Rowlands of my father (part 2)

This is the second in a series of posts on the history or the Rowland family of the Rhondda Valley. This part focuses on the children of Moses Rowland the Elder (1790-1837), including my fourth great-grandfather Morgan (1816-1884). For their story so far, see Rowlands of my father (part 1). Much of the information below has been pieced together through the combined efforts of multiple researchers over several years. In particular I would like to thank Philip Richards and Peter J. Williams for their invaluable help in researching these early generations. For consistency Welsh place names have been standardised to conform to their familiar modern spellings, and I have used the original ‘Rowland’ family name rather than the Anglicised ‘Rowlands’ variant which only became dominant towards the end of the nineteenth century.

Morgan Rowland (b. c. 1816, Penderyn, Breconshire), the eldest of Moses Rowland’s seven surviving children, was working as a blacksmith around the time of his father’s death in 1837. This is confirmed in the Llantrisant parish registers, where his marriage to a young woman named Mary Foster (b. c. March 1818, Llantwit Fardre, Glamorgan) was recorded on 23 June 1838. They were twenty-two and twenty respectively, and living at Dinas Colliery at the time. Notably, despite Morgan’s father having been a teacher, both Morgan and Mary seem to have been illiterate, with each leaving an ‘x’ instead of signatures in the marriage register. Also somewhat curiously given Moses’s work as a Nonconformist lay preacher, the wedding took place in an Anglican church, but this was likely because a Methodist chapel had yet to established in the area. Mary was the daughter of a labourer and collier named Evan Foster (b. c. July 1778, Pentyrch, Glamorgan – d. c. November 1854, Cardiff, Glamorgan) and his wife Catherine (b. c. 1781, Glamorgan – d. c. November 1846, Cardiff, Glamorgan), who had moved to Dinas in around 1820. She was the seventh of eight siblings, whose names were:

  • Evan (b. c. 1806, Llantrisant, Glamorgan – d. 6 June 1869, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Catherine (b. c. 1806, Llantrisant, Glamorgan)
  • William (b. c. 1811, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan)
  • Daniel John (b. c. 1815, Llantwit Fadre, Glamorgan – d. c. November 1882, Pontdarwe, Breconshire)
  • Hannah (b. c. 1816, Glamorgan)
  • Morgan (b. c. 1816, Llantrisant, Glamorgan – d. 1868)
  • Thomas (b. c. 1821, Dinas, Glamorgan)

After marrying, Morgan and Mary appear to have remained in Dinas, where they were recorded in the 1841 census with their first child, a two-year-old daughter named Esther (b. 7 August 1839, Dinas, Glamorgan). At this time most of Morgan’s younger siblings, including his brothers Rowland (b. c. January 1821, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 19 March 1894 , Pontypridd, Glamorgan), Thomas (b. c. 1823, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 7 April 1888, Pontypridd, Glamorgan), and Moses (hereafter referred to as ‘Moses the Younger’ to distinguish him from his father, b. c. September 1828, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 21 September 1884, Penpisgah House, Penygraig, Glamorgan), plus his sister Anne (b. c. 1830, Llantrisant, Glamorgan), were still living with their widowed mother Mary in what is described as a ‘storehouse’ nearby.

This modest family dwelling was literally the storehouse of a local mill, where miners’ families were sometimes housed upon moving to Dinas before proper accommodation became available. Their residence here suggests that despite Moses’s status as the local schoolmaster, his wife and children were far from well-off. This is reflected in the humble occupations held by the three brothers still living at home: Rowland was a collier, presumably working for the local coal magnate Walter Coffin, and both Thomas and Moses the Younger were blacksmiths like Morgan. Anne, aged eleven, was neither working nor in school. As for Morgan’s other two sisters, Esther (b. c. January 1824, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 3 August 1895, Newton Nottage, Glamorgan) and Mary (Mary (b. 30 October 1825, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 14 April 1881, Penygraig, Glamorgan), Esther was recorded in the same census working as a servant in nearby Llanwono, while Mary’s whereabouts in 1841 are unknown. Their mother Mary Rowland (née Foster) passed away around November 1845 at the age of fifty, while some of the children were still in their teens. Following her death, her youngest son Moses the Younger, to whom we will return later, appears to have assumed the role of head of the Rowland household.

A Country Blacksmith, engraved by C.W. Sharpe after J.M.W. Turner, published 1859-1861 (via Tate).

Morgan continued working as a blacksmith in Dinas for the next decade or so, perhaps principally engaged in making and repairing horseshoes for the local pit ponies. During this time he and Mary had five more children together:

  • Moses M. (b. 19 February 1842, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 12 March 1901, Thornhill House, Treforest, Glamorgan)
  • Elizabeth Foster (b. c. May 1845, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Evan (b. c. 1847, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Catherine (b. c. 1851, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. c. August 1920, Penrhiwceiber, Glamorgan)
  • Morgan (b. August 1853, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. c. February 1915, Bridgend, Glamorgan)

At some point between 1851 and 1853 however he left blacksmithing and began working for George Insole & Son at Cymmer Colliery in nearby Porth, first as a collier and then as a ‘fireman’ in 1854. Colliery firemen were among the first safety officers to be employed in mines, and were responsible for testing for flammable gases like methane and monitoring ventilation and air supply. This was especially important in the days when safety lamps were not yet widespread in South Wales, and most mines still relied on candlelight (Lewis, 1959, p. 62). Despite the increased status and responsibilities, working conditions for firemen like Morgan would have been just as dangerous as they were for the average mineworker, if not more so. Not only were they required to be the first down the mine before each shift to check for gas leaks or other potential hazards, they were also responsible for leading rescue and firefighting missions in the event of an emergency.

Cymmer Colliery, c. 1855, photographed by Joseph Collings. © Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales.

Until 1854, the fireman at Cymmer Colliery had been elected by the miners themselves (North Wales Chronicle, 23 August 1856), but this practice had been banned following a strike that year. Morgan was one of the first firemen to be appointed by the management. While the exact circumstances of how this came about are unknown, it seems plausible that Walter Coffin’s fondness for his late father Moses, former clerk at Dinas Colliery, may have been a factor (see Rowlands of my father (part 1). It is easy to imagine Coffin putting in a good work for him to James Harvey Insole at Cymmer Colliery, and the fact that Morgan’s younger brother Rowland was also promoted to overman here around the same time seems to support this theory.

