Calfaria, Aberdare

Calfaria, Aberdare
Location Monk Street, Aberdare
Country Wales, United Kingdom
Denomination Baptist
History
Founded 1811
Architecture
Heritage designation Grade II
Designated 1 October 1991
Architect(s) Thomas Joseph
Architectural type Chapel
Style Early 19th century
Completed 1852 (replacing earlier building)
Construction cost £1,400
Closed 2012
Specifications
Capacity 840

Calfaria Baptist Chapel, Aberdare, was one of the largest baptist churches in the South Wales Valleys and the oldest in the Aberdare valley. The chapel had an ornate interior, including a boarded ceiling with a deeply undercut rose, while the balcony balustrading had a cast iron front with an intricate foliage design.[1] These features were common in the Welsh chapels of the late nineteenth century. The organ was installed in 1903 at a cost of £850.[1] It was played for the last time in 2012 by Robert Nicholls, during a Radio Cymru broadcast shortly before the closure of the chapel.

Calfaria, Aberdare, now closed, in 2014

Early History

The earliest Baptist meetings in the area were held in agricultural buildings or in the Long Room of the Farmers Arms in Aberdare.[2] In 1811, a small piece of land was leased from Griffith Davies of Ynysybwl and 1812, Carmel Baptist Church was opened.[1] Known locally as Penpound, the first minister was William Lewis.[1] The church struggled in the early days owing to the failure of the Aberdare Ironworks in 1815. Lewis's pastorate came to an end after only two years.[2]

Thomas Price at Calfaria

Thomas Price commenced his ministry in 1845. As the membership grew the building became too small so Carmel was handed over to a smaller English speaking congregation while a new chapel, Calfaria, was built nearby. The new chapel was designed by Thomas Joseph, a colliery engineer from Hirwaun, cost £1,400 to build and seated 840. The building was extended in 1859 and the adjacent Calfaria Hall built in 1871.[1] The first service was held at Calfaria on February 8, 1852.[2] By this time, Price had become a leading figure in public life, primarily as a result of his very public criticisms of the 1847 Education Reports and the evidence given to the commissioners by the vicar of Aberdare, the Rev John Griffith.

At one time in the nineteenth century, Calfaria had over a thousand members but many hundreds were transferred to branch chapels established at the instigation of Thomas Price.[3] In 1855 the Heolyfelin Baptist Church was formed as a branch of the Hirwaun Baptist Church; and in 1856 91 members from Calfaria were transferred to form the English Baptist Church at Carmel, Aberdare. Bethel, Abernant, was opened in 1857. In 1849 121 members were transferred to form Gwawr, Aberaman; in 1855, 89 were released to start a cause at Mountain Ash, and in 1862, 163 were released to strengthen Bethel, Abernant; in the same year 131 were released to form a church in Ynyslwyd; in 1865 49 were transferred to form Gadlys Church. 927 altogether were released from Calfaria to form churches in various parts of the district.[2] Price, however, ensured that the unity of the Baptist 'family' of churches was maintained by such activities as Baptismal services in the river Cynon and annual eisteddfodau.[4] In 1913, a local resident recalled:

"I remember that once a month on Sunday afternoons, Dr. Price, the Baptist minister, used to baptise his recent converts in the Cynon River, alongside the iron bridge at the bottom of Commercial Street. I have seen as many as 25 or 30 converts, men and women, on the same afternoon. On these occasions the whole of the Baptist community used to meet at the chapel and march ii procession through the streets with the converts, the men converts being attired in long black robes and the women in white. They marched through the streets from the chapel to the place of baptism singing hymns. As a matter of course, large crowds gathered on the river banks to witness the immersions."[5]
Rev Thomas Price

Calfaria retained its pre-eminence among the Baptist churches of the valley although Price's prestige was somewhat undermined by his failure to support Henry Richard at the 1868 General Election. In 1869, Price visited the United States for six months with his daughter Emily. His funeral in 1888 was one of the biggest seen in the valley.[6]

The Pastorate of James Griffiths

Following Price's death, the Rev James Griffiths of Calfaria, Llanelli received a unanimous call to become his successor at Calfaria.[7] He was inducted as minister at special services held on Christmas Day 1888.[8]

Griffiths later wrote the church's centenary history in 1912. Membership stood at 537 in 1899 with a slight decline to 420 by 1916 and 396 in 1925.[1]

The Twentieth Century

In 1925 the membership stood at 395. The pastorate of James Griffiths came to an end in 1930 and he was succeeded in 1932 by D. Herbert Davies, who served until 1947 when he moved to Penuel, Carmarthen. Membership had fallen to 168 by 1963.[9]

Like so many chapels, the difficulties continued with the decline of the Welsh language in the valley and by 2003 the membership had fallen to 19 with an average attendance of six at the evening service.[1] After many years of decline, Calfaria eventually closed in 2012.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Jones 2004, pp. 95-6.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Old Aberdare. Local History of the Baptist Denomination". Aberdare Leader. 1 November 1913. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  3. Jones 1964, pp. 153-4.
  4. Jones 1964, p. 153.
  5. Alexander, D.T. (5 April 1913). "Old Aberdare. Leading Men and Establishments 50 Years Ago". Aberdare Leader. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  6. "Funeral of the Late Rev. Dr Price". Aberdare Times. 10 March 1888. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  7. "Aberdare". South Wales Daily News. 5 October 1889. p. 7. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  8. "Sefydlu Gweinidog Newydd yng Nghalfaria. Aberdar". Seren Cymru. 10 January 1890. p. 1. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  9. Rees. Chapels in the Valley. p. 77.

Bibliography

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