Bosherston
Bosherston maps (2 available)
Bosherston books (4 available)
Carmarthen Town Walk Guide
Paperback
So You Think You Know? Aberystwyth
Hardback
Haverfordwest Town and City Memories
Paperback
- 5 photos on Bosherston appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Bosherston
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Bosherston and Dyfed
Bosherston memories
Happy Days
I visited the Bosherston Tea Gardens every May Bank Holiday week from 1967-1972. The reward for walking from Broadhaven beach via the Lilly ponds was tea and a piece of iced cake complete with a cherry. On an earlier holiday the reward was a Chocolate 3D that as the name implies cost 3d.
It is a delight to find that the scene has not changed since 1972 and that the cafe is still open run by the same people. I am planning to return in July this year and look forward to visting the cafe.
Our holidays in Wales were the once a year opportunity to see Christopher, Martin and Janet. Alas Molly and Tony who introduced us ...read more here
Contributed by Joye Rosenstiel
Happy days.......
I along with very many local girls over the years helped out at the Tea Gardens during the school holidays.
I remember going to the front door a few times to ask if they had a job for me and being so scared I came away with an ice cream instead.
I need not have worried as Aunty Vi and Don were so lovely. I enjoyed several happy years with them until I left school and the village to work away.
40 years later and I still look forward to seeing Aunty Vi when I go "home".
Contributed by Susan James
A family business.
I am the lady at the door with my husband Don Weston. The date is about 1959 because that is the year we had electricity in the village and started to sell ice cream. Hence the Walls sign. My parents Mr and Mrs Caesar Evans started the tearooms here in 1922 and after my mother died in 1952 my husband and I ran this little business together very happily for fifty two years until his sudden death three years ago. But I have managed to keep the business going with the help of many good friends. I am now nearly eighty five and affectionately known by many customers as Auntie Vi. We sold your postcards ...read more here
Contributed by Mrs Violet Weston
Dyfed memories
Happy Days
I visited the Bosherston Tea Gardens every May Bank Holiday week from 1967-1972. The reward for walking from Broadhaven beach via the Lilly ponds was tea and a piece of iced cake complete with a cherry. On an earlier holiday the reward was a Chocolate 3D that as the name implies cost 3d.
It is a delight to find that the scene has not changed since 1972 and that the cafe is still open run by the same people. I am planning to return in July this year and look forward to visting the cafe.
Our holidays in Wales were the once a year opportunity to see Christopher, Martin and Janet. Alas Molly and Tony who introduced us ...read more here
A memory of Bosherston contributed by Joye Rosenstiel
Extracts From Bosherston & Dyfed books
These spectacular rock formations were crafted by the waves from a collapsed
arch. They are home to colonies of guillemots, razorbills and kittiwakes.
An extract from from"Pembrokeshire Photographic Memories".
This 13th-century,
cruciform country church
in its placid setting has a
preaching cross (possibly
14th-century) in the
churchyard, visible here
to the left of the lancet
windows. It was restored
in 1855.
An extract from from"Pembrokeshire Photographic Memories".
Near Broadhaven and amidst unwelcoming military ranges, the village of Bosherston caters for visitors who enjoy walking and touring. The proud proprietors here, with their stylish new garden furniture, await their guests.
An extract from from"Wales Living Memories".
This photographs shows tea on the lawn, Walls ice-cream and Mr and Mrs Host in attendance.
An extract from from"Pembrokeshire Photographic Memories".
The mother and child appear to have been dressed and posed especially for the photograph. In late Victorian and early
Edwardian times, this part of the village was regarded as a select residential area. The turning to the right off St Bride’s Hill
leads down to the Glen. The fields have now been more fully developed with residential property.
An extract from from"Tenby and Saundersfoot Photographic Memories".







