Early census findings By the 20th century, the numbers of Welsh speakers were shrinking at a rate which suggested that the language would be extinct within a few generations. -era
Derby Scheme (1915) According to the 1911 census, out of a population of just under 2.5 million, 43.5% of those aged three years and upwards in Wales and Monmouthshire spoke Welsh (8.5%
monoglot Welsh speakers, 35% bilingual in English and Welsh). This was a decrease from the 1891 census with 49.9% speaking Welsh out of a population of 1.5 million (15.1% monoglot, 34.8% bilingual). The distribution of those speaking the language however was unevenly distributed with five counties remaining overwhelmingly and predominantly Welsh-speaking: •
Anglesey: 88.7% spoke Welsh while 61.0% spoke English •
Cardiganshire: 89.6% spoke Welsh while 64.1% could speak English •
Caernarfonshire: 85.6% spoke Welsh while 62.2% could speak English •
Carmarthenshire: 84.9% spoke Welsh while 77.8% could speak English •
Merionethshire: 90.3% spoke Welsh while 61.3% could speak English Outside these five counties, a further two areas were noted as having a majority who spoke Welsh, those being: •
Denbighshire: 56.7% could speak Welsh while 88.3% could speak English •
Merthyr Tydfil County Borough 50.2% while 94.8% could speak English
1921 census and the founding of Plaid Cymru The 1921 census recorded that of the population of Wales (including Monmouthshire), 38.7% of the population could speak Welsh while 6.6% of the overall population were Welsh monoglots. In the five predominantly Welsh-speaking counties, Welsh was spoken by more than 75% of the population, and was more widely understood than English: • Anglesey: 87.8% could speak Welsh while 67.9% could speak English • Cardiganshire: 86.8% could speak Welsh, 72.4% could speak English • Carmarthenshire: 84.5% could speak Welsh while 83.1% could speak English • Merioneth: 84.3% could speak Welsh while 69.5% could speak English • Carnarvonshire: 76.5% could speak Welsh while 73.3% could speak English Denbighshire was the only other county where a majority could still speak Welsh; here, 51.0% could speak Welsh and 94.0% could speak English. As for larger urban areas,
Aberdare was the only one where a majority could still speak Welsh, here 59.0% could speak Welsh while 95.4% could speak English. In
Cardiff, Wales's largest city, 5.2% of people could speak Welsh, while 99.7% of people could speak English. At a district level,
Llanfyrnach rural district in Pembrokeshire had the highest percentage of Welsh speakers at 97.5%, while
Penllyn rural district in Merioneth had the highest percentage of Welsh monoglots, at 57.3%.
Bethesda urban district in Caernarfonshire was the most Welsh-speaking urban district in Wales; 96.6% of the district's population could speak Welsh. The
Welsh nationalist party
Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru ('the National Party of Wales'; later abbreviated to Plaid Cymru, 'the Party of Wales') was founded at a meeting in the 1925
National Eisteddfod in
Pwllheli, Gwynedd, with the primary aim of promoting the Welsh language.
Tân yn Llŷn Concern for the Welsh language was ignited in 1936 when the British government decided to build an
RAF training camp and aerodrome at
Penyberth on the
Llŷn Peninsula in Gwynedd. The events surrounding the protest became known as
Tân yn Llŷn ('Fire in Llŷn'). The government had settled on Llŷn as the location for this military site after plans for similar bases in the English counties of
Northumberland and
Dorset had met with protests. The prime minister
Stanley Baldwin refused to hear the case against basing this RAF establishment in Wales, despite a deputation claiming to represent half a million Welsh protesters. However, no dedicated Welsh-language television channel would be established until 1982. According to the 1931 census, out of a population of just over 2.5 million, the percentage of Welsh speakers in Wales had dropped to 36.8%, with
Anglesey recording the highest concentration of speakers at 87.4%, followed by
Cardigan at 87.1%,
Merionethshire at 86.1%, and
Carmarthen at 82.3%.
