in 1872 or 1873 The village grew out of a mainly pastoral industry (mostly
sheep farming and
dairy produce). It has a
parish church (
Anglican), a
Nonconformist chapel (Independent), and a local
pub (
Ye Olde Bull Inn) which served J.W. Lees
real ale (from a Manchester brewery). In the 1960s, the village's only shop used to be a bakery and post office also, but the
post office has been discontinued. The public house closed its doors to the public as a J.W. Lees owned pub for the last time in May 2018. On 27 September 2019 the pub re-opened as a Free house. An ancient well at Llanbedr-y-Cennin, ‘’ (‘Peter’s Well’) was believed to have healing powers.
Artists' Colony The latter 19th century saw a number of artists living in Llanbedr-y-cennin and neighbouring
Tal-y-bont. The art movement, which had started in
Betws-y-coed in the 1850s, saw a movement down the valley after the arrival of the railway in Betws-y-coed. Initial settlement was in
Trefriw, and the 1871 census listed the first artist settler in Llanbedr/Tal-y-bont as J.Cole. There were 7 artists living here by the 1881 census, and 15 by 1891. Charles Potter, an artist from Oldham (many of the artists were originally from the
Manchester area), was instrumental in setting up the Tal-y-bont Artists Club, and in raising funds to construct in 1886 the ‘Artists Club’ building at Tal-y-bont (actually Llandbedr-y-cennin), and he became its first President. The group had originally starting meeting informally at the Olde Bull Inn in 1883, then in 1884 used the upper floor of a stable building (above a carpenter's workshop, and now demolished) as their first studio. Named "Walden", the building offered a studio, a gallery, a classroom, a billiard room, and entertainment space. It originally had 40 members, male artists who lived or worked locally, although there were 150 honorary members. It had a committee of 17 members. The building was also used to hold art courses for clubs from far-and-wide, and every autumn there was an exhibition, despite the fact that this was not an altogether accessible place to the average picture-buying tourist. Nevertheless, membership (including non-resident members) grew to a number approaching 150. The artist colony was a strong influence on the formation of the
Royal Cambrian Academy of Art, which moved into
Plas Mawr,
Conwy in 1886. The colony came to an end at the onset of
World War I, and in the 1920s the building became a private home. A number of artists are buried in the churchyard at Llanbedr. == Points of note ==