The fact that family connections appear to have played a role in the appointment of key officers was unfortunately part of a wider pattern of mismanagement at Cymmer Colliery, and in the Rhondda Valley more generally. Coal output was prioritised above all other considerations, especially following Britain’s intervention in the Crimean War, with the most basic safety precautions only ever implemented following major disasters. Firemen and overmen like Morgan and Rowland were reportedly “too few in number to inspect the working places regularly and to instruct the colliers, many of whom lacked previous experience of coal mining, while some of the most vital safety points – for instance, the ventilation of doors – were in the sole control of young children” (Lewis, 1959, p. 149). In 1854 H.M. Inspector Herbert Mackworth delivered a list of special recommendations to the Cymmer Colliery’s owner James Harvey Insole. These included the appointment of a qualified mining engineer, the use of artificial ventilation, replacing naked light with locked safety lamps, and daily safety inspections. Every recommendation was ignored.

On the morning of 15 July 1856, a massive explosion ripped through the Old Pit mine of Cymmer Colliery, killing a hundred and fourteen men and boys and injuring dozens more. Apart from one collier who died of burns from the initial blast, the majority were poisoned by methane or suffocated to death. It was the worst mining disaster ever recorded in terms of sheer loss of life, but it also devastated the entire local community by depriving it of virtually all its primary breadwinners. There was barely a household unaffected, with many losing both fathers and sons. In his Report for the South Wales District (1856, p. 127) Herbert Mackworth laid the blame squarely on “the persons in charge of the pit neglecting the commonest precautions for the safety of the men and the safe working of the colliery”.

At the subsequent inquest, Morgan was called for questioning along with the other firemen who had been on duty that day. The coroner, noting that all of them had apparently gone home by the time of the explosion, drew attention to a rule which stated that “the overman and his deputies shall maintain, during all working hours, a careful supervision of the air-way, working faces, and travelling roads and over all things connected with the ventilation, lighting, timbering, and the general or special safety of the workmen.” To this Morgan replied “I do not think that the rule requires the constant presence in the pit of the firemen” and went on to defend his record and that of his fellow fireman, who he claimed had followed all the established procedures on the morning of the explosion. Gas had, he admitted, been found in one of the stalls, but this had been indicated through the customary use of crossed timbers to prevent the miners going in there. Despite his protestations, there was understandably much anger towards towards Morgan, his brother Rowland the overman, and the rest of the management among the surviving workers, with one miner declaring he “would never work in the old pit so long as the Rowlands were there” (North Wales Chronicle, 23 August 1856).

At the conclusion of the case Morgan was found guilty of manslaughter through negligence by a jury of seventeen to one, along with his brother Rowland, the colliery manager Jabez Thomas, and the two other fireman on duty that day, David Jones and William Thomas (The Morning Chronicle, 23 August 1856). The following year on 24 February 1857, Morgan, Rowland and Jabez Thomas were tried again in Swansea for the willful murder of William Thomas, Samuel Edmonds and one other miner who died in the explosion, but this time the judge ordered Rowland’s acquittal, and after a favourable summing up the jury found Morgan not guilty (The Morning Chronicle, 4 March 1857).

It is unknown what Morgan did in the immediate aftermath of his acquittal, but by 1861 he was no longer employed as a fireman. On the night of the census that year he was recorded as a travelling coal agent lodging in a house in Bedwellty, Monmouthshire, while his wife and children were living at ‘Tai’r Prenafalan (Apple Tree)’, possibly a public house, in the hamlet of Castellau. The census also shows they had two further children after 1853:

  • Rees David (b. c. November 1856, Llanwonno, Glamorgan – 2 April 1930, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Mary Ann (b. c. May 1860, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. c. May 1926, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)

While the degree to which Morgan can or should be considered responsible for the Cymmer Colliery Disaster is debatable, survivor’s guilt and the part he played in the tragedy would doubtless have haunted him for the rest of his life. And while the likes of Morgan and especially the victims’ families would all suffer in their own ways for decades to come, it is notable that the one man with the power to implement better safety measures in the colliery he owned and ensure they were carried out, James Harvey Insole, was never brought to justice or even charged. He died an extremely wealthy landowner in 1901, two days before Queen Victoria.

* * *

We will return to Morgan Rowland and his family after looking at what happened to his siblings during this same period, whose lives were all very much intertwined. As previously mentioned, following the death of Moses the Elder’s widow Mary in 1845, their fifth son Moses the Younger became head of the Rowland household. The 1851 census records him living at Graig Ddu Cottages south of Dinas with his siblings Rowland and Anne, an eight year old nephew with the somewhat unoriginal name Moses Rowland Rowland, and interestingly a ‘grandmother’ called Elizabeth Rhys (b. c. 1766, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan), a blind pauper and dressmaker who was perhaps his maternal grandmother. That year both Moses and his brother Rowland were employed as colliers, but shortly afterwards he qualified as a mechanical engineer. And then he made a discovery.

In 1858, on a piece of farmland near Dinas, Moses uncovered a coal seam with the help of a geologist named Richard Jenkins. That year at the age of thirty he founded the Penygraig Coal Company with a local builder named William Morgan, who was his brother-in-law through his sister Esther, a clerk named William Williams, and a jeweller called John Crockett (Egan, 1987, p. 36). In 1864 they sank the Penygraig Colliery, and the village which later grew up around it was named Penygraig after this original pit.

The business proved extremely profitable, with annual coal production reaching almost 100,000 tonnes by 1870 (Lewis, 1959, p. 73). In 1875 however, following a disagreement with his partner William Williams over where to sink the next pit he disbanded the Penygraig Colliery Company and founded the Naval Colliery Company with his brother-in-law William Morgan, and they sank the Pandy Pit (or Naval Steam Colliery) that year. Along the way he married a woman named Sarah Isaac (b. 6 November 1831, Eglwysilan, Glamorgan – d. 10 February 1912, Pontypridd, Glamorgan), with whom he had at least three children:

  • Emily Mary (b. c. 1859, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Sarah Ellen (b. c. 1862, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan)
  • Moses (b. c. 1864, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan)

They lived together first at Mount Pleasant in Ystradyfodwg, then at Penpisgah House in Penygraig. By the time he died on 21 September 1884 aged only fixty-six he had amassed a personal fortune of £21’609 12s 8d (worth around £2,218,463 today). However, as will be shown, his business was beset by financial difficulties, and in the final years of his life two tragedies within a short space of time would take a serious toll on his mental health.

Moses Rowland (1828-1884), c. 1880.

