DescriptionFfair Rhos is a small village situated thirteen miles south east of Aberystwyth. Before the dissolution of the monasteries, 'Ffair Rhos lay within Strata Florida Abbey's Mefenydd Grange, and was granted a fair by the Abbey. Post-Dissolution, Ffair Rhos's fairs were the greatest in Ceredigion. Fair days were 25 July, 15 August and 14 September, and in James I's time were said to attract 5000-6000 people. One fair was still held in 1974. One of the attractions of the fairs was the transport links; Ffair Rhos is located at the junction of a major north-south route and an east-west route that passes over the mountains giving access to the towns of east Wales and England. At the Dissolution of the Abbey its former lands were granted to the Earl of Essex, and in 1630 the Crosswood estate purchased most of them. A map drawn up for the Crosswood estate in 1815 shows a scatter of smallholdings across Ffair Rhos. No schedule accompanies the map, but it would seem that these were squatter settlements on common land, with perhaps some difference shown between those that had been established for 20 years or more, and so were to be granted legal title to the land, and those of less than 20 years. In the absence of an enclosure award, squatter settlement and small-scale enclosure seems to have continued apace in the first half of the 19th century, as the tithe map of 1847 records more cottages and smallholdings. Settlement reached its peak in the mid 19th century.
This area consists of an open upland valley or hollow between 240m to 400m centred on the hamlet of Ffair Rhos. Ffair Rhos is a small linear settlement on either side of a minor road surrounded by numerous dispersed farmsteads, cottages and smallholdings. Local stone is the traditional building material with slate (north Wales slate) used for roofs. Walls are usually cement rendered on houses and bare on traditional farm buildings. Older houses that almost all entirely date to the mid-to-late 19th century, are relatively small, and of two storeys or one-and-a-half storeys (although at least one single storey cottage is present). They are built in the typical Georgian vernacular style, with gable end chimneys, a central front door, and two windows either side of the door and one above, but with stronger vernacular traits such as low eaves and small windows on most houses rather than Georgian elements. Many of these houses have been recently modernised and extended. A short terrace of worker houses lies in Ffair Rhos, but most houses have (or had) an agricultural function, with stone-built outbuildings, generally confined to one or two small ranges, sometimes attached and in-line to the house. Several farms are not now working and outbuildings are not used or have been converted. Working farms have small ranges of modern steel and concrete agricultural buildings. There are a few modern houses/bungalows close to Ffair Rhos. Two small, disused chapels are present.'
Although the chapels are no longer in use, the village public house is still open. It was named as the Cross Inn on the first, third and fourth editions of the 6inch OS maps (published in 1891, 1906 and 1953) but today it is known as the Teifi Inn.
Sources: Dyfed Archaeological Trust's Historic Landscape Characterisation of Upland Ceredigion; modern and historic OS maps
M. Ryder, RCAHMW, 5th November 2018.