Travel to Bagillt Map
Bagillt tourist guide map of landmarks & destinations by Walkfo
26
travel
spots
When travelling to Bagillt, Walkfo’s has created a travel guide & Bagillt overview of Bagillt’s hotels & accommodation, Bagillt’s weather through the seasons & travel destinations / landmarks in Bagillt. Experience a unique Bagillt when you travel with Walkfo as your tour guide to Bagillt map.
Bagillt history
Castell Hen Blas, a motte-and-bailey castle, lies within the boundaries of Bagillt. It was the birthplace of Dafydd ap Llywelyn, Prince of Wales, probably around Easter 1212. Owain Gwynedd and his forces retreated to Bryn Dychwelwch, the “Hill of Retreat” in the 12th century. The future Henry VII is said to have been concealed in the Hall by Richard ap Howel.
Industrial Revolution
The Gadlys Lead Smelting Works was established by Edward Wright and his associates, who were generally Quakers, in 1704. Organised as the London Lead Company, they kept the workshop open until 1799. John Freame, one of the founders of Barclays Bank, was involved in this initiative. By the late 18th century, Bagillt had become a centre of mineral extraction and manufacturing. Hundreds of men laboured in eleven collieries that surrounded the village. There was also a factory and works that produced and refined zinc, lead and iron. Bagillt already had several quays on the banks of the River Dee, where fishing boats had moored for centuries. But by the early 19th century, these had grown into docks where cargo destined for the factories and foundries of England were loaded. In 1846, navvies laying track for the North Wales Coast Line reached Bagillt. The Chester and Holyhead Railway (now part of the North Wales Coast Line) officially opened on 1 May 1848. The local mines and works that had used these wharves now switched to haulage by steam train. Bagillt railway station had extensive sidings and goods yard. It was closed in 1966 as part of the Beeching cuts, although the station’s footbridge still remains. In 1879 a working men’s club and cocoa house was built on the High Street in the Pentre area by public subscription. The building was named the Foresters Hall; it is an impressive three-storey red brick building which is supported by the Bagillt Heritage Society. It was built to promote temperance and was originally associated with the Foresters Friendly Society. It was the first cocoa house built in Wales. But the industrial age created problems: in 1848, the same year the railway opened, a book was published in London entitled Reports of the Commissioners of Inquiry into the state of education in Wales. It detailed the poverty and hard living of many people in Bagillt and the Flintshire coalfields in the 19th century: In some of the collieries the men are paid every other Saturday, and do not return to their work till the following Tuesday or Wednesday. In Bagillt and in the adjoining town of Flint the old Welsh custom of keeping a merry night (noswaith lawen) is still prevalent, and, being generally reserved for a Saturday, is protracted to the following Sunday, during which drinking never ceases. The custom is represented by the clergy and others as involving the most pernicious consequences. I saw two men stripped and fighting in the main street of Bagillt, with a ring of men, women and children around them. There is no policeman in the township. The women are represented as being for the most part ignorant of housewifery and domestic economy. The girls are very early sent to service, but marry as early as 18, and have large families. Women are not employed in or about the mines, but spend most of their time in cockling, or gathering cockles on the beach. They have low ideas of domestic comfort, living in small cottages dirty and ill-ventilated, and at night are crowded together in the same room, and sometimes in the same bed, without regard to age or sex. Bagillt remained a hard-working boom town for more than a century. For instance on 31 May 1873, a local newspaper, the Wrexham Advertiser, reported that so many new coal workings had opened near Bagillt that it was becoming difficult to find enough miners to work in them: No less than four new collieries have been recently started near Mold, and it is becoming a serious question how to get labour to work them, all the men available in the district being already engaged. The colliery nearest the town on the north side is named Hard Struggle from the difficulty experienced in obtaining water to get up steam. Another to the east side is named Slap Bang from the fact that coal has been found near the surface. To the south the Linger and Die company are doing their best to reduce the price of coal and to enhance that of labour. While to the south east the Strip and at it company are showing the world how to make the most of it. We hear of numberless other ventures, but these are the principal. In July 1897 work commenced at Boot End, Bagillt, on the huge Milwr Tunnel which would drain water from the mines working the lead lodes under Pentre Halkyn. Digging started at a point 9 feet (2.7 m) below high-water mark on the Dee foreshore. The tunnel was driven southwest at a gradient of 1:1000. It was brick-lined where it passed through coal measures and shale but unlined after the first 1.5 miles where it passed through chert and limestone. In 1908 the tunnel was draining more than 1.7 million gallons of water per day through the drainage channel and into the river at Bagillt. Bagillt was also the site of the Hawarden Iron Works, situated near the Dee Bank Quay. It was famous for production of a number of waterwheels, including the Snaefell Wheel at Laxey, Isle of Man. But by the 1930s the Great Depression had brought hardship and misery to the area as many of the manufacturing works and collieries were closed. Large numbers of people were now out of work and in severe financial hardship. The days of industrial might have ended in Bagillt. The area was now falling into long-term decline. Before the Second World War many people left in search of work: some moved to cities like Cardiff, Manchester and Liverpool while others went overseas to Canada and America.
Modern era
The Wales Coast Path passes through Bagillt by the side of the River Dee. The town is twinned with Laxey, Isle of Man, after a visit to Laxy to see the Snaefell Wheel (now renamed the Lady Evelyn) in 2013.
Bagillt map & travel guide with history & landmarks to explore
Visit Bagillt Walkfo Stats
With 26 travel places to explore on our Bagillt travel map, Walkfo is a personalised tour guide to tell you about the places in Bagillt as you travel by foot, bike, car or bus. No need for a physical travel guide book or distractions by phone screens, as our geo-cached travel content is automatically triggered on our Bagillt map when you get close to a travel location (or for more detailed Bagillt history from Walkfo).
Travel Location: Travel Area: | Bagillt [zonearea] | Audio spots: Physical plaques: | 26 0 | Population: | [zonesize] |
---|
Average seasonal temperatures at zone
Tourist Guide to Bagillt Map
Bagillt map historic spot | Bagillt map tourist destination | Bagillt map plaque | Bagillt map geographic feature |
Walkfo Bagillt travel map key: visit National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top travel destinations in Bagillt |