Menai Bridge Explained

Country:Wales
Welsh Name:Porthaethwy
Constituency Welsh Assembly:Ynys Môn
Coordinates:53.23°N -4.16°W
Official Name:Menai Bridge
Population:3,376
Unitary Wales:Isle of Anglesey
Community Wales:Menai Bridge
Lieutenancy Wales:Gwynedd
Constituency Westminster:Ynys Môn
Post Town:MENAI BRIDGE
Postcode District:LL59
Postcode Area:LL
Dial Code:01248
Os Grid Reference:SH555725
Static Image Name:Menai bridge mist November 2004.jpg
Static Image Caption:Menai Bridge in mist
Website:menaibridge.org

Menai Bridge (Welsh: Porthaethwy; usually referred to colloquially as Y Borth) is a town and community on the Isle of Anglesey in north-west Wales. It overlooks the Menai Strait and lies by the Menai Suspension Bridge, built in 1826 by Thomas Telford, just over the water from Bangor. It has a population of 3,376. [1]

There are many small islands near the town, including Church Island. The Menai Heritage Bridges Exhibition celebrates the Menai Suspension Bridge, built by Thomas Telford, and the Britannia Bridge, built by Robert Stephenson.

Description and attractions

At the eastern edge of the town is Cwm Cadnant Dingle which is now by-passed by a modern bridge constructed in the 1970s. The Afon Cadnant drains into the Menai Strait at this point and this small estuary provides a natural haven for small boats crossing from the mainland. This was the location of the landing stage for the Bishops of Bangor who had their residence at Glyn Garth on Anglesey but whose cathedral was in Bangor on the mainland.

There are a number of small islands in the Menai Strait some of which are connected to the town by causeways, including Ynys Faelog, Ynys Gaint, Ynys Castell and Ynys y Bîg east of the suspension bridge and Church Island (Ynys Tysilio in Welsh) west of the bridge. The Isle of Anglesey Coastal Path passes along the waterfront.

Menai Bridge has several churches and chapels, including an English and Welsh Presbyterian church and a Catholic church. The town also has a primary school, Ysgol y Borth, and a large bilingual comprehensive school, Ysgol David Hughes.

Menai Bridge is home to the School of Ocean Sciences, part of Bangor University. Their research ship, the Prince Madog, is based at the pier when not at sea.[2]

Attractions in Menai Bridge include the 14th-century Church of St Tysilio, St George's Pier, a butterfly house, Pili Palas, and the Plas Cadnant Hidden Gardens, a 200-acre (80 hectare) estate originally developed as a picturesque garden in the 1800s. The garden had been the site of restoration for twenty years. In December 2015, heavy rains caused flooding which washed away rare plants representing twenty years of work by Anthony Tavernor.[3] [4] Tavernor received some help to restore the garden, enabling him and his small staff to begin rebuilding and replanting the garden. The garden was able to reopen by Easter, 2016.[5]

Listed buildings

There are over 30 buildings listed by Cadw of being of special importance. These include the suspension bridge itself, St. Mary's Church, the church of St. Tysilio, the Victoria Hotel, and the War memorial on Church Island and several individual houses and buildings[6]

Glyn Garth

Menai Bridge includes the development along Beaumaris Road known as Glyn Garth. This was a favoured location for holiday houses for the wealthy from the Manchester and Liverpool areas in the late 19th century, and many large houses of that period remain. This was also where the Bishop of Bangor had his palace.[7] The palace was demolished in the early 1960s and replaced by a block of flats, Glyn Garth Court, completed in 1966.

History

The town existed as Porthaethwy for centuries and still has a house which dates from the 17th century. The name derives from Porth (harbour) + Daethwy (the name of a local Celtic tribe and later of a local medieval commote). It is likely that a community existed here in Roman times as it is the shortest crossing of the Menai Strait.

In the 9th century, St Tysilio lived here as a hermit on Church Island.

A ferry across the Menai was first recorded in 1292. When the bridge opened in 1826, the ferry closed, but connections with the sea remained through the import, export and shipbuilding trades.

Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass (1872) mentions the Menai Bridge in chapter 8 in a nonsense song.

From 1877 to 1920, the ship HMS Clio was docked at Menai Bridge; it was lent to the North Wales Society to teach young men the ways of seafaring.[8] Many local people believed the ship was used for some type of prison, but this was not entirely true. The ship was home to young men who were in need of discipline to keep them from getting into serious trouble; some were sent to the Clio against their will.[8] The young men on the Clio were not permitted to leave the ship; some of the corporal punishment administered was cruel. Stories about life on the Clio were commonplace among the residents of Menai Bridge; for many years, some mothers threatened their misbehaving children with being sent to live on the ship.[8]

On 12 November 1918, Major Thomas Elmhirst (later Air Marshal Sir Thomas Elmhirst), commanding officer of RNAS Anglesey, flew airship SSZ73 under the Menai Bridge following the armistice at the end of World War I.

