The Welsh Areas of Patagonia
1908 Hafn y Glo, the Patagonian Steppe – The families of
Thomas Morgan and Rhys Thomas on their way to the
Chubut Valley
Patagonia has three perfectly defined geographical regions: the mountains of the Andes, the mid-zone tablelands of arid steppe, and the Atlantic coast. It is possible to describe its geography as a series of enormous steps, with the mountains of the Andes as the highest of the steps, which then descend in terraces, through the arid tablelands, until reaching the Atlantic coast. Patagonia has one of the lowest population densities in the World with less than one inhabitant for every one square kilometre.
1910 Gaiman, Chubut Valley – The family of George Hammond
on Hugh S. Pugh’s farm near Gaiman before starting their
journey over the Patagonian Steppe to the Andes
The Los Alerces National Park, near Trevelin, is one of the largest in the country with a land area of 263,000 hectares (650,000 acres – about the size of the present day county of Gwynedd in Wales). The most outstanding features of the park are the Alerce forests, little evidence of man, remarkably scenery, lakes, rivers and numerous waterfalls surrounded by mountains cloaked in forests. The Alerce tree is a Patagonian cypress tree with some examples achieving nearly 3,000 years of age and over 70 metres (23 feet) in height.
1908 Gaiman, Chubut Valley - The families of Richard Roberts
and Bernardo Mulhall on Mulhall’s farm near Gaiman
1910 – A journey over the Patagonian Steppe
The Welsh colony of Patagonia is a historical and cultural attraction. Within its zone of influence are the towns of Esquel and Trevelin in the Andes; Rawson, Trelew, Gaiman and Dolavon in the Lower Chubut river valley; and Puerto Madryn on the coast. Here, you will find the descendants of the Welsh settlers and their culture that they have maintained since their arrival, near where Puerto Madryn is today, on the clipper “Mimosa” in 1865.