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Providence Hill

Providence Hill maps

Historic maps of Providence Hill and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Providence Hill maps

Providence Hill photos

We have no photos of Providence Hill, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Narberth| Amroth| Saundersfoot| Whitland

Providence Hill area books

Displaying 1 of 6 books about Providence Hill and the local area.   View all books for this area

Memories of Providence Hill

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Dyfed memories

Robblins Sweet Shop

Coxhill Council Estate c1955
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I remember Mrs Robblin used to keep a sweet shop in her pantry, which you had to walk through her living room to get to. I lived in Hill Park and as children we would walk up to the top of Coxhill and her house was tucked in on the left hand side.
I remember there would usually be a coal fire burning and two gentlemen sat on a sofa smoking their pipes!
Years later my Aunty, Uncle and cousin lived in the very house, and it had been modernised by then.

THE SHACK

We as a family stayed in what we called 'the shack', it was situated next to the Amroth Arms. The shack was on a large piece of land. A stream ran through the grounds, it went under the road into the sea, and often when the tide was high it would come over the road into the garden. The shack was owned by a very nice family who lived 2 houses up from the Amroth Arms, there was Ruth, her husband and son, Ian. Sadly Ian died, then I am afraid so did his parents. The shack was very primitive inside, a wonderful double bed one end was held up by a few books. The children would only have to walk under the stream bridge and they were on the beach where we could watch them from the shack. How things have changed in a few short years, the shack has now been sold, and the whole shape of the front has changed due to the very high tides they... Read more

Connie's Field

In the late 1950s and 1960s we used to stay in a field halfway down the road into the village of Amroth and a lady called Connie owned a small farm, so we called it Connie's field. At first we used to just camp then later Dad got a Dormobile van, then later we stayed in a caravan just behind the pub, it was a Bluebird van. I have so many happy memeries of Amroth - Dad getting us up so early to catch the tide going out and trying to catch the flat fish, and musseling, and taking them back and cooking them over a camp fire - fantastic. I once went back in the 1970s and it was so different to what I had remembered, there was a big caravan park just along the front, but all I could think of was Connie teaching us to milk her few cows and heping her around the farm.
Sadley my mum died in 1963 so I never went back there... Read more

Happy Childhood Holidays

The Harbour c1965
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When I was a child, my grandparents had a static caravan on the 'Zealand' caravan park in Saundersfoot (now part of Scar Farm). We stayed there every school holiday and I have many lovely memories; many include a bag of chips and the steep walk up the hill beside the Hean Castle Pub. Saundersfoot feels like home to me and I hope to live there one day. It's lovely to see how it looked so many years ago.

Fire And Ambulance Station

Grosvenor Square c1955
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The Grosvenor was used as a fire (station 8 then became station B10) and ambulance station until the lease ran out in the late 1970s. The ambulance station was the first to move out, followed 12 months later by the fire service, the new station has been at its current site in west street since 1980 (then called Dyfed County Fire Brigade.). The main building was converted into 4 or so flats for fire brigade personnel, the ambulance (full time manned) and fire watch rooms (retained) were situated through the window directly behind the black and white post in the photo. On top of the roof was a large air raid siren housed in a red covering, the last time I heard this working was during the heatwave of 1976 to call out the fire pump, the siren could be heard for many miles. I remember whenever the siren was set to go all ornaments, cups etc had to be taken down off shelves before the vibration shook them down.... Read more

Pleasant Hill

1938 memories.

Does anyone know anything else about this property...ie. when built?

Thank you

'The Annie'.

The Harbour 1890
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The owner was my grandfather George Rowe.  My father, his son, was born in Tenby in 1905 and died in late 1999 aged 93 years.  You might be interested to learn that the boat (M26) in the middle of your picture was called ''The Annie'' and was wrecked near Goscar Rock in a severe storm.  My grandfather (the skipper) was found half drowned by my grandmother on the beach.  I recollect from accounts given by my father that the rudder broke in the storm and there was no way to control the ship.  It ran aground on the only rock on the north beach between Goscar and the harbour!  My grandfather was also a member of the lifeboat crew.  I am not sure which lifeboat but on one occasion it was swept down to Swansea and the crew returned three days later but not before the families had assumed they had been lost.  I think they had gone to help the Hardwick lightship.

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