Llanfair Talhaiarn
Llanfair Talhaiarn, abbreviated to Llanfair TH, is a village and community approximately south of Abergele in Conwy county borough, Wales. Until 1974 it was included in Denbighshire. The population was 979 in 2001, increasing to 1,070 at the 2011 census with 44% being Welsh language speakers.
History
The village derives its name from the church dedicated to Mary, that was founded by a monk called Talhaiarn from Valle Crucis Abbey. The original church has long disappeared.The poet and architect John Jones was born at the Harp Inn in Llanfair. He took the bardic name "Talhaiarn", and there is a popular misconception that this was the origin of the name of the village. However, the name of the village is documented long before Jones's birth.
Garthewin
The village was once part of the estate of Garthewin. The first written records of Garthewin date to the fourteenth century,but both that house and a later Jacobean house were replaced in the 18th century by the present building,
which was subsequently altered in 1930 by Clough Williams-Ellis. It was from the 18th century until the late 20th the home of the Wynne family and notable for a private theatre constructed in the stables by R.O.F. Wynne which in the 1950s saw the first performances of several of Saunders Lewis's dramas. The theatre was designed by Thomas S. Tait. The house is a Grade II* listed building and its gardens and grounds are listed at Grade II on the Cadw/ICOMOS [Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales].