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The
Clock Tower in St Peter’s Square,
Ruthin,
Clwyd, North Wales.
History of
Ruthin / Rhuthun
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Ruthin /
Rhuthun,is the county town of Denbighshire in North Wales situated at the
junction of the trunk roads A494 (Queensferry - Mold - Ruthin - Corwen -
Dolgellau) and A525 (Rhyl - Denbigh - Ruthin - Wrexham - Whitchurch -
Stoke-on-Trent). The population at the 2001 census was 5,218
Ruthin is
located around a hill in the southern part of the Vale of Clwyd - the older
part of the town, the Castle and Saint Peter's Square are located on top of the
hill, while many newer parts of the town are on the floodplain of the River
Clwyd (which became painfully apparent on several occasions in the late 1990s
-- new flood control works costing £3 million were inaugurated in autumn 2003).
The name
'Ruthin' comes from 'rudd' or red and 'din', the Welsh word for fort, and
refers to the colour of the new red sandstone which forms the geologic basis of
the area, and from which the castle was constructed in 1277-1284.
Ruthin is one
of North Wales's most prosperous towns. The quaint and
picturesque vicinity and the large properties within a rural setting appeal to
professionals who commute daily to Chester, Liverpool
and Manchester in North West England.
Little is
known of the history of the town before construction of Ruthin Castle
started in 1277. Construction was begun by Dafydd, the brother of prince
Llywelyn ap Gruffydd, but he forfeited the castle when he rebelled against King
Edward I with his brother; Edward's queen, Eleanor, was in residence in 1281,
so the castle must have been habitable by then. The Marcher Lord, Reginald de
Grey, Justiciar of Chester,
was given the Cantref (an administrative district) of Deffrencloyt (Dyffryn
Clwyd, the Welsh for Vale of Clwyd), and his family ran the area for the next
226 years. The third Baron de Grey's land dispute with Owain Glyndwr triggered
Glyndwr's rebellion against King Henry IV which began on St Matthew's Day (18
September) 1400, when Glyndwr burned Ruthin to the ground, reputedly leaving
only the castle and a few other buildings standing.
Nantclwyd
House, in Castle Street, was built about 1435 by a local merchant Gronw ap
Madoc, and is believed to be the oldest surviving town house in Wales. The
building was sold to the county council in 1982, restored from 2004, and opened
to the public in 2007. It contains seven rooms which have been restored to
represent various periods in the buildings' history - 1475, 1620, 1690, 1740,
1891, 1916, and 1942.
A Ruthin
native, Sir Thomas Exmewe was Lord Mayor of London in 1517-18. His family home, Exmewe Hall, is now
the town's branch of Barclays Bank, on St Peter's Square. Adjacent is the half-timbered Old Court House
(built in 1401), now a branch of the NatWest Bank, which features the remains
of a gibbet last used to execute a Jesuit priest, Fr Charles Meehan who had the
misfortune to be shipwrecked on the Welsh coast when Catholicism was equated
with treason — Fr Meehan was hanged, drawn, and quartered in 1679.
In 1574 Dr
Gabriel Goodman re-founded Ruthin School
which had been originally founded in 1284 and is one of the oldest public
schools in the United Kingdom. Dr Goodman's investment has been well-rewarded
as Ruthin School has produced a Speaker of the House of Commons, several
Masters of the Rolls, an Archbishop of York and many bishops, judges and
knights. In 1590, Goodman also established Christ's Hospital for 12 poor
persons around St. Peter's Church on the square, and he was also Dean of Westminster for 40 years (1561-1601).
During the
English Civil War the castle survived an eleven-week siege, after which it was
demolished by order of Parliament. The castle was rebuilt in the 19th century
as a country house, and is now a luxury hotel, the Ruthin Castle Hotel (to
distinguish it from the less expensive but still architecturally interesting
Castle Hotel on St Peter's Square). From 1826 until 1921 the castle was the home
of the Cornwallis-West family, members of Victorian and Edwardian high society
- the Prince of Wales being a guest, as was the actress Mrs Patrick Campbell.
George Cornwallis-West became the stepfather of Sir Winston Churchill, despite
being only 17 days older than him, the antics at the castle no doubt causing
some degree of scandal to the townsfolk at the time. George Cornwallis-West's
sister, Mary-Theresa Olivia Cornwallis-West, became Daisy, Princess of Pless in
Germany.
The first
House of Correction, or Bridewell, was built at the bottom of Clwyd Street, next to the river, in 1654, to replace the Old Court House, where able-bodied idlers and the
unemployed were sent to do work. Following John Howard's investigations into
prison conditions the Denbighshire justices resolved to build a new model
prison in Ruthin on the site of the old Bridewell. Work began in January 1775.
In 1802 the prison had four cells for prisoners and nine rooms for debtors. The
prison was enlarged in 1802, 1812, 1824-5, and 1837, by which time it could
hold 37 inmates.
