| Some Examples of Local Wells and Springs The Village Green Inn and
Restaurant well
This was likely to have been the old
Castle well. Originally at ground level, its circular entrance is now concealed under a
metal cover on the cellar floor, the top ten feet or so of dressed stone blocks having
been removed during building work on the rear extension to the Inn some years ago. What
remains of this well is still very impressive. It is five feet across at the top, tapering
to about four feet at the bottom, approximately 50 feet below. Peering down into the well
one can clearly see many chisel marks where the walls of the shaft were hewn out of solid
rock and the stalactites and stalagmites that have slowly built up over many years from
calcium deposited in droplets of water. At present (May 1999) there is about three to four
feet of water in the bottom of the well.
A local water diviner told the Inn's
present landlord, Bob Evans, that he believed the well to have been on this site for over
1,000 years.
Trellech town well
This is situated in the 'Withybed'
field adjoining the Cwmcarvan Far Hill road, approximately 200 yards west of Trellech Post
Office. A spring bubbles up into a brick-lined chamber capped by a square stone slab.
Several stone steps lead down to the water level and the remains of a rusty old chain
still dangles from the underside of the stone slab. According to local resident Shiela
Appleton, a bucket of cream would be attached to this chain to keep cool in the well water
so that it would separate out properly in the churn when made into butter.
Until mains water arrived in the
village in 1954, this little well used to supply drinking water and was never known to dry
up. As a child, Shiela had to fetch several bucketfuls of water during the day, which
involved running the gauntlet of an aggressive cockerel who resided in the field and
attacked anyone who went there. Mrs Ellaway (Shiela's mother) once hit the bird over the
head with her bucket and thought that she had killed him, but he got up, shook himself and
chased after her!
Overgrown and hidden for years by
nettles, this well has just been uncovered again (June 1999). Students from the University
of Wales College at Caerleon on their annual archaeological 'dig' in Trellech have
carefully cleared out all the silt and excavated the area around it.
The Village Pound
troughs
Beside the cross roads at the lower
end of the village is a curious little stone building. Recently converted into a dwelling,
this used to be the village pound where stray animals and drunken inhabitants could be
safely enclosed. Recessed into its curved roadside wall are two water troughs fed by a
spring which arises from the verge near the Virtuous well. The larger trough was
presumably intended for sheep, cattle and horses and the small one for dogs, a reminder of
the time when the hilly Trellech road was the main route from Monmouth to Chepstow and
weary travellers and their animals could stop here to quench their thirst.
Minutes of a parish meeting held on July 13th, 1896 record the unanimous
decision to site a water trough here and at a further meeting on October 30th the accounts
for its erection were approved. Details of local subscribers were listed, ranging from £5
given by Monmouthshire County Council to ten shillings from the vicar and five shillings
from the Crown Inn (now the Village Green Inn). The most expensive item on the bill was
the cost of laying the water pipe from near the Virtuous well to the Pound, which was
estimated as £7. The cost of the large trough was £1 and the small trough three
shillings.
Water now once again cascades from a pipe into one end of the large trough,
then overflows via a semi-circular channel at the other end into the much smaller trough
adjoining it, but over a number of years this water supply gradually dwindled and finally
ceased altogether. It took a great deal of patient detective work by the local Community
Councillors, Shiela Appleton and Alan Poultner, to unravel the mystery and get the water
flowing again. It was discovered that drainage 'improvements' carried out by the Highways
Department in the roadside verge close to the source of the spring had resulted in the
water pipe becoming blocked with silt and grit washing down from the road.
Over several years, the services of a
dowser, two drain-rodding companies, an official from Welsh Water and remedial work from
County Council workman to isolate the Pound's water supply from the surface water drainage
finally resulted in the water flowing freely again into these troughs during the Spring of
1999.
The Virtuous well
(St Anne's well)
First depicted on the sundial erected
in 1689 by Lady Magdalen Probert that now resides in Trellech church, this ancient well is
situated in a field on the eastern edge of Trellech Village adjoining the Tintern road.
