were little inferior in power
to the bishops of the diocese; and to the influence of one of them, who was
confessor and secretary to Rhys ab Thomas, has been attributed the active
part which that chieftain took in favour of the Earl of Richmond, afterwards
Henry VII. Near the abbey, but within the parish of Llansawel, is the seat of
Edwinsford, the property of Sir James Hamlyn Williams.