The Prisons
Act of 1865 set new standards for the design of prisons — as the Ruthin County
Gaol did not meet the standards plans were drawn up for a new four-storey wing,
and the new prison accommodating up to 100 prisoners, in the style of London's
Pentonville Prison was built at a cost of £12,000. On 1 April 1878 the Ruthin County
Gaol became HM Prison Ruthin, covering the counties of Denbighshire,
Flintshire, and Merionethshire. As far as is known, only one person was ever
executed in the prison, William Hughes of Denbigh, aged 42, who was hanged on
17 February 1903 for the murder of his wife, his plea of insanity having
failed.
Another colourful
prison personality was John Jones, known as Coch Bach y Bala – the little
redhead from Bala, who was a kleptomaniac and poacher who had spent more than
half his 60 years in all the prisons of north Wales and many in England; he
twice escaped from Ruthin Gaol, first on 30 November 1879 when he walked out of
prison with three others while the staff were having supper — a £5 reward was
offered for his capture, which happened the following 3 January. On 30
September 1913 he tunnelled out of his cell and using a rope made out of his
bedding he climbed over the roof of the chapel and kitchen and got over the
wall; after seven days living rough on the Nantclwyd Estate several miles away,
Jones was shot in the leg by one of his pursuers, 19 year old Reginald
Jones-Bateman. Jones died of shock and blood loss, while Jones-Bateman was
charged with manslaughter, though the charges were subsequently dropped.
Ruthin Gaol
ceased to be a prison in 1916 when the prisoners and guards were transferred to
Shrewsbury. The County Council bought the buildings in 1926
and used part of them for offices, the county archives, and the town library.
During the Second World War the prison buildings were used as a munitions
factory, before being handed back to the County Council afterwards, when it was
the headquarters of the Denbighshire Library Service. In 2002 the Gaol was
extensively renovated and reopened as a museum.
The first
copies of the Welsh national anthem, Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau, were printed in what
is now the Siop Nain tea and gift shop on Well Street.
In 1863 the
Vale of Clwyd Railway (subsequently part of the London and North Western Railway, the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, and British Rail) reached
the town — the route ran from Rhyl on the north coast, through Denbigh, and
Ruthin to Corwen where the line joined a route from Ruabon through Llangollen,
Corwen, and Bala to Barmouth. The railway closed in 1963 as part of the
Beeching Axe, although services between Ruthin and Corwen had been abandoned
several years earlier following a landslip. The site of the town's railway
station is now occupied by a large road roundabout (Briec Roundabout) and the
Ruthin Craft Centre which opened in 1982, where there are 10 studios occupied
by craftsmen who can be observed by tourists working at e.g. glass blowing,
ceramic manufacture, painting, furniture restoration, etc. The Craft Centre is
to be redeveloped from autumn 2006 in a £4.3 million scheme which will see it
remodelled to contain six craft workshops, larger galleries and an expanded
craft retail gallery, two residency studios, an education space and a tourist
information centre, as well as a restaurant.
Sir Henry
Haydn Jones MP (1863-1950) politician, slate quarry owner, and owner of the
Talyllyn Railway was brought up in the town. He is immortalised for children as
Sir Haydn, owner of the Skarloey Railway in Rev. W. Awdry's Railway Series.
On 6 June 1947 Wadysaw Raczkiewicz, the first president of the
Polish government in exile, died in Ruthin. He was buried in the Polish Cemetery in Newark, Nottinghamshire.
Denbighshire County Council built a new headquarters building in
2004-05.
The town's
principal educational establishment is Ysgol Brynhyfryd (Brynhyfryd School),
the local comprehensive school for 11-18 year olds. It was founded in 1898 as Ruthin County School for Girls (the town's boys travelling five miles
by train to Denbigh High School, and vice versa). The school went co-educational
with feeder junior schools up to around six miles away in 1938 under the English
form of its name, but it has generally been known by the Welsh form of its name
since the mid 1970s.
The school
underwent significant phases of building work in the 1950s, early 1970s (when
the number of pupils increased from 700 to 1000 in a few years, when the
minimum school leaving age was raised from 15 to 16), and 2001-2 before which
it had a record breaking number of mobile classrooms. The school's sports
facilities including the swimming pool are used as the town's Leisure Centre,
and it also features a theatre and arts complex, Theatr John Ambrose, named
after the much respected late headmaster of the school in the 1980s and 1990s,
which was opened by the actor Rhys Ifans (Notting Hill, etc.) a former pupil of
Ysgol Maes Garmon in Mold, but brought up in Ruthin. Brynhyfryd caused
controversy in recent years with the introduction of the Welsh Baccalureate.
Ruthin hosted
the National Eisteddfod in 1868 and 1973. The Urdd National Eisteddfod visited
Ruthin in 2006.
On 13 June 1981 Ruthin hosted the Annual General Meeting of the
International Football Association Board, the body which determines the Laws of
the Game of the world's most popular sport.
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