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Pontypool
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===Industrial development=== The [[Afon Lwyd]] valley, in which Pontypool is situated, provided an abundance of resources for the manufacturing of iron, including coal, iron ore, charcoal and waterpower. The wider technological developments of the [[Tudor period]], such as the utilisation of [[blast furnace]]s to produce iron, allowed for the greater exploitation of the mineral resources of south Wales. A blast furnace was in use at [[Monkswood, Monmouthshire|Monkswood]], near Pontypool, from as early as 1536 and was followed by the erection of other blast furnaces in the area surrounding Pontypool. An ironworks was established in what later became [[Pontypool Park]] in c. 1575. Forges, where cast iron could be converted into wrought iron, were also developed and included Town Forge within Pontypool, which was in operation during the last quarter of the sixteenth century, and the Osborne Forge, near [[Pontnewynydd]], which produced the renowned Osmond iron.<ref name="Cadw 2012, pp.6-7">Cadw (2012), pp.6β7</ref> Richard Hanbury of Worcestershire, a notable entrepreneur, developed interests within the Pontypool area during the 1570s, acquiring and developing forges and furnaces in Monkswood, Cwmffrwdoer, Trosnant, [[Llanelly]] and [[Abercarn]].<ref>William Glyn Lloyd, ''Pontypool: Heart of the Valley'', (Pontypridd: J&P Davison, 2009), pp.11β12</ref> Hanbury acquired leases and rights to utilise the raw materials of the wider area, including a large expanse of woodland to produce charcoal and some 800 acres of land to extract coal and iron-ore at [[Panteg]], Pontymoile and [[Mynyddislwyn]]. Furthermore, he secured the rights to extract coal and iron-ore on [[Lord Abergavenny]]'s Hills in and around [[Blaenavon]]. The Hanburys were also active at Cwmlickey, Lower Race and Blaendare during the seventeenth century as the demand for coal was met.<ref name="Cadw 2012, pp.6-7"/> Major [[John Hanbury (1664β1734)]] acquired a reputation as an industrial pioneer and through the endeavours of Hanbury and his leading agents, Thomas Cooke, William Payne and Thomas Allgood, significant developments within the British tinplate industry were made in Pontypool, including the introduction of the world's first [[Rolling (metalworking)|rolling]] for the production of iron sheets and [[blackplate]] at the Pontypool Park works in 1697. [[Tinplate]] was being produced at Pontypool from c. 1706, with an important tin mill in operation at Pontymoile during the early eighteenth century.<ref>Cadw (2012), p.7)</ref> During the 1660s, Thomas Allgood of Northamptonshire, was appointed manager of the Pontypool Ironworks. Allgood developed the [[Pontypool japan|Pontypool 'japanning' process]], whereby metal plate could be treated in a way that generated a lacquered and decorative finish. Thomas Allgood died in 1716, having been unable to commence production of his Pontypool Japanware but the increased creation of tinplate at Pontypool from the early eighteenth century allowed for japanning to enter wide scale manufacture.<ref>Chris Barber, ''Eastern Valley: The Story of Torfaen'', (Llanfoist: Blorenge Books, 1999), p.37</ref> There was a growing demand for these artistic, luxury products and Allgood's sons, Edward and Thomas, established a japanworks in Pontypool, which was producing large quantities of Japanware by 1732.<ref name="Cadw 2012, p.9">Cadw (2012), p.9</ref> The brothers produced a range of products, including decorative bread baskets, tea trays, dishes and other items, and were renowned for their high quality work. Following the death of Edward Allgood in 1761 there was a family quarrel between his two sons and a rival japanning factory was established in Usk. Both the Pontypool and Usk concerns had ceased production by the early 1820s.<ref>Barber (1999), pp.40β42</ref> From the mid to late eighteenth century, as the industrial revolution took hold, there was a massive expansion in the economic development of south Wales. Iron-making flourished in emerging towns and settlements, notably at [[Merthyr Tydfil]], [[Tredegar]], and Blaenavon. By the early nineteenth century, south Wales was the most important centre of iron production in the world.<ref>Peter Wakelin, Blaenavon Ironworks and World Heritage Site Landscape, 2nd Ed., (Cardiff: Cadw, 2011), p.3</ref> Whilst Pontypool was not as competitive as some of the larger ironworks towns, it retained a niche in the metallurgical market, producing specialist tinplate. The japanning industry of Pontypool continued to decline and had ceased by the mid-nineteenth century, by which time the economy of the Pontypool area relied on the iron and coal industries, the tinplate industry and the production of iron rails. The twentieth century witnessed a decline in the heavy industries of south Wales and this had a direct impact on the economy of Pontypool and its district.<ref name="Cadw 2012, p.9"/>
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