Results for subject term "Doc Penfro": 6
Stories
Connections | Cysylltiadau
Named after the former landowner Nicholas Hobbs, Hobbs Point was built in the early 1830s to accommodate the mail and packet boats that ran between west Wales and Waterford in Ireland. This service began in 1750 and operated until 1966. The mail and…
The Hollywood of Pembrokeshire | Hollywood Sir Benfro
William Haggar (1851-1925) was a travelling showman with a large family and a vision. Following his marriage to Sarah Walton in 1870, the newlyweds established a travelling theatre company and toured extensively across England and Wales. Eight of…
The RAAF in Pembroke Dock | Yr RAAF yn Noc Penfro
After the end of ship building in Pembroke Dock in 1926, the RAF set up an air base for flying boats in the disused dockyard in 1930. In 1938, they introduced the famous Sunderland flying boats to the fleet. During the Second World War, Pembroke…
The Haunting of the HMS Asp | Ysbryd yn cerdded HMS Asp
In 1857, Pembroke Dock was the setting for the remarkable climax of the haunting of the HMS Asp which, at the time, was used as a surveying vessel in the Royal Navy under the command of one Captain George Manley Alldridge (1815–1905).
Over the…
Pembroke Dockyard's Famous Ginkgo Tree | Coeden Ginkgo Enwog Dociau Penfro
Until the mid-nineteenth century, Japan was a feudal state governed by a network of powerful families and warlords led by its Shogun, isolated from the rest of the world. At that point, there was a growing realisation that China and Russia were…
The North Atlantic and a Galaxy Far Far Away | Gogledd yr Atlantig a Galaeth Ymhell Bell i Ffwrdd
A current ferry port and a former naval dockyard isn’t the first place you might think about visiting if you were interested in the history and heritage of flying. But Pembroke Dock possesses two important and related claims to fame when it comes to…