The traffic lights put up for the roadworks at the junction of Regent Street and Hill Street have been removed today (Friady) as work on a collapsed sewer is now complete .
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Friday, May 16, 2025
A5 traffic lights go as sewer repair work ends
The traffic lights put up for the roadworks at the junction of Regent Street and Hill Street have been removed today (Friady) as work on a collapsed sewer is now complete .
You can help bring history to life at Plas Newydd
Denbighshire's Countryside Team are calling on the public to help bring the story of Plas Newydd to life by sharing their hidden treasures.
Plas Newydd is famous for its connection to the Ladies of Llangollen, Lady Eleanor Butler and Sarah Ponsonby, whose remarkable story of friendship and defiance captured the imagination of visitors from across the world.
Over the years the house has welcomed poets, celebrities and curious travellers, becoming a treasured part of Llangollen’s cultural and historical landscape.
Today, the council says it wants to celebrate not just the grand stories but also the everyday memories that continue to shape Plas Newydd’s legacy.
Do you have a hidden piece of history waiting to be rediscovered? Whether it’s a photograph tucked away in a family album, or a souvenir forgotten in an attic, your contributions could become part of an exciting project to showcase the unseen artefacts and personal memories that make up Plas Newydd’s rich history.
If you have any old photographs, postcards, memorabilia, or even historic artefacts related to the Ladies of Llangollen or Plas Newydd from any era, the Countryside Team would love to hear from you. No item or memory is too small, they say.
Jillian Howe, National Landscape Community Engagement Officer, said: "Plas Newydd holds so many untold stories, and we’re excited to work with the community to uncover them. Every photo, postcard, and memory helps bring the history of this special place to life."
Councillor Alan James, Local Development and Planning, said: “This is an exciting project that our residents can be a part of to bring to life the rich history of Plas Newydd. We’re very lucky to have such an historic site on our doorstep here in Denbighshire, and I would encourage residents and visitors alike to take advantage of visiting Plas Newydd”.
* If you have any old photographs, postcards, memorabilia, or even historic artefacts related to the Ladies of Llangollen or Plas Newydd from any era, get in touch. To submit a photo and its story email plasnewydd@denbighshire.gov.uk
Thursday, May 15, 2025
Llangollen Round Challenge urgently needs your baking skills
Can you bake a cake for Cancer Research UK?
That's the question organisers of the latest Llangollen Round Challenge are asking.
Around 700 walkers will be taking part in the largest-ever Challenge on May 31/June 1, all raising funds for Cancer Research UK.
Judy and the Team behind the event say: "We have to feed them on five checkpoints and in the school restaurant at the end.
"Traybakes are easiest for us but all cakes are more than welcome.
"Cakes can be delivered to our campervan in East Street Car Park, recognisable by its flag, on Wednesday May 28, from 10am to 7pm. If you can't get there on that day, give us a ring on 07905 330788 to arrange an alternative. Very very many thanks."
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
BBC Radio Cymru to present three outstanding Welsh acts at Eisteddfod
Llangollen International Eisteddfod has announced a special event hosted by BBC Radio Cymru's Rhys Mwyn showcasing three extraordinary Welsh music acts in thrilling live performances.
The outdoor event will happen before BRIT Award-winning and Grammy-nominated KT Tunstall takes to the pavilion stage to perform her iconic debut album Eye to the Telescope in its entirety, with orchestra, for the first time ever.
- What: Rhys Mwyn Presents – Pedair, Mared, Buddug
- When: Thursday July 10, 4.30–7pm
- Where: Llangollen International Eisteddfod site
- Tickets: £5 / Free with KT Tunstall concert ticket
- Website: www.llangollen.net
Plan to honour wartime aerial photographers including Llangollen man
Plans are in hand to officially recognise the unsung heroes of special wartime units of the RAF’s - including a young man from Llangollen.
Earlier
this month the UK Government confirmed that a scheme to erect a memorial honouring
the Photographic Reconnaissance Units (PRU) had successfully moved to the
planning stage.
The intended location for the memorial would be outside the Treasury, close to the entrance of the Imperial War Museum’s Churchill War Rooms, facing St James’ Park.
The location has received approval in principle from the Royal Parks and Department for Culture, Media and Sport to proceed to the next stage, which includes ground surveys, design, and planning.
Clwyd East MP Becky Gittins has met with the team behind the project to highlight the work of the PRU, including Leading Aircraftman John Oliver Roberts was born in Llangollen and joined 682 Photographic Reconnaissance Squadron based in the Mediterranean.
