Mynydd Mechell
Mynydd Mechell maps
Historic maps of Mynydd Mechell and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Mynydd Mechell maps
Mynydd Mechell photos
We have no photos of Mynydd Mechell, although we do have photos of these nearby places:
Cemaes Bay| Llanfairynghornwy| Rhydwyn| Llanfaethlu| Llantrisant| Bull Bay| Llanfachraeth| Llanerchymedd| Llanfwrog| Amlwch| Anglesey| Trefor| Penysarn| Porth Eilean| Eilian Bay
Mynydd Mechell area books
Displaying 1 of 2 books about Mynydd Mechell and the local area. View all books for this area
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Mynydd Mechell
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Gwynedd memories
A Week to Remember
It was always a sense of adventure searching for new place to visit on our holidays - and certainly we found an idyllic spot just a mile or so outside the town of Cemaes Bay. Mother had been staying with my younger sister who was in the final weeks of her pregnancy - so to give Mother a rest before baby arrived we took her with us, I contacted the owner of a house overlooking the bay - or rather - her secretary - and we were delighted to find it was available for the week in October 1976. Travelling down from Hertfordshire we stayed overnight in Wales, near Ryton of the XI Towns - before beginning our adventurous trip to Anglesey. When we arrived at the house - we were amazed - we were greeted by the housekeeper, shown around the house, handed the keys, and she departed saying "Enjoy your stay", and that she could be found in her cottage at the end of the garden - if needed. The... Read more
Gaerwen Farm
I lived for a number of years at Gaerwen Farm, Bull Bay. The views were fantastic and on a clear day you could see the Isle of Man from the front room windows. Most of the people in the area were really lovely to know. James Francis and his sister Jane, the Rowlands sisters, Glenys Spelling who had the riding school, William Owen who had the farm next door to me and not forgetting the Wilsons who ran the Post Office. I used to shop also up at Cemaes Bay. The wonderful Meagan Owen who had Pioneer Stores. You could buy anything there and it was all top quality.
Skerries View House Cemaes Bay
When I was a young boy, aged about ten or eleven back in 1947/48, I can remember going to stay with Mr & Mrs Henshaw who lived at the above house having moved from Tal Y Cafn in the Conwy Valley. From what I can remember the house had been used by the RAF during the war. We used to cut the hay by hand and make small hay stacks. I used to sleep in a little room overlooking Cemlyn Bay and I can still remember watching the Skerries Light House flashing on and off. When we had walks in the surrounding fields I can remember going into a derelict house that once belonged to a famous singer. Several times a week we would walk in to Cemaes to the shops and then walk back again past Trwyn Y Wylfa Farm. Happy days.
Life in The Village
Was wonderful to see this postcard, as I was a child of 7 living in the village, when the photo.was taken. When we moved to the village in 1954 there was no electricity, water was from the village pump and people used chemical or earth closets. In 1960, there was mains water and electricity but no proper sanitation. I have wonderful memories of living in the village, playing in the fields and having easy access to the beach. I have visited the village quite a few times in the past 10 years and have met up with old child hood friends.
Looking For Family
I am trying to carry out a family tree with the surname Jones, it is difficult! I know there was an Elizabeth who went to Wrexham for a time. I do not know whether she returned home and would like to know more about her and her family. Anyone out there - I believe I was named after her. I wonder if there are any family members still living there and what happened to Elizabeth.
Liverpool Pilots
Fond memories of going to Amlwch Port to play as children and walking along Llancarw to Llaneilian with two or three younger children tagging along with us, and waving to the pilots as they moored outside Almwch Port.
Borth Amlwch
I am now in my mid 80's. I lived in Borth from the age of about three until eleven years at 23 Well St (Lon Wen). This was during the days of the depression and conditions in the port were grim. Many of the men had joined the whaling fleets and as they sailed past North Anglesey from Liverpool the families would gather on Llam Carw and wave tablecloths. At the bottom of Well Street, just above the park, there was a fish and chip shop owned by a Mr. Pierce. There was a lane by the side of the shop where there was a pump from which we obtained our drinking water. Close to this pump was a sweet shop. Across the road on the southern side of the park there was a bakery and alongside of the bakery was a lane leading to a place I knew as 'Gwaith Paent' where the was a type of turret in a pond and a big square cement erection. Where Craigydon... Read more
