1
Ordnance Survey Cut Mark
This OS cut mark can be found on the wall of No1 Exchange Street. It marks a point 137.620m above mean sea level.
Image: © Adrian Dust
Taken: 9 Mar 2016
0.02 miles
2
Ordnance Survey Cut Mark
This OS cut mark can be found on the wall to the south of the path. It marks a point 140.809m above mean sea level.
Image: © Adrian Dust
Taken: 9 Mar 2016
0.06 miles
3
Upstream along the Llynfi, Maesteg
Viewed from a footbridge at the western end of Plasnewydd Street.
The Llynfi is a tributary of the River Ogmore (Afon Ogwr in Welsh).
Plasnewydd Primary School is on the right. An Aldi supermarket is in the distance.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 25 Feb 2015
0.08 miles
4
Part of the Maesteg Sports Centre
The former blast-engine house of the Llynfi Ironworks, now the Reception Area of the Maesteg Sports Centre.
Image: © David Lewis
Taken: Unknown
0.08 miles
5
Entrance to Maesteg RFC ground
The Llynfi Road ground is home to Maesteg Rugby Football Club, founded in 1877.
The following explanation of The Old Parish and 7777 on the wall is based on text on the club's website:
Maesteg's English translation is Fairfield. It is also known as Yr Hen Blwyf or The Old Parish, a name that is forever associated with the numerals 7777, or the Four Sevens. Popular versions of the origin of the Four Sevens are basically the same but it has become a theme with many variations and embellishments. This straightforward account has been taken from the book Tir Iarll (Earls Land) written by the Llangynwyd historian Mr Frederick Evans M.A. from the chapter on Legends
" A certain carpenter in the Parish of Llangynwyd had to make a coffin for a young man of twenty eight years of age. When he came to engrave the deceased's age on the coffin lid he became puzzled to how to express it in figures, possibly because he could not cope with the required curves of the two numerals. Recollecting that four sevens made twenty-eight solved the difficulty of inscribing 7 7 7 7 upon the coffin. Thus, says tradition, if one of the inhabitants could have lived so long then the Parish itself must be of a fabulous age. So with a touch of amusement and slight ridicule the Old Parish or Yr Hen Blwyf was born".
However plausible the story may be, it is fiction. The name Old Parish dates from the reign of Henry VIII and the dissolution of the monasteries. The turmoil of the period saw local churches from the surrounding areas being separated from the mother church of Llangynwyd. When the various boundaries were settled the parish of the mother church of Llangywnyd was known henceforth as The Old Parish.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 17 Nov 2011
0.08 miles
6
Ordnance Survey Cut Mark
This OS cut mark can be found on the NE face of the garage on Upper Street. It marks a point 136.941m above mean sea level.
Image: © Adrian Dust
Taken: 9 Mar 2016
0.08 miles
7
Court Street, Maesteg
Houses on the north side of Court Street, viewed from near the Albert Terrace junction.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 17 Nov 2011
0.09 miles
8
Blowing Engine House, Llynfi Ironworks
Restored and now part of the Maesteg Leisure Centre
Image: © Chris Andrews
Taken: 24 Oct 2012
0.10 miles
9
The cast iron Talbot Bridge, Maesteg
An early example of an iron bridge (1835), after recent renovation.
Image: © David Lewis
Taken: 16 Jan 2009
0.10 miles
10
Valleys to Coast housing, Treharne Row, Maesteg
Located on the east bank of the River Llynfi. A notice on a fence shows V2C (Valleys to Coast housing). V2C is a not-for-profit housing association providing affordable homes to rent or buy in the County Borough of Bridgend.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 30 Oct 2014
0.11 miles