Latest events and comments from the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, North Wales, UK. EMAIL: llanblogger@gmail.com
Get in touch ...
Know of something happening in
Llangollen? Tweet
us on @llanblogger
E-mail your contributions to: llanblogger@gmail.com
We are on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/llanbloggercouk/139122552895186
Llangollen? Tweet
us on @llanblogger
E-mail your contributions to: llanblogger@gmail.com
We are on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/llanbloggercouk/139122552895186
Sunday, September 29, 2019
Llangollen goes on the market for $34 million
* The Llangollen estate in Virginia, USA.
But before the panic starts, that's not our famous town but an enormous mansion of the same name in the state of Virginia, USA.
First American diplomat and publisher Jock Whitney, then Donald Brennan, a former Morgan Stanley exec, built up the equestrian mecca and now it’s somebody else’s turn, according to an article on the Bloomberg news website.
The story says that of the roughly five million acres in Virginia granted to the Fairfax family by the kings of England in the 17th century 600 acres or so ended up in the hands of the Powell family by 1827. Politicians and gentleman merchants, the Powells built a lovely mansion they called Llangollen, which then passed from one illustrious owner to the next.
The Bloomberg piece goes on: "When Donald Brennan, the former head of Morgan Stanley Capital Partners, saw the house at the start of the 21st century, it was one of the pre-eminent properties in blue blood American horse country.
"The acreage had been expanded—the plot had become 1,100 acres—and the house enlarged, most notably in the 1930s by John Hay “Jock” Whitney, a gilded age playboy-millionaire.
"Brennan and his family officially took ownership of Llangollen in 2006 and he is now putting the property back on the market for $34 million.
"The estate, in its present form, is largely unaltered from when Jock Whitney and his wife Mary Elizabeth purchased it. Whitney inherited his wealth but did an excellent job putting it to good use. He financed Gone With The Wind, was a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art, bought the New York Herald Tribune, and served as ambassador to Great Britain.
"The Whitneys founded the Llangollen Race Meeting, a steeplechase that attracted 20,000 spectators, and built ancillary buildings on the property, including the now-famous “horseshoe stables” for their show-ponies. They added a polo field, nine houses for guests, a race track, a training track, and, most impressive of all, a hyper-sophisticated water system that remains to this day.
“The property has about 400 acres of forest that sit on the east face of the Blue Ridge Mountains,”
Brennan says. “In order to produce water for the property, there are springs whose water is pumped to the top of the mountain, at which point it comes down through streams that go into a large concrete cistern, which Whitney built into the side of the mountain above the house.”
Brennan says. “In order to produce water for the property, there are springs whose water is pumped to the top of the mountain, at which point it comes down through streams that go into a large concrete cistern, which Whitney built into the side of the mountain above the house.”
"There’s a distribution system that sends water to 120 points across the property—“the homes, the water troughs for horses, the stables, the polo facilities … it’s an incredible engineering feat,” Brennan explains. Should water levels run low, an electrical system sets off pumps in wells at ground level, sending water up to the cistern.
"When the couple divorced, Mary Elizabeth Whitney kept the estate and lived there until her death in 1988."
* To see the Bloomberg story, go to: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-23/llangollen-virginia-horse-country-historic-estate-for-sale
* To see the Bloomberg story, go to: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-23/llangollen-virginia-horse-country-historic-estate-for-sale

Saturday, September 28, 2019
Talks held on Kronospan emission concerns
![]() |
* From left, town councillor Jackie Allen; Susan Elan Jones MP; Ken Skates AM; county councillor Terry Evans and Kronospan’s environmental manager Keith Baker at Chirk Parish Hall this morning.
|
Politicians
have held 'constructive' talks about concerns over emissions from the Kronospan
factory in Chirk.
Clwyd
South Assembly Member Ken Skates and Susan Elan Jones MP met with Terry Evans,
county councillor for Chirk South and Wrexham Council’s Lead Member for Economy
and Regeneration this morning (Friday).
They
were joined by Chirk town councillor Jackie Allen, who is also chair of Chirk
Environmental Liaison Group, and Kronospan’s Environmental Manager Keith Baker.
Mr
Skates said: “I was pleased when Wrexham Council contacted me to arrange this
meeting. I know Terry as the local member gets a lot of complaints as the
council are currently responsible for monitoring emissions.
“It
was a constructive meeting and Susan and I are pleased to be working alongside
Terry and Jackie to address residents’ ongoing concerns.”
Ms
Jones said: “We know this is a long-standing issue for some of our constituents
so this was a welcome opportunity to discuss what the council and company are
doing to mitigate their concerns. It’s vital we work together on issues like
this which are important to local people, so I'm pleased Cllr Evans from
Wrexham County Borough Council and town councillor Allen were able to attend.
“Ken
and I have made numerous representations on behalf of our constituents in the
Chirk area to Wrexham Council and the company itself over the past few years to
convey residents' concerns. Most people say they don’t want the factory closed
as it’s one of our area's biggest employers and closure would devastate
hundreds of local families. However, I’m strongly of the view that more has to
be done to deal with the very legitimate environmental concerns that local
residents have.”
Natural
Resources Wales (NRW) is set to take over sole responsibility for monitoring
emissions from Kronospan next year.
Mr
Skates said: “I know there continues to be some confusion and misinformation
with regard to Kronospan, which is why the Welsh Government has issued a
direction to ensure that the site has a single regulator in the future, which
will be NRW.”
Kronospan
currently has two environmental permits. One is issued by Wrexham Council,
which relates to the wood-related production. The other issued by Natural
Resources Wales (NRW), which relates to formaldehyde production. NRW is
currently determining an environmental permit application received from Kronospan
and is expected to complete this process by early 2020.
A
recent letter to Mr Skates from Wrexham Council’s chief planning and regulatory
officer, Lawrence Isted, confirmed that the authority is currently responsible
for emissions to air, land and water, as well as noise.
Mr Isted said:
“Upon receiving complaints on such matters, my officers would consider the
likely source of the alleged pollutant and assess the controls implemented by
the company against the requirement of the permit.
“Officers would
also consider the effect of the pollutant on human health and the environment
with reference to relevant environmental standards issued by the World Health
Organisation and relevant air quality standards regulations. These standards
are used to protect the health and wellbeing of the local population.”
He added: “Recent air quality
monitoring indicates that air quality levels within the Chirk area complies
with relevant statutory guidelines.”
Friday, September 27, 2019
Conservatives select Clwyd South candidate
![]() |
* Welsh Conservative candidate Simon Baynes pictured in Llangollen. |
The Welsh Conservatives
have selected their candidate to fight Clwyd South at the next general
election.
Simon Baynes is a former
businessman, founder of the charity Concertina – Music for the Elderly and
author of the recently published book “Lake Vyrnwy – The Story of a Sporting
Hotel”.
He stood in Clwyd South in
2017, increasing the Conservative vote by almost 4,000.
Mr Baynes said: “I am extremely pleased to have been selected, and I will be campaigning
hard on the issues that matter most to the people of Clwyd South.”
He says his number
one priority is Brexit.
“It is essential that we leave the EU on 31st
October, with or without a deal. I strongly support the Prime Minister Boris
Johnson, and his approach to negotiating with the EU,” he said.
He also wants to make
sure money made available to the Welsh Labour Government from Westminster is
spent where it is needed most.
He said: “That money must
be used to fund front-line services, particularly health, education and care
for the elderly. It must not be used to finance Welsh Labour’s pet projects in
South Wales.”
Care for the elderly is a
particular concern for My Baynes, who said: “We need a long-term solution so that
people are not forced to sell their homes when they go into a care home. I also
want to see pensioner benefits fully protected.”
Having grown up in the
hotel business at Lake Vyrnwy, Mr Baynes has vowed to fight Welsh Labour plans for
a tax on tourism. He also wants to see a reduction in business rates, to ensure
the survival of local high streets.
Farming and the countryside
are important to him and he says he will work hard to support both. He is chairman of
the Welsh Historic Gardens Trust and says he is keen to protect and promote heritage in
Clwyd South.
Mr Baynes is a Trustee of Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and Mid Wales Opera and chairman of
the Holroyd Community Theatre near Oswestry.
New heritage workshop is up and running
Gwlangollen Heritage Workshop, located in the Lock Up Heritage Centre on Victoria Square, is
now up and running. Here project spokesperson Gill Britten gives an update on the new facility.
The room
is upstairs, and from the beginning of September we will be open to the general
public as often as we can manage.
We now
have a number of experienced crafters supporting the project. Between us we
cover a wide range of “wool” skills and are able to offer talks demonstrations
and bespoke workshops. These can take place in the workshop, at Pentredwr
Community Centre, or we go out to groups if that is easier.
![]() |
* The interior of the new Gwlangollen Heritage Workshop, |
So many
people have been intrigued by what’s happening outside the workshop door on a
sunny day. We are washing and drying fleece in preparation for carding. Raw
fleece is sorted, at Pentredwr. All the bits of vegetation and contamination
are removed and recycled by local gardeners as soil conditioner. Nothing goes
to waste!
The soft
locks suitable for crafts are put into net laundry bags, to prevent loose
fibres clogging up the drain. Still in the bags, the fleece is gently hand
washed in hot soapy water. The bags are hung outside on an A frame.
Once the
bags have stopped dripping, the fleece is taken from the bags and spread out
between two sheets of smooth plastic coated wire. These again are hung up outside
to dry. Once dry and fluffy, the fleece is carded. This part of the process
combs the fibres, so they all run vertically, ready for spinning or felting.
Many spinners prefer to spin raw fleece and wash the yarn in hanks. We all have
our own preference.
Historically,
anecdotal evidence suggests that locally, young boys foraged the hillsides for
fleece. Washed fleece would be snagged on bushes, stone walls or wire fences to
dry. The children scared away the birds and retrieved any clean fleece blown away
by the wind. I’ve been told by local farmers of a certain age, they remember
damming a bend in the river to make a temporary sheep wash.
