Fairbourne
Fairbourne is a Welsh beachfront village. It rests on the shore of Barmouth Bay in Arthog area, to the south of the tidewater of the River Mawddach in Gwynedd, bordered by the Snowdonia National Park. It remains in a location provided by Gwynedd council for managed retreat due to rising sea levels. The area where Fairbourne now is belonged to the historical region of Merioneth, as well as consisted largely of salt marshes and somewhat higher grazing lands. Before growth began in the mid 19th Century there were three farms on the land. Prior to the seaside resort was developed, the seaside area was known as Morfa Henddol, while the promontory outcrop currently inhabited by the Fairbourne Resort was called Ynysfaig. Regarding 1865 Solomon Andrews, a Welsh business owner, bought the promontory. Over the next numerous years he developed a seawall for tidal defense and numerous residences. To promote this he developed a horse-drawn tramway from the railway to the website in order to bring in structure products, it was transformed to a steam railway in 1916. Sir Arthur McDougall (of flour making fame) had been looking for a country estate, however when he discovered this location, he soon visualized it as a seaside resort. In July 1895 Arthur McDougall bought a substantial acreage from land speculators, which he bigger by added lots the list below year. He worked with a building contractor in 1896 that started the growth of a model seaside resort. Uncommonly for Gwynedd county, the village has no main Welsh-language name. Unlike a lot of Gwynedd, where Welsh is the majority language, English is the predominate language in Fairbourne with most of its citizens coming from or came down from those that came from England.