While the sinking of the Penygraig Colliery and Moses’s subsequent business ventures would undoubtedly have a deep and lasting influence on the Rhondda Valley, their most direct impact was on his siblings. His eldest sister Esther had married Moses’s junior business partner William Morgan on 30 April 1842. Originally a stone mason by trade, William was working as a builder by the time he and Moses went into business, and he later became a successful coal exporter. During their forty-three year marriage he and Esther had at least the following seven children together:

  • Emily (b. 14 March 1843, Pontypridd, Glamorgan – d. 4 October 1867)
  • Moses (b. 20 October 1844, Pontypridd, Glamorgan – d. 18 April 1885, Cardiff, Glamorgan)
  • John (b. 27 August 1846, Llanwonno, Glamorgan – d. 5 July 1919, Cardiff, Glamorgan)
  • Mary (b. 10 April 1848, Pontypridd, Glamorgan – d. 8 December 1855, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Thomas (b. 13 April 1850, Pontypridd, Glamorgan – d. 13 April 1850, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Daniel (b. 16 February 1851, Pontypridd, Glamorgan – d. 5 May 1855, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Charles (b. 3 June 1854, Llanwonno, Glamorgan – d. 29 June 1932 Pontypridd, Glamorgan)

After a period of ill-health William died on Christmas Eve 1885. Esther passed away a decade later on 3 August 1895, at which time her personal estate was worth £4,675 0s 2d. She was buried at Pontypridd five days later.

Esther Rowland, 1824-1895, c. 1890. Courtesy of M. Jenkins.

Moses’s other older sister Mary, on the other hand, seems to be his only sibling who did not benefit in any obvious way from her brother’s success. On 6 November 1847, at the age of twenty-two she had married a blacksmith called John Martin (b. c. 1823, Bridgend, Glamorgan – d. c. 1908, Pontypridd, Glamorgan), possibly a workmate of her brothers, with whom she had at least seven children:

  • Francis (b. c. 1847, Llantrisant, Glamorgan)
  • Anne (b. 11 June 1848, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Mary Jane (b. c. 1851, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • David (b. c. 1854, Llantrisant, Glamorgan)
  • Elizabeth (b. c. 1857, Llantrisant, Glamorgan)
  • Esther (b. c. 1860, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Margaret (b. c. 1863 Dinas, Glamorgan)

The family remained in the Dinas-Penygraig area all their life, and Mary died on 14 April 1881 aged fifty-five. Unlike Mary, Moses’s younger sister Anne did appear to benefit from her brother’s success, albeit indirectly through her husband William Thomas (b. c. 1832, Llanelli, Carmarthenshire). William was recorded as a coal miner in the 1861 census, when he and Anne were living in his hometown of Llanelli, Carmarthenshire. By 1871 however they had moved back to Penygraig, and William was working as a foreman coal tipper. Given the timing it seems plausible this promotion was enabled by his brother-in-law Moses, whose mining operation was well-established by this point. After 1871 it is unclear what became of either him or Anne, but they are known to have had at least two children together:

  • Mary Ann (b. c. 1857, Cymmer, Glamorgan)
  • Elizabeth (b. c. 1863, Llanelli, Carmarthenshire)

Like her husband, Anne’s older brother Thomas also worked as a foreman at Penygraig Colliery for a time, another beneficiary of Moses the Younger’s nepotism perhaps. Since the age of at least eighteen he had been employed as a blacksmith like his brothers Morgan and Moses, and in around 1843 had married Mary Isaac (b. c. 1825, Dinas, Glamorgan) in Cardiff, with whom he had two children:

  • David (b. c. 1848, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Mary Ann (b. c. 1851, Porth Glamorgan)

Shortly before the birth of their second child, Thomas and his family had moved to Porth, where his brothers Morgan and Rowland would soon take up positions at Cymmer Colliery. The 1851 census shows them living in a cottage with two lodgers (both coal miners), but sadly Thomas’s wife Mary passed away later that same year. He remarried about four years later to another woman, also called Mary (surname unknown, b. c. 1818, Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan – d. 22 August 1886, Llantrisant, Glamorgan), with whom he had at least one more child:

  • John (b. c. 1857, Porth Glamorgan)

By 1861 they had moved again to Castellau, near where Thomas’s brother Morgan was living at the time. Their address was recorded as the Colliers Arms, which they appear to have been running as a lodging house with five guests staying with them on the night of the census. This was evidently a profitable sideline, as although Thomas was still working as a blacksmith the family were earning enough by then to employ a domestic servant.

This was still the case in 1871, by which time Thomas had been hired as a colliery foreman, presumably by his brother Moses at Penygraig, and his eldest son David had started working as a grocer. Interestingly, their address that year is given as ‘Penygraig Store Dinas’, quite possibly the same storehouse where the Rowlands were recorded living as far back as 1841. Thomas’s stint at his brother’s company was to be short-lived however, as by 1881 he had changed careers yet again and was working as a butcher alongside his son at 12-13 Penygraig Road, Ystradyfodwg. His wife Mary died on 22 August 1886, and Thomas himself passed away at the age of sixty-five on 7 April 1888. He was buried at Cymmer Independant Chapel.

Like Thomas, Moses’s other older brother, Rowland, would also become involved in the family’s colliery business. Of all his siblings, he is perhaps the most intriguing figure. In his youth, he lived at Dinas Storehouse with his mother and several of his brothers and sisters. At the time of his first marriage to Susannah Jones around 1842, he was working as a collier. Unfortunately, not much is known about Susannah except that she and Rowland had a son together, Moses Rowland Rowland (b. c. August 1943, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 24 Mar 1926, Bridgend, Glamorgan), and she likely passed away before 1851. In the census for that year, Rowland and his son were recorded living with his brother, Moses the Younger, at Graig Ddu Cottages. Curiously however, he listed his marital status as ‘unmarried’ rather than ‘widowed’. This could have been a simple error or the couple could have separated and were living apart by this time. Later, he married for the second time to a woman named Ann Williams (b. c. 1826, Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan – d. c. November 1871, Pontypridd, Glamorgan).

Rowland’s employment as a foreman at Cymmer Colliery and his subsequent trial, conviction, and eventual acquittal following the disaster of 1856 have already been discussed in relation to Morgan. After this major setback, however, like Morgan, he became a coal agent (traveling salesman). The 1861 census shows him living at ‘Ty Rowlands’ (Rowland House) in Llangendeirne, Carmarthenshire, with his wife and seventeen-year-old son, who had become an accountant, perhaps while on an extended business trip. A decade later, at the age of fifty, he was living at Bryncelyn, near Ystradyfodwg, where he was apparently prospecting for coal in the Garw Valley while also working as a colliery manager for his brother Moses at Penygraig (Morgan, c. 1975). Living with him that year were his wife Anne, his mother-in-law Jane Williams, two lodgers, and a twenty-seven-year-old domestic servant named Jane Davies (b. c. 1843, Pontyates, Carmarthenshire – d. 6 May 1914, Pontypridd, Glamorgan).

