Nash, Newport

Nash
Welsh: Trefonnen

Church of St Mary
Nash
 Nash shown within Newport
Population 281  (2001 census[1])
Principal areaNewport
Ceremonial countyGwent
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town NEWPORT
Postcode district NP18 2
Dialling code 01633
Maindee exchange
Police Gwent
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK ParliamentNewport East
List of places
UK
Wales
Newport

Coordinates: 51°32′56″N 2°56′46″W / 51.548917°N 2.946175°W / 51.548917; -2.946175

Sheep, in the shade of a tree, beside a reen

Nash (Welsh: Trefonnen) is a village and community parish to the south of the city of Newport, South Wales, in the Lliswerry ward.[2]

Origin of the name

The name is thought to originate from a contraction of "An Ash" (tree), meaning literally `place of the ash tree(s)'. This is supported by its appearance in deeds as "De Fraxino" (fraxinus was the Latin name for the ash tree).[3]

The Welsh name is Trefonnen, given in older sources as Tre'r onnen, also meaning Town (tref) of the Ash (onnen).

Nash and nearby Goldcliff, as Nash and Goldcliffe, are two of the few villages to appear on the Cambriae Typus map of 1573.[4]

Location

Nash lies about 1 mile (1.6 km) to the south of the built-up area of the city of Newport, on the Caldicot Level, a large area of land reclaimed from the sea and crossed by drainage channels and reens.[5] In addition to the village itself, the parish contains Uskmouth power station [6] and part of the Newport Wetlands nature reserve,[7] including its Visitors Centre which was opened in 2008.[8]

The City of Newport campus of Coleg Gwent (commonly referred to as 'Nash College') is actually in the neighbouring parish of Lliswerry.

Together with the neighbouring parishes of Goldcliff and Whitson, Nash is one of the "Three Parishes" which have long been treated as a unit – geographical, socially, economically and ecclesiastically.

The parish is bounded to the south by the sea (Bristol Channel) to the east by the lower reaches of the River Usk and to the north by Lliswerry and the Llanwern Steelworks site. To the west lie Goldcliff and Whitson.

History

In 1901 the only four private residents are listed as Mrs Morgan at "Greenfield", Mrs Morgan at "The Elms", Rev. C. W. Triton (Baptist minister, but curiously no separate residence given) and Miss Ester Wilcox at "Decoy Pool". Some twenty nine commercial interests include mostly farmers (22) but also William German, blacksmith and wheelwright, at "Pye Corner", Mrs Sarah Jones, publican at "Waterloo Inn", John Skuse, shop-keeper at Broadstreet Common, Edward Tamplin butcher at "Box Cottage", David Thomas farm bailiff to Mr. James Thomas at "Pye Corner Farm", John Watkins, butcher and Lewis Williams, mason at "Ash Cottage".[9]

Fair Orchard

A large part of the village, including Farmfield House, was lost in the construction of the Uskmouth Power Station and the adjoining huge ash-pits in 1959. Although the main part of the village centres around the church in West Nash, much of the village is set along the wide Broadstreet Common, accessed via Pye Corner or Straits Lane, and which provides the more direct route to Whitson and Redwick. For many years the German family were the village blacksmiths at Pye Corner with the premises eventually becoming a petrol station. The site is now occupied by the offices of the Caldicot and Wentloog Levels Internal Drainage Board.[10] About 400 metres (1,300 ft) south of Pye Corner is Fair Orchard, dating from the early 19th century, which is a Grade II listed building.[11] The village had its own small infant school, built in 1877 [9] on West Nash Road, It closed in the 1970s and has now been converted into a private dwelling.

The Church

The Church of St Mary in West Nash, dating originally from the 12th century,[12] is an important Grade I listed church,[13] notable for its fine tower and spire and has been called "the Cathedral of the Moors". The church belonged to Goldcliff Priory in 1349 when Robert Arney was instituted to the benefice. The Arney family, in the time of Charles II, left a cottage and six acres of land, called "The Poor's Six Acres", for the support of the poor of the parish.[14]

The church was largely rebuilt during the 16th century.[15]

The only remains of the Norman church is the North Wall of the chancel and the Squint. An unusual feature, the Squint or Hagioscope was used to enable those with leprosy, smallpox or other such diseases, to see or participate in the service without endangering the rest of the congregation with infection. The tower is unusually located on the north side of the chancel. The church is thought to originally have been much larger, incorporating a North aisle.[14]

In the early years of the 20th century the floor of the bellringer's room was used as a temporary mortuary for the bodies of five sailors who had been drowned at sea, in a violent storm, near the East Usk Lighthouse. Four of the sailors had been found lashed to the mast. During World War II the church saw congregations of 400.[14] The interior, following restoration in 2004–2005, is notable for its complete set of 18th century furnishings, with box pews, a three-decker pulpit and a western gallery. In the fields to the south of the neighbouring Church Farm are ancient tumuli, the vestiges of some ancient, possibly mediæval, dwelling or chapel.

