PENTRAETH
4 miles NW of Menai Bridge on the A5025
A Parish Church of St Mary A Plas Gwyn
C Three Leaps
Before land reclamation, this sleepy village
stood on the edge of Traeth Coch (known in
English as Red Wharf Bay). Its name reflects
this, as it means head of the beach. At low
tide, the almost 15 square miles of sand
supported a flourishing cockling industry.
Nowadays, this is a popular place for a holiday,
even though it is not ideal for swimming due
to the strong tidal currents. The Parish
Church of St Mary dates originally from the
14th century, and in the graveyard is the mass
grave of people who perished on the Royal
Charter,
a sailing ship that was blown onto the
rocks near the village as it sailed from
Australia to Liverpool (see also Moelfre).
There are no names on the stones, as very few
bodies were identified. Close to Plas Gwyn,
an 18th-century Georgian mansion, is the
Three Leaps – three small stones in a row
that commemorate a contest in AD580
between two rivals for the hand of the granddaughter of the warrior Geraint. The contest
was won by the man who could leap the
furthest,
in this case, by a champion named Hywel. The stones mark his efforts, in possibly
what we now know as the triple jump. The
loser is said to have died of a broken heart.
BENLLECH
6½ miles N of Menai Bridge on the A5025
C Castell Mawr G Goronwy Owen
With its excellent beach to attract
holidaymakers, Benllech is probably the most
popular resort on Anglesey, but those coming
here should take care as there are strong tidal
currents and the sands can be treacherous.
This resort has another claim to fame, as the
birthplace of the poet Goronwy Owen. He
lived between 1723 and 1769, and spent his
last years in Virginia as the rector of St
Andrew’s Church in Laurenceville. His fame
rests on an output of just 55 poems.
PENTRAETH
4 miles NW of Menai Bridge on the A5025
A Parish Church of St Mary A Plas Gwyn
C Three Leaps
Before land reclamation, this sleepy village
stood on the edge of Traeth Coch (known in
English as Red Wharf Bay). Its name reflects
this, as it means head of the beach. At low
tide, the almost 15 square miles of sand
supported a flourishing cockling industry.
Nowadays, this is a popular place for a holiday,
even though it is not ideal for swimming due
to the strong tidal currents. The Parish
Church of St Mary dates originally from the
14th century, and in the graveyard is the mass
grave of people who perished on the Royal
Charter, a sailing ship that was blown onto the
rocks near the village as it sailed from
Australia to Liverpool (see also Moelfre).
There are no names on the stones, as very few
bodies were identified. Close to Plas Gwyn,
an 18th-century Georgian mansion, is the
Three Leaps – three small stones in a row
that commemorate a contest in AD580
between two rivals for the hand of the granddaughter of the warrior Geraint.
The contest
was won by the man who could leap the
furthest, in this case, by a champion named Hywel. The stones mark his efforts, in possibly
what we now know as the triple jump. The
loser is said to have died of a broken heart.
BENLLECH
6½ miles N of Menai Bridge on the A5025
C Castell Mawr G Goronwy Owen
With its excellent beach to attract
holidaymakers, Benllech is probably the most
popular resort on Anglesey, but those coming
here should take care as there are strong tidal
currents and the sands can be treacherous.
This resort has another claim to fame, as the
birthplace of the poet Goronwy Owen. He
lived between 1723 and 1769, and spent his
last years in Virginia as the rector of St
Andrew’s Church in Laurenceville. His fame
rests on an output of just 55 poems.
Traces of a hill fort, Castell Mawr, can be
found on the west side of Red Wharf Bay, and
on the evidence of coins found here, the site
could once have been occupied by the Romans.
MOELFRE
9 miles N of Menai Bridge on the A5108
A Parish Church of St Gallgo F Royal Charter
C Lligwy Burial Chamber E Ynys Moelfre
B Seawatch Centre C Din Lligwy Village
B Lifeboat Station
This is a charming coastal village with a
sheltered, pebbled beach, attractive cottages and
sandy beaches to both the north and the south.
