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Aberdulais (Welsh Aberdulais aber confluence (with the River Neath) or mouth (of the river) + Dulais is a village in Neath Port Talbot, Wales, lying on the River Neath. The village grew around the Aberdulais Falls, the siter of successive industries and now a hydro station. Other local attractions include a canal and the Cefn Coed Colliery Museum. Peter Hain MP is a resident of the village.
Aberdulais is also the name of an electoral ward coterminous with the village.
More famously, Aberdulais is the birthplace of Welsh champion triathlete, Aled Thomas. Aled has now retired and currently supports local events.
Aberdulais has been the heart of many businesses for a number of years. However, it has never proved a good spot, because each business there has failed, apart from the National Trust, who now run the site as a tourist and historical venue. The water wheel at Aberdulais falls produces £20,000 worth of electricity that powers the site, and the surplus is sold back to the national grid. The first business there was a copper smelting industry; that failed because it received only sporadic copper delivered via boat from Cornwall. The site was then chosen again by an ironworks forge. This, too, failed, but not much is known, so nobody knows why. It was chosen twice to be the site for an ironworks. Between the works, Aberdulais was used as a corn mill; that failed because it was too small scale, and the high price of corn as of the corn laws. It was then used as a tinplate site; that failed because tinplate was made redundant after the Bessemer Process.
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Coordinates: 51.68086° N 3.77324° W
(Source: Wikipedia) |