Llandaff
Llandaff maps (2 available)
Map of South Glamorgan
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of South Glamorgan
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Llandaff books (4 available)
Around Penarth Photographic Memories
Paperback
Around Penarth Photographic Memories
Hardback
Did You Know? Cardiff - A Miscellany
Hardback
- 17 photos on Llandaff appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Llandaff
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Llandaff and South Glamorgan
Llandaff memories
Be the first to add a memory of Llandaff.
You can also read memories of nearby places in South Glamorgan below.
South Glamorgan memories
Grandparents
My Grandparents William Garside and Evelyn Bowden were married on 29th February 1896 in Cardiff and Grandad lived in Roath prior to his marriage. I imagine they may have also stood in this spot when courting, looking quite similar.
DAVID MORGAN
The David Morgan Dept store left of picture was one of the few privately owned Dept Stores in the U.K. This store sadly closed down in 2006 and is now being refurbished and made into apartments and smaller shops.
A memory of Cardiff contributed by michael tucker
working life
I like this photograph because it
reminds me of when I used to travel
in to Cardiff by train from Barry where
I lived.
I worked in the National Provincial
Bank in St.Mary Street. I had some
lovely friends and times
A memory of Cardiff contributed by wendy john
On the Street where I lived
The photo shows the bottom of Highwalls Avenue, I lived half way up round the corner. It was a steep climb when i was litlle but got easier as I grew. I was born in this road and had such a happy time.
A memory of Dinas Powys contributed by Clive Turner
Extracts From Llandaff & South Glamorgan books
After a prolonged period
of restoration Llandaff
Cathedral was reopened
during Easter 1857. Unlike
in previous eras, the
architects overseeing the
mid 19th-century work
were determined to respect
the medieval origins of
the building. The vagaries
of hundreds of years of
changing architectural
fashion had left the
cathedral with a myriad of
conflicting structural and
decorative alterations.
An extract from from"Cardiff Old and New Photographic Memories".
The main burden of contemporary criticism lay with the Cathedral’s West Front. Whereas Prichard’s work on the 15th century
Jasper Tower was very much in tune with the prevailing conservative medieval taste his South Tower (c1867), with open
parapet and tall octagonal spire, was regarded as a radical innovation lending the façade an unusually asymmetric look.
An extract from from"Cardiff Old and New Photographic Memories".
The photographer has certainly
attracted a sizeable group of curious
onlookers in this scene dominated
by James Howell’s store (right). The
draper’s original Cardiff premises
opened in the Hayes in 1865
employing a mere five assistants.
Relocating to St Mary Street in
1867 and the shrewd acquisition
of adjoining premises allowed
the frontage that we see here,
constructed in 1879. Only a year
prior to our photograph the store
expanded ‘inwardly’ to Trinity Street.
The farmer’s son from Pembrokeshire
was on course to create Wales’
premier department store.
An extract from from"Cardiff Old and New Photographic Memories".
Admired by a lady sitting in the area later to be
occupied by the National Museum stands the City Hall,
a year after the bestowal of Cardiff’s city status. The
move to locate the then Town Hall out of the ‘old town’
was considered bold and proved contentious. Objectors
to the audacious scheme suggested alternative sites in
the Arms Park and Temperance Town.
An extract from from"Cardiff Old and New Photographic Memories".
Today’s motorists can but marvel at the wide expanse of road on offer here. The formal layout of roads around the Civic
Centre was initiated in 1903 some five years after completion of the purchase of Bute’s parkland. Original plans for one
grand avenue leading from Queen Street to City Hall proved fruitless - a development partially hindered by the Bute
retention of the adjacent Greyfriars site.
An extract from from"Cardiff Old and New Photographic Memories".