Carreg yr Halen

Carreg yr Halen is a small tidal island in the Menai Strait.[9] Its centre lies approximately 20 metres offshore from the Belgian Promenade just upstream of the suspension bridge. Only the rocky tip of the island is visible at high spring tide but at low tide area of rock, sand and some seaweed are exposed which provides feeding ground for a variety of wading birds including oystercatcher, redshank, and curlew.

It is the site of one of the many ferry crossings of the Menai Strait which were in use prior to the construction of the suspension bridge in 1826 [10] [11]

In 1914, Belgian refugees from Mechelen, who had settled in the area, built a promenade (the Belgian promenade) out of gratitude for the town's hospitality.[12] The promenade was built along the Menai Strait from Ynys Tysilio (Church Island) to Carreg yr Halen and was completed in 1916. It was rebuilt in 1963. The ceremonial reopening in 1965 was performed by the only surviving refugee, Eduard Wilhelms. Most of the refugees lived at three houses in Menai Bridge, with 12 housed at the Village Hall in Llandegfan. Most of the men were skilled in marquetry.[13]

A special celebration was held in 2014 at Menai Bridge to celebrate to centenary of the construction of the promenade.[14]

TV location

Welsh-language production company, Rondo Media, has converted a disused garage into a fake row of shops in the centre of Menai Bridge as a film set for the soap opera Rownd a Rownd, shown on the Welsh-language channel S4C. They also film the show in schools in the town, Ysgol y Borth, and around the town itself.

Fair

The large car park to the north of the High Street is the "fair field". This is a piece of common land set aside for the holding of an annual fair called Ffair Borth, a tradition dating back to 1691. It started as a horse fair, and livestock trading was carried out until the 1970s. It was also a hiring fair. It was one of the year's great occasions for the folk of Anglesey and Arfon. The fair now features traditional fair rides. It comes to Menai Bridge on 24 October every year, unless it falls on a Sunday, in which case it is held on either 23 or 25 October. The fair stalls also take over most of the roads and streets in the town, making passage through the town very difficult.

A traditional verse goes:

Governance

At the local level Menai Bridge is governed by Menai Bridge Town Council. Fourteen town councillors are elected from the two wards of Braint and Tysilio.[15]

Prior to 2013 the town wards of Braint and Tysilio were also county wards to the Isle of Anglesey County Council, electing one county councillor each. Following the 2012 Isle of Anglesey electoral boundary changes Braint and Tysilio were merged with neighbouring wards to create a larger multi-councillor ward of Aethwy.[16]

Notable people

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/viewFullDataset.do?instanceSelection=03070&productId=779&$ph=60_61&datasetInstanceId=3070&startColumn=1&numberOfColumns=8&containerAreaId=790559 Office for National Statistics : Neighbourhood Statistics : Census 2011 : Isle of Anglesey
  2. http://www.bangor.ac.uk/oceansciences/about/facilities/madog/index.php.en Bangor University, Ocean Sciences
  3. News: 'Devastation' at Plas Cadnant Hidden Gardens flood. 27 December 2015. BBC News. 18 April 2016.
  4. Web site: 'Tidal wave' devastates Plas Cadnant Hidden Gardens . BBC News . 27 December 2015 . 27 December 2015.
  5. News: Plas Cadnant Hidden Gardens to be rebuilt after floods . BBC News . 7 January 2016 . 10 April 2016.
  6. Web site: Listed buildings. 18 November 2019. Cadw.
  7. http://www.anglesey.gov.uk/leisure/records-and-archives/archives-document-of-the-month/archives-document-of-the-month-march-2013/119401.article Bishops Palace - Anglesey Council
  8. Web site: HMS Clio. Menai Bridge Society. 18 April 2016.
  9. Web site: Carrg Yr Halen. 31 January 2022. geoview.info.
  10. Web site: Porthaethwy Ferry Crossing (Main Crossing), Menai Straits. Coflein (Wales Government). 28 June 2024.
  11. Web site: Crossing the Menai Straits. Gwynedd Archeological Trust. 27 June 2024.
  12. Web site: Belgian Promenade, Menai Bridge. 14 June 2024.
  13. Web site: Belgian Promenade, Menai Bridge. 31 March 2016. History Points. 2012.
  14. Web site: Menai Bridge's promenade centenary marked by parade. 26 July 2014. BBC. 14 June 2024.
  15. Web site: Members . Menai Bridge Town Council . 28 March 2019.
  16. Web site: Isle of Anglesey (Electoral Arrangements) Order 2012 . legislation.gov.uk. . 28 March 2019 .