Showing posts with label UK-Wales-Powys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK-Wales-Powys. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 September 2022

Newtown, Powys

The Birthplace of one of the 19th Century's Greatest Social Reformers

Newtown? Where and Why


Wales
Powys
Lynne chose Newtown as the destination for her birthday sojourn. It was not an obvious choice, but there was a reason.

During the years our daughter spent at Aberystwyth University we travelled regularly from North Staffs to the Welsh coast. Crossing the border near Welshpool we either took a northerly route through Mallwyd and Machynlleth or tacked south through Newtown and Llangurig. Either way the 100-mile journey took around 3 hours, the roads are narrow and there was a good chance of finding yourself in a queue behind a tractor winding its noisy way through the quiet hills of Mid-Wales while flicking gobbets of mud and cow dung at is unwilling followers.

Mid-Wales
Shrewsbury is 35 miles from home, Newtown is another 35 miles southwest

‘I have driven through Newtown many times, and never stopped there,’ she said, ‘so I would like to visit for my birthday.’ ‘There might be a reason no one stops,’ I thought, making a token show of resistance before meekly acquiescing.

Wales

Newtown is the largest town in Powys, Wales largest county. That almost makes it sound important, but although Powys covers a remarkable 25% of the Welsh landmass, it has only 3% of the population. Newton has some 11,000 citizens, twice as many as Llandrindod Wells, the administrative centre, and ten times more than Montgomery, the other Powys town I have ‘honoured’ with a blog post.

Its name does the town no favours and is hardly unique; Wikipedia lists another 80 Newtowns (and almost as many Newtons) across the Anglosphere. In England it prompts memories, for those old enough, of the ‘challenging’ Newtown in ‘Z Cars’ or comparison with real new towns, like Telford or Milton Keynes with a reputation for many thousands of identikit 1970s dwellings and concrete brutalist centres. Actually, I like Milton Keynes, I find it well planned and user friendly, but it does have an (unwarranted) reputation

Newtown, Powys, is not like that. It may have undergone relatively recent expansion, but it is a surprisingly old new town.

Castell Dolforwyn and the Origins of Y Drenewydd (The New Town)

The A483 follows the Severn Valley southwest from Welshpool. 5 miles before Newtown a sign to Dolforwyn Castle points to a narrow side road climbing diagonally across the hillside almost parallel to the main road below. After a mile, opposite a small parking area, a footpath strikes up the hillside towards the castle.

The path up to Dolforwyn Castle
There is nothing Lynne enjoys more than a steady climb

Working its way round the end of the hill, it turns towards the summit and suddenly you are surrounded by old stonework. This area, just outside the gate, was once occupied by the village that grew up to service the castle

Dolforwyn Castle entrance

To assert his claim to be the most important among the Welsh rulers/warlords/princes, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, Prince of Gwynedd needed a presence in the strategically important Severn Valley. His successful invasion of 1257 and subsequent consolidation led to the Treaty of Montgomery (September 1267) where Henry III recognised him as the Prince of Wales. To confirm his control Llywelyn constructed a castle at Dolforwyn between 1273 and 1277.

The side of Dolforwyn Castle overlooking the Severn Valley is the remains of Llywelyn's stone work
Edward I

Unfortunately for him Henry III had died in 1272 and his son and successor Edward I was less tolerant of upstart princelings on his borders, particularly those who built a castle without his permission. Construction had hardly finished when Roger Mortimer and Henry de Lacy arrived from Montgomery with an army and laid siege.

After removing the villagers, they sat down and waited until the defenders ran out of water and the siege ended.

Roger Mortimer largely rebuilt the castle, remembering to include a well in case of another siege. Dolforwyn remained in Mortimer hands for three generations before it was abandoned. By 1398 it was described as "ruinous and worth nothing." It is now in the safe hands of Cadw, the Welsh Government’s historic environment service.

The side of the castle most rebuilt by Mortimer - including the well

Edward I had his faults, but he ensured the lands he grabbed were well governed. Driving the native Welsh princes from the Severn Valley pacified the borders and the castle’s displaced villagers felt confident enough to move down to the flatter land beside the river. Three miles from Dolforwyn they built Y Drenewydd (The New Town) or simple Newtown beside the River Severn.

