Wick
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Map of South Glamorgan
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
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Wick memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in South Glamorgan below.
South Glamorgan memories
Going home for lunch
I am on this photo. I am one of the three girls in Grammar School uniform. The time on the clock, I believe, is 12.40 so we must have been going home for lunch. Not many people used to go home for lunch but we used to walk together. Hazel Jones (in the middle of the group) was about to cross the road to go over the old stone bridge to Sunnyside Rd. But Lorna Jones (on the left) and I used to walk all the way up Newcastle Hill to Cefn Glas. We got plenty of exercise in those days! My name then was Marilyn John. I was 12 years old at the time. ...read more here
A memory of Bridgend contributed by Marilyn Jones
granny
I remember going to see granny and grandpa every
evening with my father george John. She lived in Barry
in south wales. My grandpa was a lay reader.
I am doing my family history, and my granny was born in Coity
her father and mother used to have a chemist shop in Caroline
st . Can anyone help.
A memory of Bridgend contributed by wendy john
Mum and Me in Bridgend !
I have the original post card of this picture, bought in 1950 by my Mum. I was delighted to see it was one of the Frith Prints. It's hard to see that we are on it, as the Frith watermark is right on us (not on the Frith print I purchased of course), but there is a blonde person lifting a push bike onto the pavement, and we are walking away just to the left of that person. I was five years old, with my hair in plaits. Mum is wearing a checked jacket.
We lived there while I was a kid. My Dad was the local window cleaner, and I had lots of family in and around the town.
read more here
A memory of Bridgend contributed by Janet Grice
Wartime
We were bombed out in Cardiff during the blitz in Cardiff and my father got us a house in Porthcawl. We lived on Mackworth Road. I have many happy memories of those days. I went to New Road School and then to the senior school, now a comprehhensive I think. I left Porthcawl in 1953 but still try and get back to Porthcawl every year for a short break, I wonder if any of the people I schooled with or spent my teenage years with remember me and those great nights dancing at the Grand Pavilion. John Price
A memory of Porthcawl contributed by john price
Extracts From Wick & South Glamorgan books
Once owned by the Stradling family, the buildings were bought and restored by the American publisher Randolph Hearst; since 1962 they have been home to the international Atlantic College.
An extract from from"South Wales Photographic Memories".
The last of the male line of the Stradling family died in 1738, not of old age in his bed, but killed in a duel at Montpellier whilst on the Grand Tour. The young man’s body was brought back to St Donat’s, where it lay in state in the great gallery, looked down upon by the portraits of his equally dead ancestors. Unfortunately, the funerary decorations caught fire, and body, portraits, and the great gallery went up in flames.
An extract from from"Welsh Castles".