In the 1881 census, Jane was recorded living with Rowland again at 60 Trafalgar Terrace, Ystradyfodwg, however not as his servant but as his third wife. Sadly, Rowland’s second wife Anne appears to have died in late 1871, but Rowland is alleged to have divorced her before she passed in order to marry Jane, which he did in around May 1872. He and Jane had three children together, the youngest of whom would go on to serve as a Member of Parliament for Flintshire:

  • Esther Mary (b. c. 1876 Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan – d. c. February 1919, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Rowland (b. c. 1878 Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan – d. 14 January 1904, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Gwilym (b. 2 December 1878 Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 16 January 1949, Penygraig, Glamorgan)

Despite his questionable personal life, Rowland was widely respected in the Rhondda Valley as a thoughtful theologian, a passionate advocate for the temperance movement, and an eloquent speaker. He served as a member of the Penygraig School Board and was a deacon with the Calvinistic Methodists at Dinas, then later at Pisgah Calvinistic Methodist Chapel, where he was appointed treasurer in 1868 (Morgan, c. 1975). He was also apparently held in high esteem by his workers, who, in an illuminated address from 1873, described him in rather florid prose as “a celebrated manager, the generous Rowlands [sic]; the abstainer’s leader, from whose zeal Penygraig is like a peaceful paradise … our unrivaled hero through whose work the “strike” is finally banished from cheerful Penygraig.”

Rowland Rowland, c. 1873, from an illuminated address.

Rowland retired sometime before 1891, by which time he was living at 9 Tylacelyn Road, Clydach, with his young family. He died three years later on 19 March 1894 at the age of seventy-three. According to his probate record, his final address was 36 Bryncelyn Road, Penygraig, and his effects worth £141 6s 3d went to his widow Jane, who herself passed away on 6 May 1914. Writing some years after his death, Dinas historian William James said of Rowland:

I have not knowingly come into contact with any working class man who was more sagacious than he. From what I knew of him I suspected he had too much spirit in him to stay on top of any matter for very long. If he could have confined himself to the matter in hand, it’s likely enough that he would have achieved his ambitions within many circles. Despite this, he moved in important situations during his life. He was a Sunday School teacher with but a few comparables in Dinas. He had a a particular attribute for gaining the attention and affection of his class, apart from being able to impart education to them. He did enormous good for many in Dinas with his efforts with abstinence; the results of his work in this direction will benefit generations to come. His family, by necessity feels a great loss with his death; his care for his children was so great; one can almost say that he was too extreme in this direction.

William James, 1902

* * *

We now return at last to Morgan, the eldest of the Rowland siblings and my great-great-great-grandfather. When we left him in 1861, he had been a travelling coal agent like his younger brother Rowland. Three of his children had already begun work by that time: his first child, and the only one to have left home so far, Esther, was employed as a servant in Llanwonno, his oldest son, Moses M., was an engineer, and Evan was a coal miner. These occupations reflect the fact that the Penygraig Colliery Company was still in its infancy at this stage, and the Rowland family were yet to benefit from it collectively.

By 1871 all of that had changed. Morgan was a manager at Dinas Colliery, and the family’s improved fortunes were evident from the fact that they were employing a domestic servant in their home at 1 Five Acres, Dinas. Of the children still living at home, Evan had risen to become a colliery overman, while Rees David was a shepherd, and Catherine was a milliner. The previous year, their eldest daughter Esther had married William Williams, a former clerk and her uncle Moses the Younger’s business partner in the Penygraig Coal Company. Williams was, by then, one of the company’s owners. Another of Morgan and Mary’s daughters, Elizabeth Foster Rowland, had married a mining engineer named William Lewis in 1869.

During his tenure as manager at Dinas, Morgan featured in a number of local news stories, which paint an interesting picture of his time there. One such story from 30 August 1871 recounts how he had apprehended a man he believed to be stealing some ‘tramroad plates’ (iron railway plates) from Dinas Colliery. The man then jumped up and grabbed Morgan by the beard, pulling out a tuft “the size of a small bird’s nest” (Western Mail, 31 August 1871), which he subsequently produced as evidence in the court case that followed. This was not the only time he appeared in court due to alleged cases of theft at the colliery. On 5 February 1875, Morgan accused an employee of stealing some sticks, however, he had already been annoyed with that particular worker because he was leaving the company. The defence argued that Morgan “always suspects people that he dislikes”, and the case was dismissed (Western Mail, 3 February 1875). Later that year, on 5 June, he featured in a report covering a robbery of 5d worth of oats from the colliery’s stables (Western Mail, 5 June 1875).

Morgan also featured in a number of more serious stories. On 26 April 1879, following a gas explosion at Dinas Colliery earlier that year, he became a key witness for the prosecution. By then, he was no longer working at Dinas Colliery, but he told the court that during his time there, he had repeatedly warned the owner about the negligence of an overman named Chubb, who had been promoted to colliery manager at the time of the explosion (Northern Echo, 28 April 1879). Perhaps his experiences after the Cymmer Colliery explosion had caused him to become especially safety conscious in the years since. An article from 14 October 1880 shows that he was present and aiding during the aftermath of a later mining disaster, but this time it was at the family firm, the Naval Colliery Company (The Glasgow Herald, 14 December 1880).”

On 10 December 1880, twenty-three years after the Cymmer Colliery Disaster, another horrific gas explosion killed one hundred and one miners at Penygraig. Once again, the Rowland family was implicated. Due to the family’s nepotistic hiring practices, one of Rowland Rowland’s sons, the former accountant Moses Rowland Rowland, had been appointed as a manager at the Naval Steam Colliery, despite lacking the necessary experience or qualifications. After the explosion, a Home Office Inquiry revealed that his only previous experience had been “as a clerk, storekeeper, and measurer, primarily involved in book work, and, as he expressly stated, not engaged in the practical duties of mine managing.” Moreover, his manager’s certificate “was entirely false…and the owners of the colliery, or some of them, must have known it to be false.”

No one was charged in the end, but the jury strongly condemned the company’s owner Moses the Younger for neglecting to follow a number of safety measures. A second explosion on 27 January 1884, which killed another fourteen men, further tarnished the Naval Colliery Company’s reputation and brought yet more suffering to an already traumatized community. Moses was said to have experienced severe anguish at the loss of life in the two explosions, and in his final months began to manifest “symptoms of mental disturbance” (Western Mail, 23 September 1884). The company also suffered as a result of the Long Depression in the 1880s, and it was eventually sold off in October 1887, less than thirty years after Moses discovered the original coal seam at Penygraig.

Naval Colliery, Penygraig, being dismantled, 1960s. Source: People’s Collection Wales.

