Penffordd, Pembrokeshire
Penffordd or Pen-ffordd is a small village in the community of New Moat, Pembrokeshire, Wales, in the parish of Bletherston. It lies approximately northeast of Haverfordwest.
Name
The descriptive name translates into English as top of the road, and is on a small hill at 100 m elevation.History
According to pre-1850 parish maps there was an inn in the village. The Cross Inn was run by Ann Phillips in 1908, when an unfortunate accident occurred outside; a labourer, Thomas Murphy, whom witnesses said was sober, boasted that he could lift a log estimated at 2cwt, but fell and fractured his skull, dying later that night.Penffordd was in 1895 described thus: “This quiet, out-of-the-way village seems to be intent on keeping pace with the times” in a press report on a meeting of Penffordd Literary Society in the chapel, presided over by the Rev D Richards and attended by “a very large number” of people. The report concluded:
A report of the same society's annual meeting in 1899 was equally praising, noting that the school was fortunate to have "such a go-ahead superintendent", Mr B. F. Williams, and giving the highest praise to the Ladies Choir.
Worship
Penffordd is in the parish of Bletherston.Penffordd Calvinist Methodist Chapel was built in 1861 and restored in 1913. The minister in 1893 was the Reverend David Richards. The Rev. Benjamin Jones was minister of Penffordd and Gwastad in the early 1900s. The chapel was still used for worship in 2000, but subsequently became home to a leather-working enterprise.