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Llanelli

Llanelli photos (41 available)

Old photo of Llanelli

Llanelli maps (2 available)

Old map of Llanelli

Llanelli books (3 available)

Llanelli memories

london evacuation

Llanelli, Stradey Castle 1896

my mother who is now 76 years of age,was talking with my son who is doing a world war 2 project at school.Only last night she was telling him,that in 1939 october,she aged 8 and a half and her then baby brother aged just 10 months along with their mother were evecuated to stradey castle from vauxhall,sw london.
They stayed for 10 weeks,and my mother said how the statues in the long hall scared the life out of them and also the nearby woods was something she had never seen before.My mothers maiden name was joan trim and her brother roy and late mother florence.The owners were by the name of lewis a laird i believe,by all accounts very nice people.I ...read more here
Contributed by First name Last name

A view from the band stand

Llanelli, Parc Howard c1965

I was born in 1965, the year the photo was taken and at the time my dad was a gardener at Parc Howard. I remember going to visit him almost every day, in the summer months, with either my grandmother or mother. This was a very familiar view taken from the band stand.

After what felt like hours of playing I would be taken to the cafe and bought sweets from a large select behind a glass cabinet.

Often we would go up the hill (to the left in the photo) to watch the old men play bowls and as I grew older I would play on the putting green.
Contributed by David Charles

Dyfed memories

london evacuation

Llanelli, Stradey Castle 1896

my mother who is now 76 years of age,was talking with my son who is doing a world war 2 project at school.Only last night she was telling him,that in 1939 october,she aged 8 and a half and her then baby brother aged just 10 months along with their mother were evecuated to stradey castle from vauxhall,sw london.
They stayed for 10 weeks,and my mother said how the statues in the long hall scared the life out of them and also the nearby woods was something she had never seen before.My mothers maiden name was joan trim and her brother roy and late mother florence.The owners were by the name of lewis a laird i believe,by all accounts very nice people.I ...read more here
A memory of Llanelli contributed by First name Last name

A view from the band stand

Llanelli, Parc Howard c1965

I was born in 1965, the year the photo was taken and at the time my dad was a gardener at Parc Howard. I remember going to visit him almost every day, in the summer months, with either my grandmother or mother. This was a very familiar view taken from the band stand.

After what felt like hours of playing I would be taken to the cafe and bought sweets from a large select behind a glass cabinet.

Often we would go up the hill (to the left in the photo) to watch the old men play bowls and as I grew older I would play on the putting green.
A memory of Llanelli contributed by David Charles

Extracts From Llanelli & Dyfed books

Llanelli, Stepney Street 1952

This view is remarkably similar today. The Burton’s on the right is essentially the same shop front, although a different proprietor uses it now. Pedestrianisation and the dreary paving this inevitably brings, and a street-length covered walkway, would appear to be the main changes from the scene in the 1950s.
An extract from from"Wales Living Memories".

St Brides, the Village 1906

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".

Gumfreston, Scotsborough Lane Scene 1890

In the distance are the ruins of a once great mansion, Scotsborough, dating back to the 14th century. It passed through a variety of hands and was last occupied in 1824, when it was converted to tenements. An epidemic of smallpox broke out amongst the inhabitants, and the survivors then fled the house. Despite their decay, the ruins still display some fine architectural details.
An extract from from"Tenby and Saundersfoot Photographic Memories".

Caldey Island, the Slipway c1965

The first reference to a slipway on Priory Bay was in 1897. In 1958, owing to increases in the amount of farm produce being transported from Caldey, steps were taken to improve the landing facility for boats. Redundant barges, relics from the D-Day landings, were filled with concrete and sunk to extend the slipway. Landing alongside, a boat from Tenby is collecting waiting day visitors to the island.
An extract from from"Tenby and Saundersfoot Photographic Memories".

Saundersfoot, St Bride's Hotel, Composite c1955

This postcard, probably used for advertising purposes, shows views of and from St Bride’s Hotel, with its commanding position over Carmarthen Bay. At this time the hotel offered numerous facilities, including 50 bedrooms, bedside lights in all rooms, electric fires in first-floor rooms, a tennis court, a putting green, television, a ladies’ hairdressing saloon and a private path to the beach, which is no longer available today.
An extract from from"Tenby and Saundersfoot Photographic Memories".