* * *

By the early 1880s Morgan and Mary were living at Grovefield Terrace, Dinas, with their daughter Mary Ann and a domestic servant. Mary passed away on 6 June 1883 aged sixty-five, and Morgan died the following year of ‘morbis cordis ascites’ (possibly caused by cancer) at the age of sixty-eight, uncannily on the exact same day as his brother Moses the Younger, 21 September 1884. Given the timing, it is impossible to ignore the possibility that the second Naval Colliery disaster may have hastened their declining health. Morgan’s eldest son, my great-great-grandfather Moses M. Rowland was present at his death. He was buried in Ebenezer Chapel on 22 September, and his personal estate at the time was worth £318 14s. In his obituary he was described as “a remarkable man”, “one of the best colliery managers”, and “remarkable in the neighbourhood for his attachment to intellectual pursuits” (Western Mail, 23 September 1884). His only known photograph is a faded studio portrait of him sat with his younger brother Moses, taken a few years before they died within hours of each other.

Morgan Rowland and Moses Rowland the Younger, c. 1880, Cambrian Studio, Pontypridd.

The deaths of the two great Rowland patriarchs in 1884 marked the end of an era, not just for the family, but for the Rhondda Valley as a whole. Starting from virtually nothing, by the early 1880s the Rowlands had become a kind of local industrial aristocracy. Their reliance on family connections over merit when appointing staff would ultimately prove disastrous, but their closeness as a family had also undoubtedly been key to their early success. Although the Rowland, or increasingly ‘Rowlands’, name would continue to carry some weight, Morgan’s children, including my great-great-grandfather, would never experience the same wealth and influence as their parents. In the next post, we will look at the lives they led in the aftermath of the previous generation’s spectacular rise and fall.

Sources

Egan, David. Coal Society: A History of the South Wales Mining Valleys. Gomer, 1987.

James, William. Hanes Dechreu yr Achos Crefyddol yn Ninas y Rhondda: Ynghyd a Sylwadau ar Nodweddion Amryw Bersonau. Tonypandy: Argraffwyd gan Robert Davies, Maddock, a’u Cyf. 1902. Translated by Philip Richards, 2007.

Lewis, E.D. The Rhondda Valleys: A Study in Industrial Development, 1800 to the Present Day. London: Phoenix House, 1959.

Morgan, Tudor Reynolds. The Rowlands Family, Penygraig, Rhondda Valley. c. 1975.

Northern Mine Research Society. “Cymer Colliery Explosion, Rhondda Valley, 1856”. Accessed 18 September 2023. https://www.nmrs.org.uk/mines-map/accidents-disasters/glamorganshire/cymer-colliery-explosion-rhondda-valley-1856/.

Northern Mine Research Society. “Pen-Y-Craig Colliery Explosion, Rhondda, 1880”. Accessed 20 December 2023. https://www.nmrs.org.uk/mines-map/accidents-disasters/glamorganshire/pen-y-craig-colliery-explosion-rhondda-1880/.

Rowlands of my father (part 1)

This is the first in a series of posts on the history of the Rowland family of the Rhondda Valley, the maternal ancestors of my grandfather Rowland Bevan Jones (see Keeping up with the Joneses (part 3)). In this part I will be looking at the earliest known generation of Rowlands from the late eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century. Much of this story has been pieced together through the combined efforts of multiple researchers over the years, whose work I have attempted to credit wherever possible. In particular I would like to thank Philip Richards and Peter J. Williams for their invaluable help in researching these early generations. For consistency Welsh place names have been standardised to conform to their familiar modern spellings.

In the late nineteenth century the Rowland family could be counted among the most influential industrial dynasties in South Wales. While they later became closely associated with the coal mining communities of the Rhondda Valley in Glamorgan, their origins lay further west. According to a contemporary newspaper account (Western Mail, 21 March 1894, p. 6, col. 4) they were related to the renowned evangelical preacher Daniel Rowland (c. 1711-1790), a leading figure of the Welsh Methodist Revival from Cardiganshire. This claim has never been proved however, and as it did not appear in print until over a century after Daniel’s death it may have been a later family legend.

Their earliest verifiable ancestors can be traced back to the tiny villages of Caio and Llanycrwys in Carmarthenshire, where five children with the surname ‘Rowland’ were born between 1786 and 1801 (Swann, 2015):

  • Ann (b. c. 1786, Caio, Carmarthenshire – d. c. July 1859, Llandovery, Carmarthenshire)
  • Moses (b. c. 1790, Caio, Carmarthenshire – d. 1837, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Thomas (b. c. 1791, Caio, Carmarthenshire – d. 1 January 1844, Dinas Middle Colliery, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Catherine (b. c. 1794, Llanycrwys, Carmarthenshire)
  • Rees (b. c. 1801, Llanycrwys, Carmarthenshire – d. c. 1856, Glamorgan)

While circumstantial evidence strongly suggests these five children were siblings (and in this post I will be referring to them as such), there remains some uncertainty as to their parentage. The only matching baptism record to have surfaced so far is for a Catherine Rowland from 6 May 1794 in Llanycrwys, which gives her father’s name as Roland Thomas (no mother is mentioned, unfortunately). Rees’s marriage certificate from 1840 however asserts that his father was a farmer named Rowland Rees. This claim is backed up somewhat by a Land Tax Assessment from 1798 which confirms that a man with that name lived in the parish of Llanycrwys around the time when Rees was born, specifically in the hamlet of Mynachty. Whatever their father’s name was, it seems likely their use of ‘Rowland’ as a last name arose through the Welsh patronymic system, in which children received their father’s forename as a surname.

Little is known of the family’s early years in Carmarthenshire, however Fred S. Price (1904, p. [5]) writing a century later paints an idyllic picture of the remote, rural community the children would have known growing up:

Though far removed from railways and other conveniences of modern civilisation, [Caio] deserves to be better known to the world at large on account of its historical interest, its natural beauty, its mountains and fine rocks on the north, frequented by buzzards, ravens, badgers and foxes, and which afford pastures only for sheep and ponies; its beautiful valleys of the Twrch and the Cothi on the south, where the goldfinch, the bullfinch, the swallows, the greenfinch, and the rare kingfisher haunt every year, and there rear their young. On the north the country is bare and bleak, on the south beautifully wooded, and altogether affords as great a variety of scenery as is possible on so small a scale.

Church and village, Cynwyl Gaeo (AKA Caio), 1885, © The National Library of Wales 2023 (via People’s Collection Wales).

