St. Brides Major, Ogmore-by-Sea & Southerndown Community Website group

Welcome to
St. Brides Major and Castle-upon-Alun

Return to St Brides Major Home Page

Click on thumbnail pictures below to enlarge.  Use "back" key to return

St. Brides Major is a friendly and attractive, small village in the beautiful Vale of Glamorgan in South Wales. Lying approximately three miles south of Bridgend on the B4265 between the villages of Ewenny, Wick and Southerndown, it boasts a number of amenities for the benefit of villagers and visitors alike.

There is the Parish Church of St. Bridget's and the Church in Wales School which caters for children up to the age of eleven.  The Village Shop sells a wide variety of goods and provisions as well as housing the Post Office.  Izimanga jewellery and gifts and clothes shop Clobbered-Up are on the main road.  Penuchardre provides comfortable and affordable accommodation for anyone wanting to stay for a few days. 

        

From left to right: Sports Pavilion; Church Hall; Scouts Hall; War Memorial (photo courtesy of James Heard)

A Football Field with pavilion, Church Hall and Scouts Hall are the venues for many clubs, groups and organisations to hold their meetings, helping to keep villagers fit & active or entertained. Very often there are horse riders on their way to the common and who have to cross the main road to follow some bridleways.

St. Brides Major

If it's something less strenuous you seek then the village pubs, The Fox and Hounds and The Farmers Arms provide tasty fayre and excellent beer!  Both are situated on the main road through the village.

At the junction of Southerndown Road, Ewenny Road and Wick Road by the War Memorial on the small village green proudly displayed is the Best Kept Village sign for 1993. There is also a seat here where you can pass a quiet hour and watch the world go by.  Across the road are the premises of J. R. & M. R. David, Funeral Directors.   

As you go through the village in the direction of Wick and Llantwit Major you will pass Pool Farm and the pond where until recently a pair of swans returned annually and nested, rearing many young much to the delight of young and old alike.  Just before you leave the village, Pitcot Farm is on the right.   

Castle-upon-Alun is a small hamlet to the east of St. Brides Major.  It can be reached by taking the road opposite the pond (by the Farmers Arms) then turn right at the crossroads, travelling slightly uphill, and the left fork at the next junction. 

Alternatively, when travelling from Bridgend take the second turning left after the cattle grid and immediately left again to go along Blackhall Road.  Go straight across the crossroads (shown below) and take the next left fork. 

Looking towards Castle-upon-Alun from Blackhall

However, by going down the hill at the crossroads (left in the photograph above - it should be noted that this is a very narrow single-track road that widens in parts) you will come to Daffodil Wood (Coed-y-Bwl) on the left and pass an old slab footbridge known as Packhorse Bridge (which is now classed as an ancient monument) on the right.  Carrying on further, you will come to the ford at Pont-yr-Brown.  The River Alun dries up in summer but in winter can be too deep to cross.  The stepping stones here are known as Stepsau Ddion and many small children have stood on them to fish for minnows and sticklebacks.   

Railway enthusiasts come to marvel at the brick-built arches carrying the line between Bridgend and Barry - a marvellous feat of engineering.

         

Left Photo: Ford at Pont-yr-Brown
Middle Photo: Stepsau Ddion at Pont-yr-Brown Ford
Right Photo: Railway arch crossing River Alun

If you cross the stream (providing the water is shallow enough!) then turn right at the t-junction you will come to the site of Southerndown Road Station (closed on 23rd October, 1961 and now private premises).  Turning right here by Groes Gwta farm (and, after passing through the cluster of houses, taking the right fork at the y-junction) will bring you back to the original crossroads.  Turn left to return to the pond or go straight ahead to travel to St. Brides Major via Blackhall Road. 

Castle-upon-Alun Farm was once a thatched farmhouse and it may have been the Home Farm of an old castle.  Several stone arches and relics of an old building survive and it is thought that a Welsh castle of pre Norman times could have stood in the vicinity.  Graves of the first century Roman-Celtic period containing spears and daggers have been unearthed in the area.

RETURN TO TOP  

Return to St Brides Major Home Page

 

Pages
 About us & our site
Contact us
 
Tour
St Brides Major
 Tour
 Southerndown
 Tour
Ogmore-by-Sea
 
   Latest, Diary & Archive 
 Picture Galleries
 History
 Memories
 Trees & Plantings
 Arts,  Crafts, Music & Local Products
 
 Village School
 Churches / Chapels
 Clubs/Organisations
 Recycling & Waste Collection  Services
 General Information and Links
 Businesses
 Community Council
 Police Surgery
Guest Book
Guest Map
Forum
Latest Virus news
 

Contributions to this site are welcomed and may be sent via our Contact Us link or handed in to a member of staff in the Village Shop/Post Office in St. Brides Major who have kindly agreed to pass them on.

The editors and owners of this web site reserve the right to remove, alter, or refuse to include, any link or contribution on this site, as they see fit.  Furthermore, they accept no responsibility in any way whatsoever for the content, accuracy or reliability of any other web sites mentioned or linked within these pages.