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Elan Valley Water Scheme, 1898

Description

Photograph taken at the time of the construction of the Elan Valley Water Scheme showing two ladies in a pony and trap in front of a Victorian Villa. The gentleman is believed to be W. A. Legg, and two servants are in attendance.

The dams, reservoirs, tunnels and 117 km aqueduct of the Elan Valley Water Scheme in mid-Wales were built to supply clean water to the city of Birmingham in the English midlands. Construction of this ambitious civil engineering project in the rugged terrain of mid-Wales lasted in total for thirteen years, from 1893 to 1906. The work was substantially complete when the scheme was officially opened by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra on 21 July 1904. The scheme is still supplying Birmingham's water: it was expanded in the mid-twentieth century by the construction of another dam on the Claerwen river, thus doubling the capacity of the original scheme to 345.5 million litres of water per day.

Owner:
RCAHMW
Creator:
Edward Hubbard
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Item uploaded:
10/3/2015
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Comments (1)

This photo was taken outside of Bryngwy house, South Street, Rhayader. The house was built especially for James Mansergh who was the lead engineer of the Elan Valley dams. It looks like Mansergh who is stood by the doorway. It also looks like W.A. Legg is stood behind the horse, as he can be seen in another photo from the same collection. Bryngwy later became a Childrens home for a period of time.

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