We can tell from the children’s birthplaces that the Rowlands moved north from Caio to Llanycrwys at some point between 1791 and 1794, where they remained until at least 1801. Ann, the eldest, was the first to marry and start a family. Her husband William Llewellyn (b. c. 1786, Caio, Carmarthenshire – d. c. February 1864, Llandovery, Carmarthenshire) was a fellow Caio native, and although it is unclear exactly when they were married he and Ann are known to have had the following four children between 1812 and 1831:

  • Mary (b. c. 1812, Pencarreg, Carmarthenshire)
  • Elizabeth (b. 1821)
  • Rowland (b. c. 1821, Caio, Carmarthenshire – d. c. February 1903. Rhondda, Glamorgan)
  • John (b. 18 February 1831, Llanycrwys, Carmarthenshire)

Their birthplaces suggest Ann and William did not initially travel far from the village of their birth, settling first in nearby Pencarreg before returning to Caio and Llanycrwys by the early 1820s. Two decades later however they were recorded in the 1841 census living with William’s father, Llewellyn William, in a house called ‘Wenallt’ in the Glamorgan hamlet of Llantwit Major. William was employed as a tinplate manufacturer that year, and living alongside him, Ann, and William’s father was their daughter Elizabeth and her two sons William and Rowland Thomas. William’s elderly father Llewellyn died the following year, and by the 1851 census he and Ann had moved back to Caio. William, then aged sixty-five, was working as a shoemaker and he and Ann were caring for a grandson, their daughter Mary’s nine-year-old boy John Lewis. Ann died at the age of seventy-three in the third quarter of 1859. Her husband survived a further five years, long enough for him to be recorded in the 1861 census living at the family home ‘Ddisgwilfa’ with his daughter Mary, still working as a shoemaker in his mid-seventies.

Although she and William eventually returned to Caio, Ann’s move from the Carmarthen countryside to industrial Glamorgan was a journey shared by all four of her younger siblings. The catalyst for this family migration was their brother Moses, “a short amiable man, with a high and broad forehead” (Morgan, 1903), the eldest of the three Rowland boys, and my fourth great-grandfather. In his early twenties he had moved to Penderyn in Breconshire, where he worked as a school teacher. Prior to this he may have attended one of the dissenting academies which had been set up in West Wales, which would explain how he came to learn English. On 30 December 1815 he married a young woman named Mary Morgan (b. c. 1795, Llantrisant, Glamorgan) in Ystradfellte, Breconshire, with the consent of her father Morgan Owen. The fact that her father’s permission was required suggests Mary was under twenty-one at the time. Her father Morgan also served as one of their witnesses alongside a man named John Thomas. Unsurprisingly, as a school teacher Moses was able to sign his name but the ‘x’ by Mary’s confirms she was illiterate.

Falls at Cilhepste, Ystradfellte, drawn by J. P. Neale and engraved by T. Bonnor in 1815, the year Moses Rowland and Mary Morgan were married there. Source: Rees, 1815 (via People’s Collection Wales).

After marrying, Moses and Mary appear to have stayed in Penderyn for at least a year, where they had one son:

  • Morgan (b. c. 1816, Penderyn, Breconshire – d. 21 September 1884, Hendregwilym, Penygraig, Glamorgan)

Morgan Rowland, my third great-grandfather, was baptised in Penderyn Church on 12 May 1816. Not long after, his father Moses was offered a job as a school teacher in the coal mining village of Dinas, Glamorgan, which he accepted. This fateful offer came courtesy of Walter Coffin, “the first real industrial pioneer of the Rhondda Valleys” (Lewis, 1959, p. 40) who had sunk Dinas Colliery in 1812 and was now in need of someone to teach English and arithmetic to his workers’ children. Moses had been recommended to him by Thomas Morgan, a cousin of Moses’s wife Mary who vouched for his good reputation:

There is an Abereyron man, named Moses Rowland, keeping an English School at Penderyn. He is a clever man. He is newly married at Ystradvellte to my cousin, Mary Thomas [sic] … I dare say he would accept your invitation.

Walter Coffin (1784–1867), who established the first of the deep coal mines in the Rhondda Valley.

Moses is said to have delivered his first lessons in a makeshift day school in a colliery storehouse. By the mid-1820s however he had earned a reputation as “an enthusiast in the cause of elementary education in the district” (LSJ Services [Wales] Ltd., 2009) thanks both to his tireless work at the day school, and for establishing a thriving Sunday School for children and adults in a room on White Rock Row, the precursor to Soar Baptist Chapel. In Soariana, the Centenary Book of Zoar Chapel, Penygraig he was described as a good man who was particularly active in chapel life and gave sermons as a lay preacher there despite being a Methodist himself (Hicks, 2002). Around this same time Moses apparently “became such a firm favourite with [Walter] Coffin that he later became secretary and his Clerk of Works” at Dinas Colliery (Carpenter, 2000, p. 28).

Throughout the 1820s, as Moses’s reputation and influence grew so too did his family, with Mary giving birth to at least eight children between 1819 and 1830:

  • Ester (b. c. 1819, Glamorgan – d. 11 February 1820, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Rowland (b. c. January 1821, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 19 March 1894 , Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Thomas (b. c. 1823, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 7 April 1888, Pontypridd, Glamorgan)
  • Esther (b. c. January 1824, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 3 August 1895, Newton Nottage, Glamorgan)
  • Mary (b. 30 October 1825, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 14 April 1881, Penygraig, Glamorgan)
  • John (b. c. 6 December 1827, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan – d. c. 19 December 1827, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan)
  • Moses (b. c. September 1828, Dinas, Glamorgan – d. 21 September 1884, Penpisgah House, Penygraig, Glamorgan)
  • Anne (b. c. 1830, Llantrisant, Glamorgan)

Two sadly died in infancy (Ester, their second-born, and John, their sixth) but of those who survived, several would go on to have a significant impact on Rhondda Valley and its community in the decades to come.

Following Walter Coffin’s sinking of a second mine shaft the population of Dinas continued to increase throughout the 1830s, and by 1941 Coffin employed 301 men and 113 boys, more than any other colliery in the Glamorgan highlands not connected to an ironworks (Lewis, 1959, p. 44). Conditions for mineworkers were notoriously harsh and dangerous at the time, however some mine owners did at least provide educational facilities for their workers’ children (and indeed the children they employed) at a time before government grants for schools were available. Initially this was on a largely informal basis, like the early arrangement between Moses Rowland and Walter Coffin, however later a number of official colliery schools were opened in the Rhondda.

Among the very first of these was Graig-Ddu School in Dinas, which was opened by Walter Coffin in 1830. Moses’s success as an educator in the local area and his good working relationship with Coffin made him the obvious candidate for the role of Dinas’s first schoolmaster. On 29 September 1829 an agreement was signed between Coffin, Moses and the owner of the Graig-Ddu and Gwaun-Adda farmland to lease that land for nine hundred and ninety-nine years, with the first rent payment due on that date the following year (Lewis, 1959, p. 191).