A
Chalybeate spring bubbles up into a stone basin set into an arched recess in the rear
stone wall of a horse-shoe shaped structure partly sunken into the meadow. Steps lead down
into a paved area with a stone benched seat on either side, although in recent years a
rise in floor level has made sitting in here difficult. There are two squared niches in
the rear wall, possibly for drinking vessels or votive offerings. Today offerings are also
frequently placed on the ledge around the inside of the arched recess, while the hedgerow
trees behind the well are festooned with strips of white cloth and ribbons, reflecting a
continuing belief in the medicinal properties of the spring water. Tradition had it that
if you dipped a piece of your garment in the healing water, as the fabric rotted away, so
your symptoms would disappear.
The name 'virtuous' well does in fact
refer to its medicinal qualities and not to any moral virtues supposedly endowed upon
those who partake of its iron-impregnated waters. According to an ancient Welsh
manuscript, the healing water of the Bards ran beneath the Caer of the Three Stones and it
has been suggested that the existence of this well was associated with the choice of
Trellech for mystical Druidical rites.
Many pilgrimages were made here over
the centuries. An inscription on the Sundial in Latin describes Trellech as being
'greatest because of its well'. In the 18th and 19th centuries the unpleasant-tasting
water was considered especially beneficial for eye ailments and 'complaints peculiar to
women'.
Like many other holy wells, St Anne's
well was also used as a wishing well. To make a wish one threw into the water a small
metal object. Many bubbles arising from it meant a rapid granting of one's wish, few
bubbles meant that a long period of time would elapse before the wish came true and no
bubbles at all meant that one's wish had not been granted. The young maidens of Trellech
anxious to know how long they had to wait until their wedding day, would drop a pebble
into the water and every bubble that arose counted for one month.
Several local folk tales concern the
Virtuous well: for instance, the fairies were believed to dance around it. One day a local
farmer dug up the fairy ring around the well as he 'didn't like all them silly tales'. The
following day when he attempted to draw water, he discovered that the well was dry,
something that had never happened before. However, it was only dry when he tried to obtain
water. A little old man seated by the well informed him that he was extremely annoyed by
the destruction of the fairy ring and ordered its immediate restoration. As soon as the
farmer replaced the missing turf, the water started flowing freely again.
Legend also has it that nuns used a
three mile long secret passage from Tintern Abbey so that they could come and take the
well waters unobserved. However, according to historical record, there were only monks at
the Abbey - or were the nuns kept very well hidden?
Hygga bathing place and
horse pool
Half a mile south-west of Trellech,
close by the old farmhouse, stone steps lead down to a curious bathing place which was
described in Bradney's One Hundred of Trellech (1913) as follows:- 'On the west
side of the house is a large bathing place, with steps leading into it, filled by a strong
spring which comes out of the bank
. in 1677 it is described as 'the little well
adjoining the brew-house of Andrew Lewis, gent"'.
Today, although a little overgrown,
one can still see a huge oblong stone trough, approximately nine feet long and two feet
six inches wide, divided into two sections, situated against the steep bank of a
tree-covered hillock. Spring water arising from the bank is channelled separately into
each half of the trough via two stone spouts set into the rear retaining wall - an early
example of a 'his' and 'hers' bathing place, perhaps?
Beyond the trough is a square, two
feet deep water sump remaining from the time when the spring water was pumped up to supply
the farmhouse. At the base of the surrounding wall of squared old red sandstone blocks is
an outflow. From here the spring feeds two ornamental ponds before trickling into the
nearby stream (which forms the Angiddy Brook), along with another spring which flows out
of a rocky outcrop beneath a clump of mature trees, about 50 yards to the west of the old
stone bathing place.
On higher ground to the east of Hygga
farmyard, in the lee of an enormous, ancient, hollow sycamore tree, is the 'Horse Pool'.
