Ponciau grew up around coal and iron ore mining and iron founding. Iron ore was mined nearby at
Llwyneinion. A coal pit was recorded here in 1757, with a lease on land being taken out by the great industrialist
John Wilkinson, while the Ponciau ironworks is thought to have been started in 1807 by Thomas Jones of Gardden. A second ironwork was commenced nearby at Aberderfyn in the same period. Houses were built nearby, with little regard for planning, to house the workers. At Brynydd, close to the
Royal Oak public house, was the former site of typical very basic, one room, terraced, workers' houses. chapels, some built in the distinctive 'Ruabon Red' brick. Ponciau and Rhosllanerchrugog previously had more than 150 public houses but the majority of those have closed. The
Colliers Arms and
Horse & Jockey remain. One of the main streets in Ponciau is Chapel Street, which once contained a large number of
nonconformist chapels: the Ponciau area had been one of the main centres of the
1859 and
1904-5 Welsh religious revivals. Several chapels remain in use. Many of the old buildings in the village are made from distinctive 'Ruabon Red' bricks, the product of local clays from the Ruabon Brick and Terracotta Company. Ponciau
ward has one of the largest populations (4,486) in Wrexham County Borough. The ward is described as "
The Ponciau North, Ponciau South and Rhos wards of the Community of Rhosllanerchrugog and the Aberoer and Pentrebychan wards of the Community of Esclusham" in the
OPSI document Statutory Instrument 1998 No. 3142. 29% of households do not own a car. A section of the ward boundary follows the path of the
River Clywedog. ==The Ponciau Banks==