Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Temperance Town, Cardiff

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Country
  
Wales

Established
  
1850s

City
  
Cardiff

Temperance Town, Cardiff wwwabandonedcommunitiescoukTTView18701JPG

Temperance Town, Cardiff, was the unofficial name for a working-class inner-city suburb established in the late 1850s and demolished in the 1930s to make way for Cardiff Bus Station.

Temperance Town, Cardiff Temperance Town

History

Temperance Town, Cardiff Temperance Town

Temperance Town was built on reclaimed land next to the River Taff. The land was owned by Colonel Edward Wood, a teetotaller, who imposed a condition on the developer that the sale of alcohol would not be allowed - hence the district's name.

Temperance Town, Cardiff Old Cardiff Pics on Twitter quotCardiff Bus Station c1937 Built on

Development took place in the late 1850s and the early 1860s. Schools were opened in January 1879 and a church, St Dyfrig's, was built in 1888. The main street, Wood Street, was filled with shops and other businesses. The large Temperance Hall was eventually converted to a Congregational church.

Temperance Town, Cardiff Coflein Mapping

In the early 20th century Cardiff's prosperity had been reduced by the decline in coal exports. Poverty and overcrowding in Temperance Town increased, and conditions deteriorated. In 1930 the Great Western Railway built a new station on the edge of the district and the railway company was concerned that the visible poverty of the district would affect its image and its business. It persuaded the Cardiff Corporation (the local authority) to improve the area; the Corporation (without consultation with the inhabitants) obtained the Cardiff Corporation Act 1934 to provide the necessary powers. The redevelopment plans included new public facilities such as a bus station.

Temperance Town, Cardiff Cardiff39s ambitious city centre regeneration plan of 150 years ago

The Corporation rehoused Temperance Town's residents elsewhere in better housing elsewhere in the city, and the district's demolition started in late 1937.

Temperance Town, Cardiff Coflein Mapping

In the event World War II delayed redevelopment. The bus station opened in 1954; Wood Street was widened and lined with offices and shops. In 1958 a swimming pool, the Wales Empire Pool, was built for the British Empire and Commonwealth Games, in the same year.

Temperance Town, Cardiff Temperance Town Wales Online

References

Temperance Town, Cardiff Wikipedia