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Ely, Cardiff

Coordinates: 51°28′45″N 3°14′59″W / 51.47917°N 3.24972°W / 51.47917; -3.24972
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Ely
Ely is located in Cardiff
Ely
Ely
Location within Cardiff
Population14,603 (2011)[1]
Community
  • Ely
Principal area
Preserved county
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCARDIFF
Postcode districtCF5
Dialling code029
PoliceSouth Wales
FireSouth Wales
AmbulanceWelsh
UK Parliament
Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament
List of places
UK
Wales
Cardiff

51°28′45″N 3°14′59″W / 51.47917°N 3.24972°W / 51.47917; -3.24972

Ely (Welsh: Trelái from tref, town + Welsh: Afon Elái, River Ely) is a district and community in Cardiff, Wales. It is to the north of Cowbridge Road West. Caerau defines the boundary to the south as does River Ely to the east and in part to the north.

Roman era

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In Roman times, Ely was the site of a Roman villa, near the old racecourse, and of iron smelting possibly using manganese to harden steel.[2][better source needed] There is also thought to have been a Roman road near the site linking to Cardiff Roman Fort and eastwards to Newport.[3]

19th century

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Grand Avenue, 1966

In 1855, the first horse race took place at Ely Racecourse, which took over from the Great Heath racecourse.[4]

The Ordnance Survey map from the early 1880s shows just how isolated the ancient Ely village was from the rest of Cardiff. Reports about travelling along the main road over Ely Common to Cardiff talk of potholes and no shelter and a terrible journey on foot. Most of Ely was still farmland feeding Cardiff's population. A railway station had only recently been constructed, and this gave the surrounding area further potential for mass housing development.

A Cardiff trolleybus crossing Grand Avenue in Ely, 1969.

The 'Ely Industrial School' on Cowbridge Road East was home to orphaned children originally from Cardiff. It had been set up to accommodate "pauper children" from 1863. It was very much a product of the Victorian age, and workhouse mentality, increased social awareness and responsibility saw it closing in 1903 and converted to additional workhouse accommodation for adults (though never used for that purpose), known as Ely Lodge. The children lived in what became known as Ely Homes.[5] The school was demolished some years later and an infectious diseases isolation unit was built on the same site.

The land was once owned by the Earl of Plymouth, who dictated that alcohol may not be sold on the land.[citation needed] As a result, like other plots of land with similar conditions, the boundaries of the old estate can be approximated by the locations of public houses around the area.[citation needed] To attract business from nearby areas, establishments would be built as close to it as possible without actually being in Ely (local establishments are actually in Caerau and Fairwater).[citation needed]

20th and 21st centuries

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Ely Police Station, Cowbridge Road West
Ely Fire Station, Cowbridge Road West
Ely Library

Ely's rapid expansion of housing began in the 1920s to provide 'homes fit for heroes' after World War I.[citation needed] This came with the construction of council houses to rehouse people from Cardiff's inner-city slums.[citation needed]

Ely Racecourse had its grandstand destroyed in a fire in 1937 and was then closed in 1939.[6]

Ely Hospital was a large psychiatric hospital which was the subject of abuse allegations in the 1960s.[7] The subsequent enquiry led to reforms to mental health provision throughout the National Health Service. The hospital closed in 1996.[8]

The area is widely considered to be one of Cardiff's less desirable areas in terms of crime and standard of living. But the residents of Ely are keen to dispel this reputation, citing the fact it is a very large, close-knit community.[9]

Crime and disorder

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The area was scarred by rioting in September 1991 when shops and houses were vandalised and burnt in one of several waves of rioting around that time which occurred nationally and resulted in extensive damage and casualties.[10] The trouble was said to be started after a dispute between Wilson Road shopkeepers over the right to sell bread.[11] Some of the buildings targeted in Ely have since been demolished under more recent redevelopment projects.[citation needed]

In June 1993, 45-year-old former steelworker Les Reed was beaten to death after he challenged a gang of youths on the estate after he and a friend witnessed them vandalising a bollard in the middle of a road. Three local youths were later found guilty of Mr Reed's murder and sentenced to life imprisonment, and a fourth was cleared of murder but found guilty of manslaughter and received a lesser sentence. Mr Reed's friend, Phillip Tull, was also attacked but survived. After the trial in March 1994, it was revealed that three of the gang had previous convictions for violence, including one gang member who had a conviction for wounding against Mr Reed's teenage son Martin in 1991. Around this time, The Independent reported that unemployment on the estate stood at more than 30% (at least three times in the national average) and there was an ongoing problem with car crime and gang warfare.[12]

On the night of 22-23 May 2023, rioting broke out in the area after two teenage boys, Kyrees Sullivan and Harvey Evans, were killed when the electric bike they were riding crashed.[13][14][15]

Transport

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Cowbridge Road West (the A48) is the predominant road running through Ely as it runs on to Canton and Cardiff city centre to the east, and to Culverhouse Cross interchange to the west near the Western Cemetery. The parallel Grand Avenue links Cowbridge Road West to the northern estates of Ely.

