- William Madocks
William Alexander Madocks (
June 17 1773 –September, 1828), was a landowner andMember of Parliament for the town of Boston,Lincolnshire from 1802 to 1820. He is best known, however, for his activities as an agricultural improver in northWales , especially around the towns ofPorthmadog andTremadog , both of which he founded.Madocks' family originally came from
Denbighshire although Madocks himself was brought up inLondon . As the youngest son he was not wealthy, but he had great vision. His ambition was to open up this part of Wales and raise its prosperity by improving road and later rail links and by introducing manufacture. The Union with Ireland of 1800 meant through traffic was now likely. He promoted the building ofturnpike roads; and to avoid the dangerous crossing of theTraeth Mawr (the estuary ofRiver Glaslyn ) or the long detour viaAberglaslyn bridge, he devised an ambitious scheme to build a great embankment across the Glaslyn estuary. This was to become part of a rail link across mid-Wales to Porth Dinllaen (now owned by the National Trust) on theLlŷn Peninsula which he hoped would become the main port forDublin fromLondon and the south of England. At that time theMenai Strait and theRiver Conwy were not bridged, but later his rivals succeeded in promoting the North Wales coast route andHolyhead became the principal port forIreland .In the autumn of 1811 the embankment (Cob) was finished. It had taken longer and cost more than anticipated, and Madocks’ creditors were pressing for payment. Now, an end to the financial worries seemed assured, with a toll from foot passengers and carriages, and the income from the reclaimed land. A four day feast and
Eisteddfod was held to celebrate the Cob's completion.Then in February 1812 high tides and a storm breached it. Madocks' agent and supporters held the creditors at bay, drummed up men and money from all around the county and finally repaired the breach and strengthened the whole embankment. By 1814 it was open again. But Madocks' finances were in ruins and all his properties were mortgaged. In 1821, he obtained an Act for a harbour at Ynys y Tywyn, to be renamed Port Madoc. By 1824, he was surveying the possible train routes from
Porthmadog to the new slate quarries atBlaenau Ffestiniog . Within a generation, the harbour was busy, with slates from Blaenau Ffestiniog reaching the harbour via the Cob, carried by theFfestiniog Railway . This commerce fuelled the growth ofPorthmadog .In 1826 Madocks and his family travelled to
Italy for a holiday. Madocks wrote home frequently, sending instructions to John Williams for the preparation of their new house Morfa Lodge, (now Gelli Fair) above Porthmadog, for their return. But on the way home in 1828 Madocks died suddenly inParis . He was buried on17 September in thePère Lachaise cemetery, Paris. His daughter Eliza Anne (Maria) Ermine was only six, so his estate was held in trust until she came of age. His wife returned to her childhood home nearBrecon leaving the estate to be split by those who had helped finance Madocks’ ventures. The memorial to this remarkable man is the little town ofTremadog , still near-perfect in its design and setting.References
* Beazley, Elizabeth, "Madocks and the Wonder of Wales" London Faber and Faber 1967
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