This would be done
two or three days prior to shearing. They say the fleece in those times were
much cleaner than today. Perhaps someone knows what year the river authority
stopped the practice.
If this has
aroused your curiosity and you would like to visit the workshop, please do so.
Visitors are most welcome. Unless you happen to be passing, do please get in
touch first to make sure someone is here to let you in.
* Call, text, or Facebook Gill on 07871 774 651 or email gwlangollen@gmail.com
Thursday, September 26, 2019
AM lashes out over votes for prisoners
North Wales Assembly
Member and Shadow Minister for Communities and Local Government, Mark Isherwood
AM, has condemned Labour and Plaid Cymru for supporting proposals for
legislation to give Welsh prisoners the right to vote.
Speaking in a debate on the Equality, Local Government and Communities Committee
report Voting Rights for Prisoners, Mr Isherwood (pictured) referred to the fact that only 9% of people in
Wales said that all prisoners should be allowed to vote in a 2017 YouGov survey.
He said “The fact that Labour and Plaid Cymru are supporting this further
evidences the growing gap between the expressed will of the people of Wales and
their elected so-called representatives.
“Rights
go with responsibilities, and not voting is just one of the facts of life
arising from being in prison, reflecting a decision by the community that the
person concerned is not suitable to participate in the decision-making process
of a community.
“Some 17% of prisoners
are already eligible to vote - prisoners in the community on temporary
licence can now vote, and both un-convicted prisoners being held on remand and
civil prisoners jailed for offences such as contempt of court also already have
the right to vote, although very few do.
“The
UK Government has also said that it should be made more clear to people given
prison sentences that they will not have the right to vote while in prison."
He added: “It is
concerning that some Committee members believed in the principle of votes for
all prisoners.
“Despite this, the Committee report only
recommended that the Welsh Government and National Assembly legislate to give
Welsh prisoners serving custodial sentences of less than four years the right
to vote in devolved elections.
“For the reasons already outlined, Mohammad
Asghar AM and I could not agree with this recommendation.
“Responding to this report, the Welsh Government
stated that it “will work to introduce legislation in this Assembly to enable
prisoners from Wales serving a custodial sentence of less than four years to
vote in devolved local government elections”.
“Responding on behalf of the Assembly
Commission, the Llywydd stated that it “does not consider that amendments
should be introduced to the Senedd and Elections (Wales) Bill to address this
issue”.
“In a letter to the Committee Chair last
week, the Welsh Government added that it is committed to the principle of
prisoner voting in all local elections and that it will seek an appropriate
legislative vehicle at the earliest opportunity, to enable prisoners from Wales
to vote in Assembly elections on the same terms as will apply for local
government elections.
“To be clear,
according to the Law Pages, giving the vote to prisoners serving a custodial
sentence of less than 4 years will include those convicted of: Having a blade
or sharp point in a public place; Racially aggravated common assault; Racially
aggravated criminal damage; Procurement of a woman by threats; Attempted incest
by a man with a girl over 13; Abduction of an unmarried girl; Causing
prostitution of women ;Soliciting by men; Ill-treatment of patients; Assault
with intent to resist arrest, and procuring others to commit homosexual acts.
“It is this that Labour and Plaid Cymru are supporting, further
evidencing the growing gap between the expressed will of the people of Wales
and their elected so-called representatives here."
Ian takes steps - 281,327 - to beat prostate cancer
![]() |
* Ian Parry steps out along the canal to help beat prostate cancer. |
Ian Parry, who is secretary of Llangollen Prostate Cancer Support Group, decided to take up his personal walking marathon to raise funds for Prostate Cancer UK.
Each year, 11,000 men die from this form of cancer and therefore the charity felt that taking 11,000 steps - by walking, running, jogging
or even dancing - every day during the month of September would be an
appropriate fundraising challenge, with each step being in memory of a life lost this
year.
The money raised across the country will go towards research that will help spot prostate cancer
sooner with more accurate tests, faster treatments with fewer side effects and emotional and practical support for everyone
affected.
Ian began the challenge on the first of September by walking from his home in Llan to Trevor Basin along the
canal and registering his 11,000 steps.
His steps are recorded from an app on
his phone. On average 11,000 steps are equivalent to approximately five miles and
Ian says he is aware that this sort of distance is not really significant and can
easily be achieved by younger and even fit older men.
He has been recording his daily steps mainly along the
canal from the Horseshoe Falls to Trevor Basin, from there towards Chirk and
from Chirk to Lion Quays. A couple of days were spent in Chester walking around
the city walls and riverside.
After completing three weeks of the challenge Ian has accumulated
281,327 steps against the target of 231,000 and approximately 121 miles and so
is well on his way to achieve his total of 330,000 steps.
His fundraising through Just Giving and donations made
direct to Prostate Cancer UK has reached £500 but he is hoping to get
considerably more.
* If you would like to support Ian in this challenge by making
a donation and helping Prostate Cancer in its research you can do so by visiting
the Just Giving website at: https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/Ian-Parry9
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)