Ely is served by Cardiff Bus services 17 and 18 which operate every 10 minutes from Wood Street in Cardiff city centre via Canton and Caerau. North Ely is also served by service 13 which terminates at the Cardiff Bus Interchange Cardiff Bus services 96 to Barry, and Adventure_Travel_(bus_company)'s C1 service also serves Ely between Culverhouse Cross, Cardiff City Centre and Pontprennau to the north

The nearest station is Waun-gron Park in Fairwater. Ely railway station, which closed in 1962, was on the South Wales Main Line.

Electoral ward

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Ely electoral ward of Cardiff

Ely is both an electoral ward, and a community of the City of Cardiff. There is no community council for the area. The electoral ward of Ely falls within the parliamentary constituency of Cardiff West. It is bounded by Fairwater to the northwest; Caerau to the south (although some of Lower Ely is technically in the electoral ward of Caerau, as is Trelai (Ely) Park); Culverhouse Cross to the west; and the Vale of Glamorgan to the southwest.

All three council seats are safely held by the Labour Party, with one of the long-term representatives being former Council leader, Russell Goodway,[16] though in 2004 when Labour lost the Council to the Liberal Democrats, Goodway retained his seat by only 62 votes.[17]

The Ely electoral ward consists of the area north of Cowbridge Road West, while the Caerau electoral ward consists of the area south of Cowbridge Road West.[citation needed] However, a misconception is Caerau being a subsection of the Ely area.[citation needed]

Notable people

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Amenities

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Ely features several shopping parades. Two large supermarkets are located just off Cowbridge Road West on nearby Treseder Way. Many small shops and local businesses are notably on Wilson Road and Grand Avenue; and other chain stores are in the Caerau ward.

Education

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Primary Schools in Ely:

  • Windsor Clive Junior School on Grand Avenue
  • Herbert Thompson Primary School on Plymouthwood Road
  • Hywel Dda Primary School on Cambria Road
  • Saint Fagans Church in Wales Primary School on Drope Road
  • Saint Francis RC Primary School on Wilson Road

High Schools in Ely:

Youth Centres in Ely:

  • North Ely YC on Pethybridge Road
  • Dusty Forge Project on Cowbridge Road West

References

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  1. ^ "Ward population 2011". Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  2. ^ Fryer, Alfred C. (1894). "Interesting Discoveries near Cardiff". The Journal of the British Archaeological Association. p. 326-327. OCLC 1537130. (pages 386–387 of the scanned copy at archive.org)
  3. ^ Romans in Britain: Roman roads near Cardiff Archived 2008-06-11 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Cardiff Timeline - Cardiffians.co.uk". Archived from the original on 19 February 2008. Retrieved 29 February 2008. Cardiffians.co.uk Cardiff Timeline
  5. ^ "Millbank Primary History". Archived from the original on 20 February 2006. Retrieved 3 September 2006.
  6. ^ "Ely Racecourse". Peoples Collection Wales. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  7. ^ "Report on Ely Hospital". Department of Health and Social Security. 11 March 1969 – via Socialist Health Association.
  8. ^ "Ely Hospital". National Archives. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  9. ^ "Elford Road - Ely". Cardiff Life. BBC. Archived from the original on 15 March 2005.
  10. ^ WalesOnline (28 August 2011). "The night Cardiff burned: The Ely riots 20 years on". WalesOnline. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  11. ^ WalesOnline (28 August 2011). "The night Cardiff burned: The Ely riots 20 years on". WalesOnline. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  12. ^ "Life for vandal who kicked man to death: Two teenagers to be held". The Independent. London. 23 March 1994.
  13. ^ Antonia Matthews and Adam Hale, "Cardiff Riot: Two Teenagers Killed in Crash before Ely Disorder", BBC News, 23 May 2023. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  14. ^ "Cardiff Riots: Social Media Rumours About Crash Started Unrest, Says Police Commissioner", The Guardian, 23 May 2023. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  15. ^ Owen, Cathy; John, Lucy; Lewis, Ffion (23 May 2023). "Live updates as youths killed in Ely crash that sparked violence are named". WalesOnline. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  16. ^ Cardiff council elections: The story in each ward Archived 20 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine, YourCardiff (Wales Online), 3 May 2012. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  17. ^ "Goodway: I've got my life back", Wales Online, 17 June 2004.
[edit]
St Fagans Fairwater
St Georges
super Ely
Ely Canton
Wenvoe Caerau