Robert Owen

The Statue

Walking from the large car park beside the Severn towards the bustling town centre we passed a statue of Robert Owen, Newtown's favourite son. Designed by Gilbert Bayes and erected in 1956 this rather sentimental statue of the Newtown-born industrialist and social reformer, stands in the tiny Robert Owen Memorial Garden.

Robert Owen (1771-1858)

Birthplace and Museum

Central Newtown has sufficient self-important buildings to ensure the town is not mistaken for an over-grown village. The HSBC building is a typical HSBC design, cut down to fit the corner plot, once occupied by Robert Owen’s birthplace.

HSBC, Newtown, on the site of Robert Owen's birthplace

The Cross Building on the junction of Broad and High Streets, was built to commemorate Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee in 1897. It was financed by Sarah Brisco of the Pryce family (of whom more later) who donated the clock to the people of Newtown in 1900. [Update: Barclays Bank were tenants from the start. They closed this branch just weeks after our visit].

The Cross Building, Newtown

Across Severn Street is Sarah Brisco House and the Robert Owen Memorial Museum.

Robert Owen Memorial Museum, Newtown

Born in 1771, Robert Owen had little formal education but was a voracious reader. Leaving school aged ten, he was apprenticed to a Lincolnshire draper and by the age of 23 was a partner in a Manchester mill.

Robert Owen's birthplace may have gone, but the museum preserves the doorknocker!

In the early 1790s he started thinking more about how workers were treated, developing progressive moral views.

Robert Owen

In the late 1790s he met David Dale, a Scottish entrepreneur and philanthropist, and the builder of the New Lanark mills in southern Scotland. We visited New Lanark, now a UNESCO World Heritage site) in 2021 (click here.) In 1799 he married Dale’s daughter and in 1800 took over New Lanark. Dale had been considered a model employer, but Owen went much further, putting limits on the hours and ages of child workers and ensuring they received an education. He introduced a standard eight-hour day and lobbied to have his reforms put into law. Prime Minister Robert Peel sympathised, but his ideas were too radical for the time.

Robert Owen and his reforms

Despite (or because of) the way he treated his workers he made a great deal of money. He sold New Lanark in 1825 and although his subsequent projects met with less success, his contributions to the founding of the cooperative movement and to trade unionism were of great importance. He was a visionary and a man ahead of his time.

St Mary’s Church, Robert Owen’s Grave and More

Although he lived most of his life in Scotland and England, Owen returned to Newtown at the end of his life and died here in November 1857. Despite declaring himself an atheist in 1817 and becoming a spiritualist in his 80s he was buried at St Mary’s Church a short walk from the museum.

Robert Owen's grave, St Mary's Church, Newtown

Nearby a plaque commemorates Thomas Powell, a chartist leader born in Newtown in 1802. Described as a ‘disciple of Robert Owen’ and ‘a fighter for political rights and equality’, he was imprisoned for his trouble in 1839-40. He died in Trinidad in 1862.

Thomas Powell's plaque, St Mary's Newtown

The Charter from which the Chartists took their name demanded six radical reforms:

1) A vote for every man aged twenty-one years and over.
2) A secret ballot.
3) No property qualification for Members of Parliament (MPs).
4) Payment of MPs enabling persons of modest means to become MPs.
5) Equal constituencies.
6) Annual Parliamentary elections.

Chartism was at its peak 1839-48 but faded away thereafter. All their outlandish demands were eventually met except No. 6 which still sounds outlandish.

St Mary’s Church served Newtown for 500 years, but being beside the river, flooding was a continual problem. Eventually, a new church was built and St Mary’s was abandoned in 1850. It is now a ruin, but has been stabilised.

St Mary's, Newtown

From St Mary's to the Textile Museum

Beside the Severn

Newtown’s textile museum was a 250m walk away. We set off from St Mary’s strolling along the bank of the Severn. The River Severn, shared between Wales and England, is Great Britain’s longest river, but at Newtown it is little more than a stream, being barely 30km (18 miles) into its 354km (220 mile) journey to the Bristol Channel.