Moses’s tenure as schoolmaster of Dinas was to be a brief one however. In 1837 he died after suffering a case of bronchitis at the age of forty-seven. He was buried at Ebenezer Chapel, where his epitaph reads “I shall be satisfied, when I awake with Thy Likeness” (psalm 17:15). Despite the short time he spent in the Rhondda there is no doubt he left an enduring legacy, and according to Tudor Reynolds Morgan (1903), “his qualities of heart and mind influenced Dinas people long after his departure.” His wife Mary lived long enough to be recorded in the 1841 census, at which time she was working as a housekeeper and living at Dinas storehouse where her husband had taught with her unmarried children Rowland, Thomas, Moses, and Anne. She died just four years later in 1845 at the age of fifty, when her youngest children were still in their teens. Following her death her son Moses (the Younger) seems to have become the head of the house, but his story will be told in the next installment.

* * *

Among those most directly influenced by Moses (the Elder) were his three younger siblings, Thomas, Catherine, and Rees. The eldest of these, Thomas, had married a woman named Margaret “Pegi” Rowland (b. c. 1893, Llanddewi, Cardiganshire – d. c. 1874, Pontypridd, Glamorgan) on 16 August 1816 in Caio when he was around twenty-five. The signature on his marriage certificate shows that like his brother Moses he was literate, and that Pegi was not. Moses and his wife Mary also served as Thomas and Pegi’s witnesses, having themselves been married the previous year. They initially settled in the village of Myddfai where they had two children, before moving to Llandingad in the early 1820s, where they had a third:

  • Ann (b. November 1818, Myddfai, Carmarthenshire)
  • Rowland Thomas (b. 25 May 1821, Mydffai, Carmarthenshire)
  • Esther (b. 16 September 1824, Llandingad, Carmarthenshire)

Around the middle of the decade however they followed Thomas’s brother Moses to Glamorgan, where their final three children were born:

  • John (b. c. 1827, Glamorgan – d. 1 January 1844, Dinas Middle Colliery, Dinas, Glamorgan)
  • Moses Thomas (b. c. 1832, Llantrisant, Glamorgan – 16 October 1895, Penygraig, Glamorgan)
  • David (b. 1834, Glamorgan – d. 1 January 1844, Dinas Middle Colliery, Dinas, Glamorgan)

The 1841 census records the family living at Dinas storehouse, the same building where Moses’s widow Mary was housed at the time. Thomas was by then working as a collier, unsurprisingly given his family’s connection to the pits, and he is also said to have also served as a deacon at Ebenezer Chapel at around this time. Perhaps more surprisingly, all four of his sons were recorded as colliers as well, the youngest of whom was only seven. Beyond shocking by today’s standards, the use of child labour in coal mines was already coming under increased scrutiny by 1841. The previous year a commission headed by Baron Ashley had been established to investigate the working conditions of miners, particularly children, and Dinas was one of the collieries they visited. It was found that even by the standards of the time, Walter Coffin’s use of young children for work underground was excessive, with more boys under the age of 13 employed at Dinas than at any other colliery in Glamorgan and Monmouthshire (Lewis, 1959, p. 151). Remarkably, the report included the first-hand accounts of several boys at Dinas Colliery, which describe their long hours, low wages and the dark, dangerous conditions in which they worked. One boy even touched on the issue of elementary education in Dinas, which despite the efforts of educators like Moses Rowland was always doomed to suffer as long as economic necessity and the absence of legal protections kept so many children in work:

I have been driving horses below ground three years, and was 12 months before at a trap door [working as a ‘door boy’]; when at the traps used frequently to fall asleep; works 12 hours; would go the School if the work were not so long; cannot go now as I now have to work on the night as well as the day shifts.

Philip Davies, aged 10 (Haulier)

The commissioners added that Philip was illiterate, as well as neglected and sickly in appearance. In general they noted that the children working in the mines of South Wales “become pallid, stunted in growth, short of breath, sometimes thin and often burnt, crooked, crippled, and that, in addition, they are peculiarly subject to certain mortal diseases, the direct result of their employment and the state of the place in which they work” (Lewis, 1959, p. 153).

Engraved illustration of children working in a colliery. Source: The Condition and Treatment of the Children Employed in the Mines and Colliers of the United Kingdom. Carefully Compiled from the Appendix to the First Report of the Commissioners … With Copious Extracts from the Evidence, and Illustrative Engravings. London: William Strange, 1842 (via British Library).

The report sparked a public outcry, and many including Charles Dickens (whose A Christmas Carol was partly inspired by the report) called for a change in the law. After being watered down considerably in the House of Lords this was granted with the Mines and Collieries Act 1842, which banned women, girls, and boys under the age of ten from working underground. The immediate effect on Thomas Rowland’s family would have been limited however, as all but one of his sons would have been over ten by 1842, and in practice the law was widely flouted due to poor enforcement and a lack of compensation for families whose incomes were hit by the new restrictions. Moreover the Mines and Collieries Act of 1842 did nothing to improve the dangerous and often deadly working conditions for those who were still obliged to work below ground.

On the morning of New Year’s Day 1844, a firedamp explosion at Dinas Middle Colliery caused by poor ventilation took the lives of twelve workers, four of whom were children. Among those killed were Thomas Rowland, and his sons, John and David. Reports from those who were there that day paint a harrowing picture of a powerless and grief-stricken community:

The agony and consternation of the wives and daughters of the employed, among whom the report spread, may be easily conceived. Each, for the moment, lamented the death of a son, a brother, or a husband; and, until the exact number of the deceased was ascertained, the neighbourhood presented a scene of wailing and alarm, which a bereavement under such circumstances is well calculated to create.

Report on the 1844 Dinas Colliery explosion which lists Thomas, John, and David Rowland among the dead. Source: The Bristol Mercury, 6 January 1844, p. 4, col. 1 (via The British Newspaper Archive).

Three days after the explosion the bodies had still not been recovered, and Thomas and his sons were among the last to be found. None but one of the bodies displayed signs of burning, suggesting the rest died of suffocation. In addition to those killed, a further three suffered broken limbs and other injuries. The coroner’s inquest that followed was severely critical of the overman Griffith Williams, who it transpired had neglected to personally check if conditions were safe in each heading that morning, and had instead entrusted a fourteen-year-old boy under his charge to inspect several by himself (The Monmouthshire Merlin, 13 January 1844, p. 2, cols. 4-5). The coroner recommended the overman be charged with manslaughter, but a jury ultimately returned a verdict of accidental death. There was to be no significant legislation to improve working conditions for miners until the Mines Regulation Act 1860, which raised the minimum age boys could work underground from ten to twelve, where it would remain for several decades.

After her husband’s death, Thomas’s widow Pegi worked as a glover and was recorded living at ‘Dinas Cottages’ in the 1851 census along with her last surviving son Moses, who himself died as the result of a mining accident years later in 1895. It is unknown what became of their daughters Ann and Esther, but as Pegi would have struggled to support three children by herself with little income and no compensation, it is possible they were sent to live with relatives after their father’s death.

