BEAUMARIS
4 miles NE of Menai Bridge of the A545
A Beaumaris Castle A Courthouse
B Museum of Childhood Memories
B Beaumaris Lifeboat Station
A Parish Church of St Mary and St Nicholas
A Beaumaris Gaol I Menai Strait Regatta
An attractive and elegant town, Beaumaris was
granted a charter by Edward I in 1294 and it
adopted the Norman name beau marais, which
translates as ‘beautiful marsh’. The lawned
seafront, now with its elegant Georgian and
Victorian terraces, was once a marsh that
protected the approaches to Beaumaris
Castle. Often cited as the most technically
perfect medieval castle in Britain, Beaumaris
Castle was the last of Edward I’s “Iron Ring”
of fortresses built to stamp his authority on
the Welsh.
Begun in 1295, and designed by the
king’s military architect, James of St George,
this was to be his largest and most ambitious
project. Regarded as a pinnacle of military
architecture of the time, with a concentric
defence rather than the traditional keep and
bailey, the outer walls contained 16 towers,
while the inner walls were 43 feet high and up
to 16 feet thick in places. It was never actually
completed, as the money ran out before the
fortifications reached their full planned height.
Perhaps a measure of the castle’s success was
that, unlike other castles built by Edward I,
it
never experienced military action. Now a
World Heritage Site and in the hands of
CADW (Welsh Historic Monuments),
Beaumaris Castle is still virtually surrounded
by its original moat. There was also a tidal dock here for ships coming in through a
channel in the marshes – an iron ring where
vessels of up to 40 tons once docked still
hangs from the wall.
The Parish Church of St Mary and St
Nicholas dates from the 14th century, and
was originally the church for the castle
garrison. It has noteworthy 16th-century
choir stalls and the stone coffin of Princess
Joan, wife of Llywelyn the Great and
illegitimate daughter of King John. For many
years the coffin was used as a drinking trough
for horses.
The building has four clocks on
its tower, and it is said that Richard
Rowlands, who was about to be hanged in
the old gaol nearby, cursed the clock facing
the gaol, saying that it would never tell the
same time as the other three. It never did,
until it was found out that the prevailing
southwest winds were interfering with the
hands. This was rectified and the clock has
shown the correct time ever since.
Although Beaumarais saw little or no military
action, the town briefly enjoyed notoriety as a
haven for pirates, as well as being a busy trading
port. With the advent of steam ships and
paddle boats,
the resort developed during
Victorian times as visitors from Liverpool and
elsewhere took the sea trip down
to the town. It is now a popular
place with the yachting fraternity
due to its facilities and
involvement in the annual Menai
Strait Regatta.
While having connections
with the sea trade and
developing as a holiday resort,
Beaumaris was at one time also
an administrative and legal
centre for the island. The
Courthouse, dating from 1614 is open to the public during the summer and,
although it was renovated in the 19th century,
much of its original Jacobean interior
remains. It was here, in 1773, that Mary
Hughes stood in the dock and was sentenced
to transportation for seven years after she
had been found guilty of stealing a bed gown
valued at six pence!
Close by is Beaumaris Gaol, which was
designed as a model prison by Hansom in
1829. In this monument to Victorian law and
order, the last man to hang was Richard
Rowlands, who cursed the church clock
opposite as he climbed to the scaffold in
1862. Today’s visitors can relive those days of
harsh punishment as well as view the cells
and the treadwheel and follow the route
taken by the condemned men to their
rendezvous with the hangman.
An equally interesting place for all the
family to visit is the Museum of Childhood
Memories in Castle Street. It is a treasure
house of nostalgia with a collection of over
2,000 items in nine different rooms. Each one
has its own theme, such as entertainment,
pottery and glass, and clockwork tin-plate toys.
Visitors can wander around and see the
amazing variety of toys, which illustrate the changing habits of the nation over the past
150 years.
LLANFAES
5 miles NE of Menai Bridge off the B5109
A Parish Church of St Catherine
Now a quiet and sedate place, Llanfaes was a
busy commercial village long before the
establishment of Beaumaris as one of the
island’s major centres, and travellers from the
mainland arrived here after crossing the Menai
Strait from Aber and the Lavan Sands.
In 1237,
Llywelyn the Great founded a
monastery in the village over the tomb of
Joan, his wife and the illegitimate daughter of
King John. The tomb can now be seen in St
Mary’s Church, Beaumaris, where it was
moved at the time of the Dissolution. In 1295,
Edward I moved the inhabitants of Llanfaes
to Newborough so that he could use the stone
in the town to built Beaumaris Castle.
During
World War II, flying boats were built at a
factory near the village. The Parish Church
of St Catherine dates from 1845, and
replaces an earlier church. It is an imposing,
steepled building that seems much too large
for the village.
LLANGOED
6 miles NE of Menai Bridge on
the B5109
A Castell Aberlleiniog
B Haulfre Stables
In Edwardian times, this historic
village was a popular resort with
the lower middle classes who
came here to relax in boarding
houses by the sea. Llangoed’s
seaside charm is enhanced by its
pastoral setting where a walk
downstream, alongside the river,
leads to Castell Aberlleiniog, found in the
midst of some trees.
This was originally a
timber castle, built in around 1090 by Hugh
Lupus, Earl of Chester, who, along with Hugh
the Proud, Earl of Shrewsbury, exacted great
cruelty on the Welsh. Lupus was later killed
during an attack on the castle by Magnus, King
of Norway, when he was struck in the eye by
an arrow. The ruins of the bailey, which was
constructed later, are still visible. Close by is
the site of a battle where, in AD809, the
Saxons were, albeit briefly, victorious over the
defending Welsh. Haulfre Stables is a small
equestrian museum housed in a historic stable
block and containing a collection of Victorian
harnesses and saddlery, carts and carriages.
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