Beside the Severn, Newtown

The Long Bridge

We crossed the river on the Long Bridge. A wooden bridge was built on this site in the 15th century and maintained by bequests in the wills of Newtown’s leading citizens. It survived the great flood of 1795 and was still in use, though somewhat rickety, in the early 19th century.

Long Bridge over the Severn, Newtown

In 1820, maintenance of roads and bridges became the responsibility of the County and the present bridge was constructed. It was barely adequate for the traffic of the mid-19th century and is even less adequate now – signs declare its feebleness in two languages. Drivers of heavy vehicles will be relieved that there is a modern bridge a short distance downstream.

Long Bridge, Newtown in 1880

The photo above was taken from the bridge looking past where I was standing. Newtown, give or take a line of parked cars and some signs, is still recognisable. The photo was borrowed from CountyTimes.co.uk and is part of the Powys Digital History Project.

A Scary Road Sign

Whether it is a 'Weak Bridge' or a 'Pont Wan', this long exiled, monolingual anglophone Welshman applauds the efforts made to keep the ancient language alive and well. Monolingual as I may be, I was brought up, mainly in England, by Welsh parents, and Lynne is Welsh, so I generally approach place names with reasonable confidence. I am unfazed by Llanelli (where Lynne was born), Ystradgynlais, Tonyrefail, or Machynlleth but the sign just over the bridge gave me pause for thought.

Scary sign, Newtown

Bilingual signage is inevitably asymmetric; all towns and villages have Welsh name (though some have been invented quite recently) but many places have never had an English name. Bettws Cedewain is no problem, ‘w’ is a vowel (sometimes) and ‘Bettws’ is pronounced ‘Bettus’ (simples!) but at first glance Llanllwchaearn appears to have six consecutive consonants followed by three consecutive vowels. By breaking it down into 3 syllables, remembering ‘w’ is a vowel, not sweating the terminal vowels - and pronouncing ‘ll’ as a voiceless lateral fricative (and we all know what one of those is) I triumphed-ish.

Newtown Textile Museum

Newtown’s Textile Museum occupies a weaving factory built in the 1830s. The lower storeys consist of three pairs of back-to-back weaver’s cottages. The upper storeys, were used for weaving, the large windows giving light to operate the hand-looms.

Newtown Textile Museum is the 4-storey red-brick building
Weavers' workshop, Manchester

There were many such factories here in the 19th century. Newtown was a weaving town, so Robert Owen’s switch from being a draper to manging mills seemed quite natural and the few surviving weaving factories in Manchester are similar in design. In Manchester and Lanark Owen was weaving cotton from the Americas, in Newtown it was locally sourced wool.

The lower floors give an idea of the basic, and rather cramped living conditions of the workers and their (often large) families…

…where women could earn money by spinning…

Weaver's cottage, Newtown Textile Musuem

…for the looms above.

Looms, Newtown Textile Musuem

There are also education facilities for guiding school parties through the whole process from sheep to cloth.

The top floor has the workshops of other forgotten occupations. There is a clog maker’s…

Clog makers, Newtown textile Museum

…and a draper’s shop, or is it a haberdasher? I looked them up. Draper: A person who sells textiles. Haberdasher: one who sells, needles, thread, buttons etc. (North American usages are different).

Drapers or Haberdashers? Newtown textile Museum

I am generally wary of textile museums. Across the world people are keen for us to watch them weaving, and even keener for us to buying something. Unfortunately, I have little interest in textiles, but they are often poor people, so we buy a gift for someone who doesn’t really want it. Newtown Textile Museum is not like that, it brings to life a period of the town’s history and is well worth a visit.

Newtown and the World of Retail

Sir Pryce Pryce-Jones

Pryce Jones was born near Newtown in 1834 and apprenticed to a local draper in 1845. He took over the business in 1856 and then started a new company under his own name, dealing in Welsh flannel. With an established national postal system and the arrival of the railway, he was able to set up a mail order business in Newtown, that not only numbered Florence Nightingale and Queen Victoria among its customers, but eventually shipped Welsh flannel across Europe and to America and Australia. In 1879 he built the Royal Welsh Warehouse which still stands next to the station. He became MP for Montgomery in 1885 and was knighted two years later as Sir Pryce Pryce-Jones. Apart from being the Jeff Bezos of Mid-Wales, in 1876 he patented the ‘Euklisia Rug’, the world’s very first sleeping-bag.