This very impressive 30 feet square pond is now rainwater filled, but used to be spring
fed. It is walled on three sides with thin, squared stones and set into the centre of the
East wall is a channelled overflow stone six feet long, two feet wide and one foot thick.
In years gone by the farm's cart horses would be lead into the pool from the west side to
quench their thirst and be cleaned off after working hard in the fields all day.
Rose Cottage well
About a quarter of a mile past the
Virtuous well, but set back from the roadside, is Rose Cottage. A lovely old specimen of
Albertine rose rambles over the face of this little cottage and just a few feet in front
of it is a large stone-built well head, about three feet high and seven feet square. This
was only uncovered a couple of years ago by the present owners, Hilary and Kevin Lindsay,
when they were removing an old stone and earth wall adjacent to the cottage.
The 30 feet deep well shaft is three
feet in diameter and is lined all the way down with local quartz conglomerate 'pudding
stone' blocks. The water is about six feet deep and when a cave diving friend descended
into the well in the Spring of 1999 he reported that he could clearly see shards of
pottery sticking out of the layer of silt at the bottom.
Ninewells
One mile east of Trellech is an area
of mixed deciduous woodland and walled fields known as Ninewells from the nine springs
that once arose from there.
In 1810, Charles Heath described how a
number of small springs arise beneath the roots of some fine beech trees standing on the
summit of rising ground. He says that within ten yards these streams unite to supply a
Cold Bath below. According to Charles Heath, 'Mr Pritchard, carrier, Monmouth, having
broke his leg, was advised by his surgeon as soon he was able to use a crutch, to bathe in
this water, which he did, and in a very little time he was restored to the perfect use of
his limb. Afterwards, it became the resort of the afflicted with lameness, and other
infirmaties (sic.), from all parts of the country, many of whom partook of its
benefits; indeed, it is said, that the trees around exhibited many supporters of
affirmity, left in them, as trophies, by those who had derived health from the virtues of
these springs. At present, like the well at Trellech, the Bath is seldom made use of,
except by those who reside near it.'
Today, this Cold Bath is capped by a
huge, ugly slab of concrete, placed there some years ago by the local farmer to keep out
his cattle. An old photograph, taken very early this century, shows five steps leading
down into an oblong stone-lined bathing place. Ferns and other plants are sprouting out of
the walls above the water line and a profusion of aquatic plants can be seen covering much
of the water's surface. This photograph, which appeared on an old black and white
postcard, is labelled 'Old Roman Baths, Ninewells'.
From the concrete-covered bathing
place, the field slopes down to join a stony track leading from Ninewells cottage to the
Tintern road. About 50 yards from the roadside entrance, another of the nine springs
trickles from a pipe set in the centre of a 14 foot semi-circular recess in the dry stone
boundary wall of Ninewells Wood. This spring supplies a modern galvanised cattle trough,
the overflow from it forming a little brook which runs alongside the track and flows
underneath the wall beside the old stone gatepost, before disappearing briefly underneath
the gateway and re-emerging as a fast flowing roadside brook, that makes its way down
towards Whitestone.
Catbrook well
At the lower end of Catbrook's old
village green can be seen a good example of a typical Monmouthshire well. A spring bubbles
up inside a stone chamber surmounted by a flat-topped stone, approximately two feet six
inches square, whose lower surface is shaped into a semi-circular arch. The spring then
flows out through a stone-channel for several yards before passing underneath a drystone
wall to join the Cat Brook.
This attractive little well was lost to public view for over 20 years after a
local resident, concerned about childrens' safety, campaigned to have it filled in and so
County Council workmen cemented it over in the early 1970s. The well was opened up again
and restored to its present picturesque appearance by another local resident, Alan
Watkins, who also tends the village green with its three commemorative trees. Beside each
one is a metal plaque giving details of its planting; the oldest celebrating the jubilee
of King George V and Queen Mary in 1935 and the most recent, a flowering cherry, marking
the closure of Catbrook primary school in 1987.
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