Caernarfon listed 79.2%.
Radnorshire and
Monmouthshire ranked lowest with a concentration of Welsh speakers less than 6% of the population.
First Welsh-medium schools The first Welsh-medium primary school was established in Aberystwyth in 1939 by
Ifan ab Owen Edwards. Originally a private school named Ysgol Gymraeg yr Urdd composed of only seven children, it later became
Ysgol Gymraeg Aberystwyth and now teaches over 400 children.
Ysgol Glan Clwyd was opened in 1956 with 94 pupils in
Rhyl, becoming the first secondary school with a formal remit to teach through the medium of Welsh. It moved to
St Asaph in 1969. In 1949 Cardiff gained its first Welsh medium primary school, Ysgol Gymraeg Caerdydd, renamed Ysgol Bryntaf and moved to
Llandaf in 1952. In 1978
Ysgol Glantaf opened, Cardiff's first Welsh-medium secondary school. In 1962 Rhydfelen secondary school was founded, the first Welsh medium secondary school in South Wales (later
Ysgol Garth Olwg).
Welsh Courts Act 1942 The Welsh Courts Act was passed in 1942, repealing Henry VIII's earlier laws; this finally permitted limited use of the Welsh language in courts of law.
Tynged yr Iaith and the 1961 census In 1962
Saunders Lewis gave a radio speech entitled ('The Fate of the Language'), in which he predicted the extinction of the Welsh language unless
direct action was taken. Lewis was responding to the 1961 census, which showed a decrease in the number of Welsh speakers from 36% in 1931 to 26% in 1961, out of a population of about 2.5 million. Meirionnydd, Anglesey, Carmarthen, and Caernarfon averaged a 75% concentration of Welsh speakers, but the most significant decrease was in the counties of
Glamorgan,
Flint, and
Pembroke. Lewis's intent was to motivate Plaid Cymru to take more direct action to promote the language; however, it led to the formation of
Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg (the Welsh Language Society) later that year at a Plaid Cymru summer school held in
Pontardawe in
Glamorgan.
Flooding of the Tryweryn valley , Ceredigion, on the site of the slogan's first appearance In 1965 the village of
Capel Celyn was
drowned in the Tryweryn valley. This created tension between natural resources provision and the protection of cultural identity. This event is commemorated in Wales with the graffitied slogan ('Remember Tryweryn'). The flooding of Tryweryn continues to influence debates on forced removal even today. Songs and poems also pay tribute to the loss and shame of the event.
Last of the Welsh monoglots In a 1968 newspaper report the existence of a small number of elderly Welsh monoglots in the Llŷn Peninsula of North Wales was described.
Influence of Gwynfor Evans The leader of Plaid Cymru,
Gwynfor Evans, won the party's first ever Parliamentary seat in Carmarthen in 1966, which "helped change the course of a nation". This, paired with the
Scottish National Party's
Winnie Ewing's winning a seat in 1967, may have contributed to pressure on the Labour prime minister
Harold Wilson to form the
Kilbrandon Commission. This event may have also contributed to the passing of the
Welsh Language Act 1967. The act allowed the use of Welsh alongside English in courts of law in Wales, partly based on the Hughes Parry Report. Following the defeat of the "Yes Campaign" for a Welsh Assembly in 1979, and believing Welsh nationalism to be "in a paralysis of helplessness", the
Conservative Home Secretary announced in September 1979 that the government would not honour its pledge to establish a Welsh-language television channel, much to widespread anger and resentment in Wales. The government yielded by 17 September, and the Welsh Fourth Channel (
S4C) was launched on 2 November 1982.
Welsh Language Act 1993 The Welsh Language Act 1993 provided a new law for public organisations in Wales to have bilingual schemes, which would be supervised by the
Welsh Language Board. Some private sector companies, including
British Telecom and
British Gas, had already included Welsh-language schemes in company policies before this Act. == 21st century ==