The Royal Welsh Warehouse, Newtown

Laura Ashley

Laura Ashley, whose designs are invariably described as ‘quintessentially English’ was actually Welsh. With husband Bernard Ashley she opened their first shop in Machynlleth in 1961 and built their first factory in Newtown. Then from Newtown to the world.

Dinner in Newtown on a Tuesday

Google maps suggests Newtown is replete with restaurants, but eliminating cafĂ©s, coffee shops and takeaways greatly reduces the possibilities for a drink and a sit-down dinner. On further investigation the remaining establishments were largely ‘closed: next open, Thursday 7 pm’.

One Italian restaurant was, apparently, open. After walking right across central Newtown (a short hike!) we found it too locked and unlit. Wandering around, we found several drinking-only pubs – once the norm, but no longer elsewhere – multiple takeaways but no restaurants. One pub sported a somewhat unappealing menu outside. We entered. It was large and not particularly crowded, but most unoccupied tables were piled with uncleared dirty dishes. We exited.

We hovered outside an Indian restaurant, but it appeared to lack a licence, and Lynne deserved a drink on her birthday. We popped into a Spar convenience store and purchased a bottle of Rioja, intending to pick up a takeaway and return to our B&B. Setting off on our quest, the proprietor had said we would be welcome to eat in the breakfast room and use their plates and cutlery. It had seemed an odd speech at the time, now we understood.

Fish King Souvlaki

Fish King is a chip shop, but we had seen has some positive comments about its Greek food on TripAdvisor.

Fish King the following morning with friendly proprietor toting a broom

By 7.45 the fish’n’chip rush had gone and the proprietor was happy to run us through his Greek options. We ordered a chicken souvlaki and fried chicken (the choice was chicken or chicken). Returning to the B&B felt like a defeat, it was too cold for the outside tables but he had one inside table. Sitting in splendour in the corner of a chip shop, we ate our chicken, drank our wine from borrowed mugs and provided a talking point for later customer.

Dining in Newtown's exclusive Fish King

It was wholesome, reasonably priced, and had some genuine Greek flavours. Being a chip shop, our meal came with pita bread and chips; the younger me would have eaten it all, but maturity means I  cannot manage so much carbohydrate so I left most of the chips. I had assumed the proprietor was a Greek Cypriot - there are many in the Fish and Chip trade - but he was actually Romanian and had learned to cook during a ten-year spell in Cyprus. An affable young man with a gift for languages and an entrepreneurial spirit, he deserves to do well.

In Conclusion

Despite initial misgivings there is plenty in and around Newtown to fill a day, and the people we met were all very pleasant. Do go and visit, but if you don’t fancy eating in the corner of a chip shop, go at the weekend.

Wednesday, 26 July 2017

Montgomery: Punching above its Weight

A Tiny Town with Much to Offer

Wales

Tradition dictates that for our wedding anniversary I organise a day out culminating in a meal at a top class, usually Michelin starred, restaurant while Lynne remains ignorant of where we are going until we get there. The 26th is our anniversary and this year’s restaurant is The Checkers, just over the Welsh border in the small town of Montgomery. I intended to write a post entitled Montgomery and The Checkers, but my plan seriously underestimated the charm of the tiny town (pop 1,300) which deserves a post of its own – so there are two this year, this one for Montgomery, the next for The Checkers.[Post removed. The Checkers ceased to be a Michelin star restaurant a few months after our visit. It now trades as the Checkers Pantry specialising in 'luxury bed and breakfast'.]

The Historical Counties of Wales
Montgomery, only just in Wales and the former county town of a former county

26-July-2017

Our visit to the Welsh Marches did not start well, but by Welshpool the sky had a few blue patches and the rain was no longer continuous. South of the town I swung confidently into Glansevern Gardens only to discover they were closed. Their website clearly says the gardens will be closed for 2017, but I missed it. Ah well, next time.

