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Bid to save Cwm Rhondda chapel raises enough money to buy it
Bid to save Cwm Rhondda chapel raises enough money to buy it

BBC News

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Bid to save Cwm Rhondda chapel raises enough money to buy it

A campaign to save the chapel where the hymn Cwm Rhondda was first sung has raised enough money to buy the known and Bread of Heaven, the hymn was first sung at Capel Rhondda in Hopkinstown, Rhondda Cynon Taf, just before Christmas final service, amid declining numbers at services, was in December 2024 and the Grade II listed chapel was put up for sale by the Welsh Baptist Union with a price tag of £47, - fearing it could be bought by a property developer - wanted to save it as a community space and campaigner Rhian Hopkins, who grew up in the village, said: "It's amazing." Ms Hopkins started the campaign less than two weeks ago and it has raised about £55,000 after the original target of the asking price was raised to £60,000 to cover legal and other costs."I keep thinking 'am I just having a vivid dream which I'll wake up from'," she said."This isn't just any chapel, this is the home of Cwm Rhondda, the home of Bread of Heaven. "This is a really important part of not just local heritage but Welsh heritage and potentially worldwide heritage from the response we've had." Ms Hopkins put a post on Facebook while her my sons were on holiday in France with their dad and said her campaign "snowballed"."It's been so exciting and I have worked ridiculously hard, doing 12-plus hour days on the campaign," she said."Michael Sheen retweeted the post this week but the biggest difference to the campaign was after BBC Radio 4 Today programme featured the story."I watched the crowdfunding page and it was like someone winning the jackpot on a fruit machine and the coins keep on coming out because the figures just kept on going up." With the money now raised to buy the chapel, Ms Hopkins hopes it can one day become a museum with a visitor centre. "A lot of money will also need to be spent on the chapel. There was a quote of £50,000 just to restore the vestry floor."There's also knotweed in the graveyard, it's going to take a lot of money and work." Singer and broadcaster Beverley Humphreys, who is from nearby Pontypridd, said: "This hymn, Cwm Rhondda is in our DNA as Welsh people... it's been in my heart ever since I can remember."There is so much history embedded in this wonderful hymn and it's not just about preserving something special from our past but what Rhian and the team will do is preserve something beautiful for the present and for the future."

Welsh community races to save chapel where Cwm Rhondda hymn first sung
Welsh community races to save chapel where Cwm Rhondda hymn first sung

The Guardian

time5 days ago

  • General
  • The Guardian

Welsh community races to save chapel where Cwm Rhondda hymn first sung

A Welsh valleys community has launched a campaign to save the chapel where the popular hymn Cwm Rhondda, or Bread of Heaven, was first sung. The composer John Hughes wrote the hymn in 1907 to celebrate a new organ at Capel Rhondda in Hopkinstown, near Pontypridd. The Grade II-listed building closed its doors in December after years of shrinking congregations and was put up for sale by the Baptist Union of Wales for £47,000 two months ago. When Rhian Hopkins, who grew up in Hopkinstown, drove past the chapel and noticed the for sale sign, she said she was 'devastated'. 'I wasn't able to stop thinking about how this piece of history could be lost or turned into flats by a property developer who could pick it up for next to nothing,' she said. 'I arranged a viewing and took an architect friend who said the building was fine.' Hopkins and other campaigners set up a last-minute crowdfunding drive on 17 July, the day before the deadline for potential buyer bids. The union has since extended the deadline to 28 July to give the fundraiser the chance to meet its target. As of Wednesday, 65% of the total – £31,000 – had been pledged. Hopkins said: 'At a time when the world can feel rather bleak, this community effort seems to be resonating with people and reminding us that although we might no longer feel the need to attend a religious service every Sunday, we do need spaces and occasions where we can come together as a community.' Hopkinstown residents hope that Capel Rhondda can be maintained as a community space, with a potential focus on choirs and Welsh-language groups. 'We have lots of ideas about how the building can be used going forward but really want to engage with those living in the village to find out what they want and need,' the fundraising page says. More challenges lie ahead, Hopkins acknowledged. 'The first step is to secure the building. Then we probably need to set up a charity of some sort… There are all sorts of maintenance and repair costs, heating and maintenance, things like that to think about,' she said. About a quarter of Wales's places of worship have closed over the last decade as congregations have declined, according to research by the Bevan Foundation, the leading Welsh public policy charity and thinktank. Chapels across Wales have been redeveloped into private homes or second homes and holiday lets.

Historic chapel where ‘Bread of Heaven' hymn written under threat from property developers
Historic chapel where ‘Bread of Heaven' hymn written under threat from property developers

Telegraph

time20-07-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Historic chapel where ‘Bread of Heaven' hymn written under threat from property developers

A Welsh village is battling to buy an historic chapel where the classic hymn Bread of Heaven was written. The Grade II-listed Capel Rhondda is on the market for £47,500, including the graveyard. The chapel in Hopkinstown, South Wales, was built in 1885 for worshippers in the mining valleys. But now the village wants to buy it to turn it into a community hub – and stop it being bought by property developers. Composer John Hughes wrote the well-known hymn Cwm Rhondda for an anniversary service at the chapel in 1907. Better known as 'Bread of Heaven', it is often sung at Welsh rugby matches, pubs and funeral services. Fund-raiser Rhian Hopkins said: 'It would be a real shame if the incredible building which was funded and built by our ancestors was lost to a property developer who may not respect the building's history'. She added: 'It was built by the community, for the community so I would like to see it remaining as part of the community. 'My worry is that although it's a Grade II-listed building, and will obviously be protected in some way, it's on the market for what is a relatively low price for a property these days. I'm concerned that it could be bought by a wealthy property developer from outside the area and has no connection to the building. 'It's at that sort of price where someone might just buy it speculatively and leave it to sit empty. There are repairs that are needed already, so things would only get worse.' She decided to set up a crowd funder in an attempt to raise the asking price for the chapel and to ensure it would remain in the community's hands. Architectural interest The chapel was Grade II-listed in 2001 for its 'architectural interest as a late 19th century chapel in a prominent location retaining its original character'. A spokesman for The Baptist Union of Wales said: 'The union is sad to have had to close the chapel and we are thankful for all that has been done there over the years. 'Until recently, it was a very active church. But unfortunately, attendance numbers have declined and the buildings have started to deteriorate. It's a decision not taken lightly. The vestry in particular is in a very poor state of repair and can't be used. 'At the end of last year we looked at different options for uses for the building but could not find anything suitable – there was no other available option than to put it on the market. It's such a shame, but the building needs some investment and we hope we will find an appropriate buyer and a new lease of life to this historic building that has served the community so well.'

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