Baptist chapel

Former Baptist Chapel, Pye Corner

At Pye Corner the former Baptist chapel, with its small graveyard, still stands in good repair. The chapel opened in 1820 with seating for 125. Its congregation included residents of what was then the hamlet of Lliswerry, 1 mile (1.6 km) or so distant.

Some of the congregation found it more convenient to attend Lliswerry Baptist Church when it opened in 1889, the same year that Lliswerry was incorporated into Newport under the provisions of the Newport (Mon.) Corporation Act, 1889. A steady decline in attendances at Nash led to only five remaining members in 1988. The chapel closed soon afterwards.

The chapel contained a covered immersion baptismal font and a rare pedal organ built and played (well into his nineties) by the late Alfred W. Haime, master baker, of Earlswood, Shirenewton.[16] In 2006 a planning application was made to Newport City Council to convert the building into a dwelling house with vehicular access. It is now in private ownership, although unhindered access to the graveyard remains.[17][18]

Amenities

Ophrys apifera at Newport Wetlands Reserve

To the north of church, at the end of St. Mary's Road, The Waterloo public house is a tenanted free-house notable for the fact it is owned by the parish council. A modern Community Hall has been built nearby.

Located at the edge of the Newport Wetlands Reserve,[19] East Usk Lighthouse [20] provides a notable landmark. Parts of Nash are designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest SSSI.[21]

The village enjoys a regular public bus service provided by Veolia Transport Cymru.

The local newspaper is the South Wales Argus which is published in Newport.

In October 2009 the village skyline was transformed with the installation of two 2.5-megawatt wind turbines, on the site of chemical company Solutia UK Ltd, which will supply up to one-third of the facility's electricity needs.[22]

Present-day Nash

Entrance to Newport Wetlands Visitor Centre

Several road schemes have proposed a southern relief motorway loop for Newport, as a way of mitigating the congestion of the existing M4 motorway. Many of these schemes have involved intrusion, to a greater or lesser extent, into Nash. As a result Nash Community Council became a member of the "Campaign Against the Levels Motorway" (CALM) Alliance formed to oppose such schemes by the Friends of the Earth Cymru.[23] The bypass scheme was eventually cancelled in July 2009.[24]

In June 2010 a public meeting was held at the village Community Centre to discuss proposals for a waste incinerator in Newport. Members of the "Stop Newport Incinerator Campaign (SNIC)" organsised the meeting to explain to residents the possible development on Bowleaze Common land south of Llanwern steelworks.[25]

Government

The area is governed by the Newport City Council and the Nash, Newport community council. The village falls within the Llanwern ward of the Newport East parliamentary constituency.

References

  1. Office for National Statistics Parish Headcounts: Nash
  2. Lliswerry ward councillors at Newport City Council
  3. Bradney, Sir Joseph, A History of Monmouthshire, Vol 4 part 2: The Hundred of Caldicot (Part 2). pub 1914, reprinted 1994, Merton Priory Press.
  4. A reproduction of the map is at File:Atlas_Ortelius_KB_PPN369376781-011av-011br.jpg
  5. Reen near Nash, Newport:: OS grid ST3483 :: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!
  6. Uskmouth powerstation:: OS grid ST3283 :: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!
  7. Newport Wetlands Visitor Centre:: OS grid ST3383 :: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!
  8. Newport centre is a wetland wonder!
  9. 1 2 Kelly's 1901 Directory
  10. Caldicot and Wentloog Drainage Board
  11. Good Stuff (31 October 1996). "Fair Orchard – Nash – Newport – Wales". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  12. 900-year-old Newport church
  13. "St Mary the Virgin Church at Nash" at geograph.org.uk
  14. 1 2 3 Hando, F.J., (1958) "Out and About in Monmouthshire", R. H. Johns, Newport.
  15. "900-year-old Newport church to tell its story", South Wales Argus, 6 August 2010. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  16. "Nash Baptist Chapel at Pye Corner" at geograph.org.uk
  17. http://www.saqqara.demon.co.uk/familytree/Nash%20Baptist%20Church.htm
  18. "Former Nash Baptist Chapel, Pye Corner" at geograph.org.uk
  19. Newport Wetlands Plaque:: OS grid ST3383 :: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!
  20. Newport Wetlands, East Usk Lighthouse:: OS grid ST3382 :: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!
  21. City of Newport Countryside and Parks
  22. Solutia in green bid to blow aawy high energy bills at walesonline.co.uk
  23. Friends of the Earth:Protest to greet new M4 exhibition
  24. M4 Toll Newport Bypass at cbrd.co.uk
  25. Incinerator plans up for discussion at southwalesargus.co.uk

This article contains public domain material from J. A. Bradney's History of Monmouthshire (1904).

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