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Historic Factsheet 4 – Brickworks

Brickworks in the Clyne Valley, Swansea, West Glamorgan

Introduction

Brick making was an important activity in the Swansea area with several brickworks in Clyne Valley, Dunvant, Killay and Blackpill during much of the 19th and first half of the 20th Century.

There were Brickworks operating in Clyne Valley for nearly a century. As time progressed the works moved, but always in the same area as there was sufficient clay, water and access to transport.

The remains of the last brickworks are located north of the spine path, east of Killay Station.

Timeline

Kelly’s Directory 1875 ‒ Essery & Starkey

Kelly’s Directory 1884 ‒ (Frederick) Pinn, Killay, Swansea

Kelly’s Directory 1891 ‒ (James) Howell & Co, Killay, Swansea

Kelly’s Directory 1895 ‒ (James) Howell & Co, Killay, Swansea

Kelly’s Directory 1923 ‒ (John Cleland) Napier, Killay, Swansea

Kelly’s Directory 1926 ‒ (John Cleland) Napier, Killay, Swansea

Clyne Valley Brick & Tile Co Ltd, Killay, Swansea

Evans-Bevan (Evans & Bevan Ltd, Cadoxton House, Neath) Clyne Valley Brick Works

Bricks marked with Clyne, Killay, Evans Bevan Clyne Works, E&B Killay and PR (Philip Richard, owner of Rhydydefaid and Commercial collieries, and Dunvant brickworks) are still to be found.

Local memories vary about the closure date of the brickworks. Some indicate that the site was cleared between 1955 and 1957.1 However, a planning application was granted to Evans & Bevan in 1962 to extend the clay pit at Clyne Valley Brickworks, and other witnesses suggest that the works closed c1965 and that the site was cleared c1968.

Map records

There is no record on the 1843-5 Tithe Maps of fields for clay or bricks3.

The 1881 OS map marks ‘Brickkilns’ and another larger building on a Brick Field4. This area is now wooded and the ground is very rough. It lies alongside a track leading into the Valley from Clyne Cottages (Clyne Valley Road). Clyne Colliery is nearby on this OS map with coal pits, smithy, engine house and coke ovens marked.

On the 1899 OS map, the field remains ‘Brick Field’ and kilns are there but rebuilt. It sits at the NW angle of the railway from the Rhyd y Defaid Colliery to the mainline.

On the 1919 OS map, the Clyne Valley Brick & Tile Works have moved east of the original Brickfield and sat where the Clyne Colliery was on the 1881 map.

On the 1958 OS map, the brickworks are in the same place but a railway track runs underneath the mainline to a marked clay pit and a disused clay pit is also shown (SS 60259218). Neither of these pits appears on earlier maps though the bridge was there. The line of the railway to the Rhyd y Defaid Colliery is still visible but the track had gone from OS 1958. The clay pit is on the OS 1964 map but marked as disused on OS 1993.

The Cambrian newspaper carries advertisements for Killay brickworks from October 1875 when Essery & Starkey advertised bricks, roofing and flooring tiles &c from their works at Killay and Gower Road5. In 1876, when the company was liquidated the sale advertised a 21-year lease from 30th December 18746.
The works are listed in the Kelly’s Directory for 1891 and the 1930-31, 1938, Swansea Chamber of Trade Directory which named Killay brickworks and Clyne Valley brickwork.

Composite map by John Hayman showing the various sites of the Brickworks

Clay pits and railways

Over the years of operation, the railway system in the works grew and withered. Local clay pits were dug and when worked out clay was bought in from further afield by road (via Clyne Valley Road). Studying the Ordnance Survey maps will give a fair indication of the railway system.

A narrow gauge tramway ran from the works south-west under the BR line to clay pits. The clay pit is not accessible from the lower edge but can be looked down into by crossing the bridge higher up the railway (SS 60099211) and walking up into the wood.

Many of the bricks made were used to build houses in Derwen Fawr, Sketty, Tycoch and Killay.

Spoil heaps remain close to the track on the NE side of the track7 and faulty bricks were crushed and sold as hardcore for paths and tennis courts or used whole for cesspits or farm buildings. The bricks remaining at the time of clearance appear in paths in Clyne Valley.

Gauge 2ft: 4wDM RH 296102/1950: new to works, scrapped c.1968.

Clyne Valley (Killay) brickworks was working in the 1870s just north of the railway line and close to the coke ovens and coal pits of the Clyne Colliery. By 1899 (OS Glamorgan xxiii.ii) there were new buildings and two new circular kilns as well. The Works were linked to the ‘Rhydydefed’ Colliery by rail. By 1919 (OS Glamorgan xxiii.ii) the ‘Clyne Valley Brick and Tile Works’ show as new buildings to the east of the previous ones – though the ‘Rhydydefed’ Colliery is ‘disused’.

The clay pits lay on the far side of the railway from the works and the clay was brought in by rail under the mainline track, a route that is still visible along with spoil heaps. Waste bricks imprinted with the various names of the Works can be found too.

