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Old Photographs, Recognition, Handwriting Deciphering => Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition => Topic started by: mezentia on Saturday 04 November 17 22:25 GMT (UK)
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Can anyone help decipher the two residences for this marriage, please?
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First one Pontygwaith
Second might be Rhymney
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Thanks :)
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Hi I don't think the second word is Rhymney there is only one y at the end none before.
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I think it’s been written as Rumney. Rhymney would make sense. I’ve found spellings to be quite varied for a lot of place names in Wales, one L instead of two at the beginning of names is quite common for example.
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There is/was a Rumney (not the same place as Rhymney) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumney,_Cardiff
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What awful writing 🙄
Have looked at Pontygwaith on the map but can’t see anything local that looks like the second one 🤔
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Looks like it could be Rumney to me as well - the Rhymney near merthyr may well have been spelled the same way as the Cardiff one back in those days. Also compare with the R at the start of John Richards, father (?) of the bride
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I think it says Rumney as well. But this then throws up another query. The bride's father is described as a 'Miner'. Now, Rumney is part of Cardiff which is not within the coal measures, so he would hardly be mining for coal from there. But he could be a coal miner if they were living in Rhymney as there was a lot of mining activity in the Rhymney Valley, which is within the coal measures. However, the area around Rumney has been mined for its mineral deposits in the past, namely iron, although I'm not sure whether or not this was on an industrial scale.
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The 1871 census RG10/5328/16 p25 has Rhymney in the Bedwellty Registration district spelled as "RUMNEY"