Tag: 20th-century-wales
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Trevor Owen Davies (1895–1966)

A Farm Boy at Christ Church, Oxford, A Welsh Scholar in Public Life In 1920s Oxford, the halls of Christ Church were filled with the sons of the English landed elite. Among them sat an unlikely figure: a farm labourer from the Dyfi Valley who had traded his plough for Augustine. Trevor Owen Davies was…
Antony David Davies
20th-century-wales, Augustine theology, BBC Religious Advisory Council, Brecknockshire history, Caeadda, Calvinistic Methodism, Christ Church Oxford, christianity, History, Justice of the Peace Wales, Llanwrin, llyfnant-valley, Machynlleth County School, Mid Wales history, Montgomeryshire, Oxford theology, Powys history, Presbyterian Church of Wales, Reformed theology, Rural Wales, Social history, Trefeca College, Trevecka College, Trevor O Davies, Trevor Owen Davies, University College Aberystwyth, Wales, Welsh biography, Welsh broadcasting history, Welsh chapel culture, Welsh clergy, Welsh education history, Welsh history, Welsh intellectual history, Welsh ministers, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh Public Life, Welsh rural society -
Tea and Waterfalls: John and Jane Waters of the Llyfnant Valley

In the remote folds of the Llyfnant Valley in north-west Montgomeryshire—where waterfalls crash through ancient woodland and time seems to move at the pace of a farm horse—a remarkable couple forged a life of quiet industry, community service, and understated innovation. Jane and John Waters, my grandmother’s aunt and uncle, were not landed gentry or…
Antony David Davies
19th-century-wales, 20th-century-wales, ancestry, cwmrhaiadr, edwardian-wales, family history, farmhouse-tea-rooms, Genealogy, History, ireland, john-waters, llyfnant-valley, local-heritage, Machynlleth, Rural Wales, Social history, tea-rooms-of-wales, travel, tymawr, victorian-wales, waters-family, Welsh history, welsh-tourism-history