In 1951 the Clyne Valley Brick and Tile Company was in voluntary liquidation. David Evans Bevan (the owner) reported to the Central Land Board that 3 million bricks had been produced in the year to June 1949.

he Works closed during the 1950s. There was a brief reopening at the end of the decade when production was about 75,000 bricks weekly. This was the last industrial activity in the Clyne Valley. By this time there were no local coal sources left to power the kilns and this may have contributed to the brickworks final closure.

Evans-Bevan only kept a few smaller coal mines when coal was nationalized in 1946, and the brickworks in Killay got its coal supply from one of these remaining smaller mines – he thought Skewen. It smelt of sulphur and consequently could not normally be used as house coal.

We met with PE about his memories of the Killay brickworks. He remembers Phil Wilson (PW) who was the last worker there (PW’s wife did the church flowers) (PE knew PW’s daughter – she was only a couple of years older than him and died tragically young). After production stopped in 1966, the site was manned by PW and Dan Morris covering the 2 dayshifts. Previously there had been 3 shifts including a night shift.

There had been about 30 people there in the 1950s and 1960s, some from Killay, also Upper Killay, Dunvant and ‘town’.
The claypit was still being worked accessed by the track under the railway (now bike path). Originally there was a tram, which transported the clay ‘up and around to be dropped into a hopper’. In the late 1950s and early ’60s, a truck was used to replace the tram. It was bought new and never registered for road use.

The track was ripped up but the little engine was kept on a siding to the north of the works. PE showed us the siding clearly marked on the 1958 OS map.

Coal to fire the brickworks may have come in from the E-B colliery at Skewen.

In the early 1960s, he remembers two inhabited stone built cottages in the woods which were located on the farm track linking Sketty Park Estate and the Clyne Cottages. This site once also formed a junction with an old offshoot line from the main railway which serviced the drift mine behind the Commercial. The southern end of this railway line also flanked the brickworks, the latter furnace complex having been constructed partially on the remains of its embankment.

Brickworks

BP told PE of the walking stick at The Railway Inn presented to Lewis Gill when the Commercial closed. PE told us that Lewis Gill was one of the last burners at the brickworks along with Dan Morris and Phil Wilson. Lewis Gill lived in what was the old Killay police house and when he retired, the vacancy was taken up by Cliff Arthur.

PE said there was a ‘pill box’ where the explosives for the brickworks were kept – this was on the east side of the tram track at the brickworks where the steps now go down to the river path and canal.

Dan Morris lived at 482 Gower Road. There was no electricity in the house – probably lit by gas as late as the 1960s. Cliff Arthur lived at 3 Dunvant Road and he, Dan Morris and Phil Wilson were the last 3 burners at the brickworks. Cliff Arthur, as a young man once worked at the Dunvant Foundry. Dan Morris was ‘a big man’, a recluse – his brother died just before the war and his neighbour Mrs Bowen used to cook for him and put the food through ‘under the hedge.’

PE and his friends used to go to ‘the cabin’ where the brickworks men heated up their tins of soup for lunch – they just threw the cans out of the window: there was ‘a huge pile’ of empty cans. There was an open fire in a hearth which the men would let go out after lunch but PE would get it going again. There was only a very dim light bulb in the cabin. PE described the night shift as ‘creepy’. He showed us where the cabin was on the 1957 OS map. He also pointed out the office building.

George Sturgess also often visited the burners and would spend hours sitting and chatting in the cabin. Originally from Northampton, George was a retired post office worker who lived in the semi-detached house next door down from the old Killay church schoolhouse on Gower Road. The school building was demolished in the 1980s and sited on the bend between PE’s house and the Railway pub.

The local coal merchant was Aubrey Williams who also branched out as a haulier. His home was opposite Lewis Gill’s. One of his trucks was always used for collecting and delivering all the bricks. It was usually an old Commer truck and accessed the brickworks on what is now the track in past the Clyne Valley Cottages. There was a conveyor belt at the works which dropped the bricks into the truck for delivery. Lewis Gill’s son Des often used to drive the trucks for Aubrey Williams and take them to Cardiff, Maesteg and all across South Wales. PE’s first ever visit to Maesteg was with Des Gill and a load of bricks. Once the London Brick Company started up the local works couldn’t compete.

PE said production stopped in 1966. The site was manned by the burners as caretakers for a year or 18 months after closure. Phil Wilson was the very last man off the site. He had spent virtually the whole of his working life at the Killay brickworks.

After closure, PE and 2 friends used to go there to play but were not really allowed on: the police were aware and he remembers being warned off by them.

References

All references are from the West Glamorgan Archives unless otherwise stated.

Interview with Brian Jones (Jones Bach), the Railway Inn, Killay, 17th August 2011 by Barbara Parry

www.opobs.org.uk The Brickworks of South Wales (accessed February 2016)

Peter Edwards (PE) and his sister Catryn met with Jane Sherrard-Smith (JSS) and Barbara Parry (BP), 5th September

1. Audrey Vincent Thesis D/D 2 579/1

2. D/D Jas/4234

3. Oystermouth P/115/3/1,2; Swansea St Mary’s P/123/18/1,2

4. OS map 1881 Glamorgan xxiii, ii

5. The Cambrian, Swansea, October 29th 1875, p.5

6. The Cambrian, Swansea, June 2nd 1876, p.1

7. GGAT PRN 02109w

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