The Cottage and Monty's Brewery, Montgomery

Instead we headed straight for Montgomery only to meet a ‘road closed’ sign. A diversion onto single track roads, including a do-it-yourself level crossing, brought us into Montgomery at The Cottage, the visitor centre for Monty’s Brewery. Things were starting to look up.

Lynne outside The Cottage, Monty's Brewery Visitor Centre

Inside we met Pam Honeyman, the head brewer who founded Monty’s in 2008 with her husband Russ, the commercial director. She left for the brewery a mile down the road while a charming and knowledgeable young lady talked us through the beers and sold us three ⅓ of a pint tasting glasses each.

Talking us through the beers while pulling a ⅓ of Old Jailhouse
The Cottage, Monty's Brewery Visitor Centre, Montgomery

Cascade hops give Monty’s Sunshine (4.2%) floral and citrus aromas. It is a very good beer and (for my taste) a little more bitterness would make it a great beer. Monty’s Pale Ale (4.0%), lighter in colour, alcohol and flavour is, at first sip, a tad underwhelming, but it grew on me. Old Jailhouse is a darker, maltier brew and at 3.9% as good a session beer as you will find.

Left to right;Sunshine, Pale Ale and Old Jailhouse
The Cottage, Monty's Brewery Visitor Centre, Montgomery

Lynne’s trio consisted of Sunshine, Pale Ale and Best Offa. Best Offa (4.0%) is a clever name and each pint triggers a donation to the upkeep of the Offa’s Dyke footpath, which passes a mile or so east of Montgomery but, for me the fine balance of hop and malt left it short of personality.

Lynne with Sunshine, Pale Ale and (left of picture) Best Offa
The Cottage, Monty's Brewery Visitor Centre, Montgomery

Monty’s beers are interesting, individual and worth seeking out. The same cannot be said of their ‘gourmet' sausage roll, a stodgy relic of the 1970s and best avoided.

Montgomery Castle

We drove into town and took the road winding up the hill to the castle.

After 1066 William the Conqueror quickly established control over England, but having left Wales for another day he needed a strongman to guard his western flank, so in 1071 he made Roger de Montgomery* Earl of Shrewsbury.

Like the Romans before him, Montgomery realised that controlling the broad valley of the little River Camlad, which flows into the Severn at a fording point, was the key to blocking Welsh marauders from English lands. The Romans built their fort on the lowlands near the confluence, Montgomery built a wooden motte and baily castle on high ground overlooking the valley. When Roger de Montgomery died in 1094 the castle soon passed to Baldwin de Boulers whose family held it for the next hundred years.

The route into England. The River Camlad flowing along the far side of the valley (aka the Vale of Montgomery) marks the English border

The town that grew below the castle became known as ‘Montgomery’ in English and ‘Trefaldwyn’ (Baldwin’s Town) in Welsh.

The weakness of King John encouraged Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of Gwynedd to flex his muscles, and he destroyed the castle in 1215.

John died the next year and his son, Henry III, became king at the age of 9. With a boy king to the east and a clever and ambitious Welshman to the west a stone castle seemed a good idea. Architect Hugh de Burgh chose a new site, a prominent outcrop immediately above the town, which by 1227 had become important enough to receive a Royal Charter. In 1228 the inner ward was completed and another attack by Llewelyn was repulsed, but for more security, middle and outer wards were added. By 1233 Llewelyn had established himself as the first ruler of a united Wales, so he had another crack at Montgomery and failed again.

The inner ward of Hugh de Burgh's Castle, Montgomery

Our visit started with a sit in the car park while large raindrops belaboured the car roof. The path to the castle, through the long gone outer ward uses the only level approach to the outcrop. The ditches, now spanned by modern bridges, made the castle impregnable to any medieval army, and a well, hacked through 25m of solid rock, meant they could hold out almost indefinitely.

