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Bedwellty () is a small village in Caerphilly County Borough in south . The village stands on a ridge of high ground between the and valleys. The village comprises St Sannan's parish church, public house and a few houses. The register of St Sannan's Church dates from 1624, which qualifies Bedwellty as an . Historically the parish lay in the county of Monmouthshire, the hundred of , County Court District, the rural deanery of Bedwellty, the archdeaconry of and the diocese of . Ibid. Several towns based on the iron industry expanded within the parish boundary, including from west to east, , and , which gradually gained administrative independence from Bedwellty between the 1870s and 1890s. A Bedwellty Local Government District was established for the rest of the parish in 1891, becoming an urban district in 1894.

Bedwellty Urban District was abolished in 1974, being divided between the Rhymney Valley and districts. A community called Bedwellty was then created for the part of the former urban district which lay within Islwyn. The community of Bedwellty was abolished in 1982, being divided into the four communities of Argoed, Blackwood, , and .


History
The original ancient parish was very large, including most of the upper and valleys. The first census, of 1801 The 1801 Census documented that 619 people lived in the parish, which then included and .Cited by
(1990). 9780907158431, The National Library of Wales.
A number of communities grew up in the parish, and in the 19th century these became separate local government units.

The church of St Sannan was built in a thirteenth century Gothic style. The church tower is fourteenth century and contains six bells. The church was restored in 1858 and repaired in 1882. The exterior is whitewashed.

The Bedwellty Poor Law Union was established in 1849, covering the two parishes of Bedwellty and . A workhouse was built to serve the area at Georgetown in Tredegar, opening in 1852.

On 19 June 1874, , and local boards of health and local government districts were formed, each including parts of the . The remainder of the parish of Bedwellty became a local government district on 29 May 1891. When parish and district councils were established under the Local Government Act 1894, the Bedwellty Local Government District became Bedwellty Urban District. The 1894 act also directed that parishes could not straddle district boundaries, and so the parts of Bedwellty parish which were within the Ebbw Vale, Rhymney and Tredegar urban districts became separate civil parishes.

Bedwellty urban district included the hamlets and villages of , Argoed, Blackwood, , and .

In 1926, Bedwellty and urban districts formed the West Monmouthshire Omnibus Board

(2025). 9781905304264, Venture.
to ensure local control of bus services. In 1935, a County Review Order altered the boundaries between Bedwellty and Mynyddislwyn.

Bedwellty Urban District Council established its headquarters at the corner of Commercial Road and Bedwellty Road in Aberbargoed. After the council's abolition the building was converted into flats and renamed Blaen-y-Cwm.Planning application 5/5/83/0097: Change of use of buildings and land for residential purposes at Municipal Offices, Aberbargoed, granted 28 March 1983.

The urban district was abolished by the Local Government Act 1972 in 1974. Its area was split: the wards of , Cwmsyfiog, , and Phillipstown passed to the Rhymney Valley district of , where they became a single community called New Tredegar. The remainder of Bedwellty urban district, comprising the Argoed, Blackwood, Cefn Fforest, and Pengam wards, passed to the borough of Gwent, where they became a single community called Bedwellty. The Aberbargoed area was later transferred from New Tredegar community to community. Bedwellty community was abolished in 1982, being divided between four new communities called Argoed, Blackwood, Cefn Fforest, and Pengam.Islwyn (Communities) Order 1982 S.I. 1982/233

Further local government reorganisation in 1996 saw the Rhymney Valley and Islwyn districts united to become the of Caerphilly, bringing the former area of Bedwellty Urban District back within one administrative area. The area of the former Bedwellty Urban District now corresponds to the communities of Argoed, Blackwood, Cefn Fforest, New Tredegar, Pengam, and parts of the communities of Bargoed and .

The parliamentary constituency of Bedwellty was created in 1918 covering a much larger area. It continued to exist until 1983, when it was replaced by the constituency of Islwyn. The member of parliament for the Bedwellty and Islwyn constituencies from 1970 to 1995 was , Leader of the Labour Party from 1983 to 1992, who took the title Baron Kinnock, of Bedwellty in the County of Gwent in 2005.


See also
  • Bedwellty (UK Parliament constituency)
  • Bedwellty Greyhound Track


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