Dyma dudalen Facebook swyddogol ar gyfer Gwasanaethau Mynwentydd ac Amlosgfeydd Cyngor Bwrdeistref Sirol Wrecsam. Mae Mynwent Wrecsam yn Ffordd Rhiwabon, Wrecsam LL13 7RE. Agorodd Mynwent Wrecsam ym 1876 ar lain a elwid unwaith yn Cae’r Cleifion, ac mae les 1840 oddi wrth Esgob Llanelwy yn cyfeirio ati fel Tera Lepresorum, ‘Tir y Gwahanglwyfus’. Dyluniwyd y Fynwent mewn arddull gardenesque fel lle
gallai pobl yr Oes Fictoraidd fynd am dro a chael awyr iach. Ers hynny mae oddeutu 37,000 o gladdedigaethau wedi eu cynnal. Dioddefodd ffabrig y Fynwent draul dros y blynyddoedd ac yn ddiweddar mae wedi elwa o raglen adfer trwy Raglen Parciau i Bobl Cronfa Treftadaeth y Loteri . Mae Mynwent Wrecsam yn llawn a dim ond claddu mewn beddi presennol a ganiateir. Lleolir mynwent bresennol Wrecsam ar Ffordd Plas Acton, Wrecsam, LL112UB. Agorwyd y fynwent newydd hon ar dir amaethyddol yn 2009. Mae'r fynwent mewn arddull lawnt, sy'n golygu bod cerrig beddau'n cael eu gosod ar slab concrit wedi'i osod ymlaen llaw ar ben y bedd, gyda'r llain gladdu ei hun yn bodoli'n gyffredinol fel parcdir glaswelltog wedi’i iddo adfer ar ôl claddedigaeth. Mae gan y safle’n un agored ac fe'i adeiladwyd mewn lleoliad tawel, lled-wledig sydd â chysylltiadau trafnidiaeth hawdd. Agorodd amlosgfa Pentrebychan ym 1966, ar safle Plas Pentrebychan gynt. Mae’n gyfleuster pwrpasol sy’n cynnal tua 1700 o Amlosgiadau’n flynyddol, ac mae wedi’i leoli mewn Parcdir helaeth lle mae pedair gardd goffa wedi’u creu, lle gall teuluoedd drefnu i weddillion gael eu gwasgaru. Lleolir yr amlosgfa ym Mhentrebychan, ar gyrion Wrecsam, LL14 4EP. Credir i'r plas cyntaf ym Mhentrebychan gael ei adeiladu ar ddechrau'r 17eg ganrif gan Hugh Meredith o Wrecsam. Mae’r teulu wedi olrhain eu tras at Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, Tywysog Powys. Disgrifiwyd y plas a'r ystâd fel un o'r rhai helaethaf yn yr ardal. Aeth y Plas yn adfail a chafodd ei ddymchwel yng nghanol yr 20fed Ganrif, ond erys yr ardd ffurfiol a'r parcdir. Mae holl diroedd ein mynwent ac amlosgfa ar agor bob dydd i'r cyhoedd tra mae’n olau dydd. I gael rhagor o fanylion ynghylch pryd mae’r tiroedd a’r swyddfeydd yn agor, ewch i’n gwefan. This is the official facebook site for Wrexham County Borough Council’s Cemeteries and Crematorium Services. Wrexham Cemetery is in Ruabon Road, Wrexham LL13 7RE. Wrexham Cemetery opened in 1876 on a plot once known as Cae’r Cleifion or The Field of the Sick, and an 1840 lease from the Bishop of St Asaph refers to it as Tera Lepresorum, ‘The Lepers’ Land’. The Cemetery was designed in the “Gardenesque” style as a place where Victorians could go for a stroll and refresh themselves in the open air. Around 37,000 burials have taken place since then. The Cemetery fabric suffered wear and tear over the years and has recently benefitted from a program of restoration through the Heritage Lottery Parks for People Programme . Wrexham Cemetery is full and only internments into existing grave plots are permitted. Wrexham's current cemetery is located on Plas Acton Road, Wrexham, LL112UB. This newer Cemetery was opened on agricultural land in 2009. The cemetery is a lawned style, which means that headstones are placed onto a preinstalled concrete slab at the head of the grave, with the burial plot itself generally existing as grassed parkland once restored after burial. The site has an open aspect and was built in a quiet, semi-rural location that has easy transport links. Pentrebychan crematorium opened in 1966, on the site where Pentrebychan Hall was previously located. It is purpose built facility that manages around 1700 Cremations annually, and is set in extensive Parkland in which four gardens of remembrance have been created, where families can arrange for remains to be scattered. The crematorium is located in Pentrebychan, on the outskirts of Wrexham, LL14 4EP. The first hall at Pentrebychan is believed to have been built at the beginning of the 17th century by Hugh Meredith of Wrexham. The family traced their ancestry to Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, Prince of Powys. The hall and estate were described as being among the most extensive in the area. The Hall fell in disrepair and was demolished in the mid 20th Centaury, but the formal garden and parkland remain. All of our cemetery and crematorium grounds are open daily to the public during daylight hours. For more details of when the grounds and offices open please see our website.