A little damp and windswept, Lynne stands on the bridge between the middle and inner wards, Montgomery Castle

After treaty negotiations here in 1267 Henry III granted Llewelyn ap Gruffudd, the grandson of Llewelyn ap Iowerth, the title of ‘Prince of Wales,’ though it was more a recognition of reality than a 'grant'. 15 years later an army gathered at Montgomery before marching south and killing Llewelyn ap Gruffud, the last indigenous Prince of Wales, near Builth Wells.

Montgomery Castle, the inner ward on its impregnable rocky outcrop

With Wales subdued, for a while, Montgomery castle lost its importance. In 1402 however, during the uprising of Owain Glyndŵr (who also has a claim to be ‘last indigenous Prince of Wales’) the castle was attacked, but again could not be taken. The town, though, was destroyed and remained abandoned for almost 200 years.

In the Civil War, the castle was surrendered to the Parliamentarians in 1643, and like so many other medieval castles, subsequently demolished.

A Climb to the Montgomery War Memorial

From the car park a sign points up Town Hill to the Montgomeryshire War Memorial. Starting steep and overgrown the path soon reaches a larger track…

Towards the Montgomeryshire War Memorial

….which eventually leaves the woods and heads for the hilltop memorial. The 6m tall Portland stone column was dedicated in 1923 to Montgomeryshire’s 1914-18 dead. It has since been re-dedicated to the victims of all wars.

The Montgomeryshire War Memorial (from this angle looking more like an industrial chimney) on the top of Town Hill

The Old Bell Museum, Montgomery

Returning to town we dropped into the Old Bell Museum. The 16th century building, which has previously been a slaughterhouse and a temperance hotel among many other things, is like the TARDIS, larger inside than it looks from the outside. Its eleven rooms are crammed with exhibitions of local history including many fascinating old photos. Local medical practices, the Cambrian Railway, the workhouse, the castles including models and artefacts from excavations and even the architecture of the building itself are all covered. Run by Montgomery Civic Society volunteers, it’s the sort of quirky local museum every self-respecting town should have, but very few do. And it costs only £1.

The Old Bell Museum, Montgomery

A Selection of Montgomery's Historic Buildings

After looking at the old pictures we walked outside to find the town has changed remarkably little. Of its two main streets, Arthur Street has gained some parked cars, but little else.

Arthur Street, Montgomery

Its timber frame buildings remain unmolested…

Timber framed buildings, Arthur Street, Montgomery

…while Bunner’s Hardware store which is well into its second century is another Whovian enterprise. This TARDIS stocks everything from a coffee cup to a lawn mower...

Bunner's Hardware store, Arthur Street, Montgomery

...and the Dragon Hotel, a former coaching inn, provides food, drink and accommodation, as it has done since the 17th century.

The Dragon Hotel, Montgomery

While Broad Street, the other main street starts from Montgomery's Georgian Town hall.

Montgomery Town Hall, Broad Street

The Checkers is also in Broad Street and we went there next. It is the subject of the following post, so this one skips nimbly forward to ….

27-July-2107

St Nicholas' Church, Montgomery

After an excellent breakfast – and more delicious pork products from Neuadd Fach - we walked down Broad Street, across the B4385 (the ‘main road’ through Montgomery) and up Church Bank…

Looking down Broad Street from Church Bank, Montgomery

…to St Nicholas’ Church. The photo below was taken across the town from near the castle, about the only place you can see the building in its entirety. The nave is early 13th century (c1227) and the transepts were added around 1275. A spire was added in 1543 but that was taken down and replaced by the current tower in 1816. That late addition looks wrong to me and spoils the exterior….

St Nicholas, Montgomery

…but the interior is wonderful. The western part of the nave has a 15th century hammer beam roof, visible at the top of the photograph below, while the central part has a slightly later barrel ceiling.

Hammer beam ceiling (top of picture) and barrel ceiling, St Nicholas' Church, Montgomery

The rood screen is 15th century and was brought from nearby Chirbury Priory at the dissolution of the monasteries. The ceiling beyond is part of the 1865 restoration.

Rood screen and barrel ceiling, St Nicholas, Montgomery

In the South transept is an Elizabethan canopy tomb.