Fame, however,
came to Moelfre in an
unfortunate and bizarre way via its lifeboat,
which, over the years, has been involved in many
rescues, two of which are worthy of mention Returning to Liverpool from Australia in
October 1859, laden with cargo and
passengers, including gold prospectors coming
home after making their fortunes in the
Australian Gold Rush, the Royal Charter
sank. A rigged iron vessel and the pride of the
merchant fleet, the ship was all set to make the
long passage in record time but, while
sheltering from a hurricane in Moelfre Bay, she
foundered with the loss of 450 passengers and
crew.
Only 39 people survived, and many
believe that the gold still lies with the wreck
out in the bay. Efforts have been made to
recover the lost fortune with varying but not
overwhelming degrees of success and it has
been said that the larger houses around
Moelfre were paid for with gold washed
ashore from the wreck. This is despite
customs officers swamping the village in an
attempt to ensure that any salvaged gold
ended in the Exchequer rather than in the
hands of the locals.
Charles Dickens visited
the site on New Year’s Eve 1859, and
apparently based a story on the disaster in The
Uncommercial Traveller (see also Pentraeth).
One hundred years later, almost to the day,
in October 1959, the coaster Hindlea,
struggling in foul weather, had eight crew
members rescued by the Moelfre Lifeboat.
The rescue earned Richard Evans, the
lifeboat’s coxswain, his second RNLI gold
medal for gallantry.
The Lifeboat Station can
be visited between 9am and 4pm, with crew
training at 7pm on Wednesdays.
At Llanallgo, between Moelfre and Dulas, is
the mainly 15th-century Parish Church of St
Gallgo, with its ancient bell, one of the oldest
in the country. It was struck in the 13th
century, and bears the inscription Ave Maria
Gracia Plena (Hail Mary, Full of Grace), as well
as the imprint of an Edward I coin struck in
1281. In the graveyard is a memorial to the
victims of the Royal Charter tragedy. St Gallgo
is famous as being the brother of Gildas, the
6th century historian of Britain,
who wrote De
Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae. He was born in
the Kingdom of Strathclyde in Scotland,
which at that time had strong ties with Wales,
and even spoke the same language.
The Seawatch Centre has displays and
exhibits about Anglesey’s rich maritime
heritage, including athe village’s lifeboat.
Beyond the station is a small outcrop of rocks,
Ynys Moelfre, a favourite spot for seabirds
and, occasionally, porpoises.
About a mile
inland from the village, off the narrow road, is
the impressive Lligwy Burial Chamber, a
Bronze Age tomb with a huge capstone
supported by stone uprights, which lies half
hidden in a pit dug out of the rock. Close by is
Din Lligwy Village, the remains of a
Romano British settlement that covers over
half an acre.
Certainly occupied around the
4th century AD, after the Roman garrison on
Anglesey had been vacated, some of the stone
walls of the buildings can still be seen and
excavations of the site have unearthed pottery,
coins and evidence of metal working from
that period. Nearby are the ruins of the 14th
century Capel Lligwy LLANDDYFNAN
5 miles NW of Menai Bridge on the B5109
B Stone Science C Llanddyfnan Standing Stone
To the west of the village lies Stone Science,
an unusual attraction that tells the story of the
earth from its beginning to the present – a
journey spanning 650 million years.
The
museum illustrates the science with displays of
fossils, crystals and artefacts, and there are
numerous and varied items for sale in the
Stone Science shop. Nearly opposite is the eight-feet-high Llanddyfnan Standing Stone.
LLANGEFNI
6 miles NW of Menai Bridge on the B5420
B Oriel Ynys Môn
The island’s main market and administrative
centre, Llangefni is also the home of Oriel
Ynys Môn (the Anglesey Heritage Centre), an
attractive art gallery and heritage centre, built
in 1991,
which gives an insight into the history
of Anglesey. From prehistoric times to the
present day, the permanent exhibition covers a
series of themes including Stone Age Hunters,
Druids, Medieval Society and Legends.
Llyn Cefni Reservoir to the northwest of
the town is an important wildlife habitat and
nature reserve overlooked by a hide; it also
provides a pleasant picnic area.
On the
northwest edge of town by the River Cefni,
The Dingle is a local nature reserve with
footpaths through mature woodland. The
A5114, which connects Llangefni to the A5, is
the shortest A road in the British Isles.
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