* * *

Thomas’s younger sister Catherine is perhaps the Rowland sibling about whom we know the least. She married relatively late at the age of thirty-six to a widower named Thomas Thomas (b. c. April 1792, Caio, Carmarthenshire), whose first wife apparently died giving birth to their seventh child. The wedding took place on 6 April 1830 in Thomas’s home parish of Caio, and they would go on to have at least the following five children over the next decade:

  • Esther (b. c. 1832)
  • John (b. c. 1833, Caio, Carmarthenshire)
  • Moses (b. c. 1834, Caio, Carmarthenshire)
  • David (b. c. 1835)
  • Ann (b. c. 1840, Llantrisant, Glamorgan)

The children’s birthplaces show they remained in Caio for about five years before joining Catherine’s siblings in Glamorgan. In the 1841 census the family, including two children from Thomas’s previous marriage, William and Rees, were living at Graig-Ddu south of Dinas, close to the village school. Thomas was recorded as a labourer while his teenage boys Rees and William were both working at the colliery, as was his and Catherine’s eight-year-old son John. In 1851 they were living at ‘Gwaun Adda Cottages’, and by then Thomas was working as a coal miner alongside his sons William, John, and Moses. In a sign of the changing times, their youngest child Ann was recorded as a full-time ‘scholar’.

Unfortunately after this date nothing more is known for certain about Catherine, her husband Thomas, or any of their children. Slightly more can be said of her brother Rees, the fifth and last of this first generation of Rowlands. At age twenty he married Gwenillian Jones in Llanddeusant, Carmarthenshire, on 30 January 1821, with whom he had at least five children:

  • John (b. c. Llanddeusant, Carmarthenshire, 1822)
  • Esther (b. c. 1826)
  • Margaret (b. 23 December 1826, Llywel, Breconshire
  • Gwenillian (b. c. 1832)
  • Ann (b. c. 1837)

From their children’s baptism records and later census returns we know Catherine and Thomas initially settled in Llanddeusant, Carmarthenshire before moving to Llywel in Breconshire by 1826, where Rees worked as a weaver. Rees’s wife Gwenillian died at some point between 1837 and 1840, and in around August that year he married his second wife Kesiah Jones (b. c. 1811, Glamorgan – d. c. August 1849 Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan) at Carmel Chapel, Merthyr Tydfil. Their marriage certificate records Rees’s address as Ystradyfodwg, confirming that he and the children had moved to Glamorgan around the same time as his sister Catherine. He gave his occupation as ‘farmer’, and in common with his brothers Moses and Thomas he signed his name on the register (unlike Kesiah whose mark indicates she was illiterate). As mentioned near the beginning of this post however, the real significance of Rees’s second marriage certificate is our only credible source confirming his father’s name, and therefore that of his siblings’, Rowland Rees. Moreover the absence of the word ‘deceased’ or ‘retired’ under his father’s name suggests that as late as 1840 he was possibly still alive and working as a farmer.

The 1841 census shows that Rees and his family farmed a piece of land known as ‘Rhondda Ffychan’, most likley on the site now occupied by Rhondda Fechan Farm in Ystradyfodwg parish. It also shows that by then he and Kesiah had had their first child together, who would soon be joined by a second. Their names were:

  • Mary (b. c. 1840, Glamorgan)
  • Jenkin (b. c. September 1845, Ystradyfodwg, Glamorgan)

Jenkin’s baptism record from 7 September 1845 gives the family’s address as Aberdare, where Rees was apparently still working as a farmer. Kesiah died in 1849 aged around thirty-eight, and two years later her widower Rees was recorded living at Graig-Ddu Cottages south of Dinas, the same place his sister Catherine’s family had been a decade earlier. By then Rees was no longer involved in farming and was instead employed as a ‘coal tipper’, no doubt working for Walter Coffin’s now-ubiquitous colliery like both his brothers before him. And like his brothers, he too would soon be gone, but with the passing of this first generation of Rowlands the next were ready to make their mark.

View of Dinas, c. 1874-1875. Several locations associated with the Rowlands are labelled, including (from left to right) Gwaun-Adda where Catherine’s family lived, the Methodist Chapel where some of them preached and worshipped, Dinas Middle Pit where Thomas Rowland was killed, and Graig-Ddu where Moses established his school and where both Catherine and Rees would later live. Source: Ordnance Survey (via National Library of Scotland).

* * *

In the next instalment we will look at this second generation of Rowlands, specifically the children of Moses Rowland (the Elder) and Mary Morgan, including my third great-grandfather Morgan, whose influence in the Rhondda Valley would soon come to rival Walter Coffin’s. For better or worse.

Sources

Carpenter, David. Rhondda collieries. Stroud: Tempus, 2000.

Commissioners for Inquiring into the Employment and Condition of Children in Mines and Manufactories. The Condition and Treatment of the Children Employed in the Mines and Colliers of the United Kingdom. Carefully Compiled from the Appendix to the First Report of the Commissioners … With Copious Extracts from the Evidence, and Illustrative Engravings. London: William Strange, 1842

Hicks, Gareth. “Glamorgan  County, Towns and Parishes 2”. Genuki. 2002. Accessed 27 February 2023. https://www.genuki.org.uk/big/wal/GHP/HelpPagepearlsGLA2#Merthyr.

Lewis, E.D. The Rhondda Valleys: A Study in Industrial Development, 1800 to the Present Day. London: Phoenix House, 1959.

Morgan, O. History of Pontypridd and the Rhondda Valleys. Pontypridd: Whittaker & Co., 1903.

Morgan, Tudor Reynolds. The Rowlands Family, Penygraig, Rhondda Valley. c. 1975.

Northern Mine Research Society. “Dinas Middle Pit Explosion, Glamorganshire, 1884”. Accessed 17 March 2023. https://www.nmrs.org.uk/mines-map/accidents-disasters/glamorganshire/dinas-middle-pit-explosion-glamorganshire-1844/.

Price, Fred S. History of Caio, Carmarthenshire. Swansea: Published by the author, 1904.

Rees, Thomas. The Beauties of England and Wales: or Original Delineations , Topographical, Historical, and Descriptive (Vol. XVIII — South Wales). London, 1815.

Swann, Brian. Martin and Rowlands Families of Glamorganshire. Version 1.02. 2015.

LSJ Services [Wales] Ltd. “Colliery schools in the Rhondda in the c19th.” Tribute to the Rhondda. 2009. Accessed 7 November 2011. http://www.therhondda.co.uk/general/rhondda_education.htm.

Williams, Peter J. Rowlands Family Tree. 2011.