Elizabethan canopy tomb, St Nicholas, Montgomery

The occupant is Richard Herbert, Lord of Chirbury who died in 1596. His family were the last to hold Montgomery Castle and it was his eldest son Edward (b 1583) who surrendered the castle in the Civil War. His 7th child was the poet George Herbert while Thomas (the 10th and last) was born posthumously. The tomb also contains an effigy of his wife Magdelene, though she is not buried here. She must have been a tough lady; despite giving birth to 10 children in 14 years she survived her husband by 31 years. She remarried and is buried in Chelsea.

Richard Herbert (present) and Magdelene Herbert, née Newport, (absent), Canopy tomb, St Nicholas', Montgomery

Beside the canopy tomb are two more tombs with heavily restored effigies.

The one with the helm is said to be another Richard Herbert who died in 1543, though the carving probably dates from earlier. The man with the flowing locks is Edmund Mortimer, who died in 1408 supporting Owain Glyndŵr at the siege of Harlech. He married Glyndŵr’s sister Catrin, while his sister Elizabeth was the wife of Henry ‘Hotspur’ Percy. He features in Henry IV Part 1 as Hotspur’s brother-in-law, though Shakespeare conflates him with his nephew the Earl of March.

Richard Herbert (possibly) on the far side, Edmund Mortimer, nearest the camera, St Nicholas, Montgomery

The Robber's Grave, Montgomery

In the cemetery is the ‘Robber’s Grave.’ John Davies (not my father-in-law but a man of the same name) was sentenced to hang for highway robbery in 1821. Protesting his innocence, he said God would prove him guiltless by not letting grass grow on his grave for a hundred years; and so it came to pass (allegedly). There is, of course, plenty of grass on it now, except where it has been worn away by the feet of tourists. I wondered as I took the photograph if the virtuous people in the surrounding graves ever get the hump that the only one to get any visitors is the convicted felon.

The Robber's Grave, St Nicholas, Montgomery

Mitchell's Fold Stone Circle

On our way home, having crossed the Vale of Montgomery into the Shropshire Hills we stopped at Mitchell’s Fold Stone Circle, or rather we stopped on the road and walked to it, a mile there and back, across an increasingly exposed and windswept moorland. And was it worth it? Of the 1,000 or so Neolithic/Bronze Age Stone Circles in Britain and Ireland, it probably ranks in the top 950, but only just. Of the original 30 stones, 15 survive, not all of them vertical. The largest stone, was once one of a pair.

Mitchell's Fold stone circle

It is difficult to appreciate what our ancestors saw in sites like this. We look down from the moor onto rich agricultural land, but when Mitchell’s Fold was erected all they would have seen was forest. I find it easier to understand the storyteller who dreamed up the medieval explanation. As the plaque at the site tells it ‘ during a time of famine a fairy gave a magic cow that provided an endless supply of milk. One night an evil witch milked her into a sieve. When the cow realised the trick, she disappeared. The witch was turned to stone and a circle of stones was erected around her to ensure she could not escape.

Looking back towards Wales from Mitchell's Fold stone circle

If you are in these parts I would not bother with Mitchell’s Fold, but little Montgomery has an important Marcher Castle, an impressive church, more old buildings than you can shake a stick at, a Michelin starred restaurant, cheaper places to eat and drink, a fascinating little museum and its own brewery. Many much bigger places offer far less.

Footnote: The Montgomery Family

Roger de Montgomery came from what is now the Calvados department of Normandy where the villages of St-Foy-de-Montgommery and St-Germain-de-Montgommery (both with two ‘m’s) can still be found. Nearby Colleville-Montgomery (one ‘m’), previously Colleville-sur-Orne, changed its name in 1946 in honour of Field Marshall Sir Bernard Montgomery, commander of the invasion of Normandy in 1944.

Although born in London, Montgomery’s family came from Ulster and were members of the Clan Montgomery who had emigrated from lowland Scotland to form part of the Protestant Ascendancy. The Clan Montgomery had emigrated to Scotland in the 12th century from the Welsh border country as vassals of the FitzAlans, so Viscount Montgomery (as he became) took his name from the Welsh town, though not from the family of Roger de Montgomery.