The Photographic
Reconnaissance Unit (PRU) was formed
in September 1939 and throughout the Second World War it operated highly
dangerous, clandestine photographic reconnaissance operations over all theatres
of operation, and captured more than 26 million images of enemy operations and
installations during the war.
The purpose of the PRU was to provide up-to-date intelligence to strategically plan the Allied actions in the war. The intelligence it gathered, flying Spitfires and Mosquitos, was used by all the armed forces, giving same-day intelligence on enemy activity.
The intelligence provided by the PRU was used in the Cabinet War Rooms – now the Churchill War Rooms located underneath the Treasury – and was instrumental in the planning of major operations, including D-Day and the Dambusters Raid, the monitoring of major shipping movements such as German warships Bismarck and Tirpitz, and the locating of the site of the V1 and V2 rocket launching site at Peenemünde, as well as many other intelligence successes.
Due to the clandestine nature of their operations – they flew solo operations, unarmed and unarmoured – the death rate was nearly fifty percent. However, despite having one of the lowest survival rates of the war – life expectancy in the PRU was around two and a half months – there is no national memorial to the PRU.
Therefore, since 2021, the Spitfire AA810 Project has campaigned to establish such a memorial to the 1,746 PRU pilots and navigators.
While
the PRU had many different nationalities serving in it, it was still made up
predominantly by servicemen from throughout the United Kingdom. Among those who
served in the PRU was Llangollen’s John Roberts.
LAC John Oliver Roberts was born in Llangollen and joined 682 Photographic Reconnaissance Squadron based in the Mediterranean.
He died whilst off-duty when he drowned bathing in the sea on June 16, 1943 in La Marsa, Tunisia. His body was not recovered until three days after he had been reported missing and he is buried in the Enfidaville War Cemetery in Tunisia. He was aged just 19 years old.
Becky
Gittins said: “I am pleased to support this fantastic campaign to commemorate
those who served in the Photographic Reconnaissance Units.
“This includes John Roberts, from Llangollen, who served our country under what must have been exceptionally difficult conditions.
“It is so important, particularly during the 80-year anniversary of VE day, that we recognise the vital contribution that the likes of John and others from Clwyd East made to the war effort. The 26 million images the PRU garnered, provided our armed forces with critical intelligence on the activity of enemy operations.
“I am also delighted that the memorial will recognise the work of photographic interpreters – a third of whom were women – whose skills and analysis for the PRU produced the war winning intelligence that it did, ensuring that the pilots sacrifice was not in vain.”
More information on the Spitfire AA810 Project, the history, the plane and its pilots, and the Memorial campaign can be found on its website: www.spitfireaa810.co.uk.
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
New Pavilion parking arrangements will benefit the town says Eisteddfod team
* John Gambles, chair of the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod, at the front car park off Abbey Road.
Talk on female pilot kicks off museum events programme
On May 28 at Llangollen Museum Sally Knight will be giving a talk about her intrepid grandmother, one of the early pioneering female pilots about whom she has written a book.
In 1937 a two-seater aeroplane piloted by Phyl Lewin and her husband Brigadier General A.C. Lewin disappeared over Southern Sudan. The book is the story of Phyl’s life up to this point.
It tells of her Victorian childhood, travel before World War I, nursing as a VAD in France and then marriage and emigration to Kenya to farm.
Widowed and remarried, she flew many times in small aeroplanes between Kenya and England in the 1930s. The diaries of these journeys make exciting reading. The story continues with the rescue from the swamp and how the rest of her life unfolds.
The talk will all start at 7pm. Tickets for all are £3 at the door, refreshments will be provided.
Going on to speak about other events at the museum, Dave Crane says: "Our art gallery exhibition of pictures from the museum collection will remain up for this month, but has been augmented by a small collection of paintings by local artists Tony Daniels and Margaret Hallam. June will see an exhibition of pictures from the Llangollen International Eisteddfod.
"We have a new window display, featuring items related to WWII and VE Day. Our item of the month is a box of Llangollen Tourist Guides, collected by Chris Burrows, who, very sadly, died recently.
"Also – watch out in June for a new display, in one of our three new cabinets, featuring items from an archaeological dig by the Clywdian Range Archaeolgy Group at a rare Bronze Age ritual site in Bryneglwys.
"Their work has uncovered a remarkable collection of artefacts, including flint tools and arrowheads, as well as a cup-marked stone, which they believe hold significant historical value. They are keen to share their discoveries with the local community and to highlight the cultural heritage of the region. They hope to continue their work on the site over the next three years and so the display will be hopefully updated on a regular basis.
"In June as well, our Eisteddfod display will be rejuvenated, with new items and a new audio point featuring recollections from members and volunteers, recorded back in the 1970s, about the history and operations of the Eisteddfod."




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