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17th June


By Huw Llywelyn Rees, 2013-06-17

John_James_Hughes     1024px-Вид_из_Донецкой_областной_администрации_010

The Welshman who founded the Ukranian city of Donetsk.

John Hughes  was born in Merthyr Tydfil in 1815, where his father was an engineer at Cyfarthfa ironworks.  John also became an engineer, working in Ebbw Vale and Newport, where he  patented inventions in armaments and armour plating.

Hughes later moved to London, where he became a director of the Millwall Engineering and Shipbuilding Company who specialised in iron cladding the wooden warships of British Admiralty.

When the company  received an order from Russia in 1870 to plate a naval fortress  at Kronstadt on the Baltic Sea, Hughes went out with eight shiploads of equipment and specialist ironworkers and miners, mostly from south Wales, to build a rail producing factory and metallurgical plant.

The settlement which grew in the shadow of Hughes' was named after him and hence, the town of Hughesovka (now called Donetsk) was born.  The town grew rapidly and Hughes provided schools, a hospital, tea rooms, bath houses, a fire brigade and an Anglican church dedicated to St David and St George. 

Hughes died on 17th June 1889 and the company was taken over by his four sons.  They rapidly expanded the works, especially with the need for artillery shells  at the outbreak of the First World War in 1914.  However, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 led to the departure of almost all the company's foreign employees, but the works prospered under Communist rule.



  

House of the Long Shadows  was released on 17th June 1983 

Set in a remote Manor House in the heart of Wales, the film is of historical importance in  that it is the only co-starring effort of the four masters of terror: Vincent Price, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee and John Carradine.  This is also the last film in which Cushing and Lee appeared together.  An American writer goes to a remote Welsh manor on a $20,000 bet: can he write a classic novel like "Wuthering Heights" in twenty-four hours, however,he discovers some rather odd inhabitants on his arrival. 

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This was the day in 1282 that the Battle of Llandeilo Fawr took place.  In 1282 Edward I, was attempting to subdue Wales by surrounding the armies of Llywelyn ap Gruffydd in Gwynedd.  His plan was to invade Wales on three fronts.  In south Wales, Edward ordered Gilbert de Clare to hold that area and to prevent Welsh forces travelling to reinforce Llywelyn in the north. De Clare’s army of 1,600 infantry and 100 cavalry had just taken Carreg Cennen Castle and were returning with the spoils when they were ambushed by the Welsh at Llandeilo Fawr destroying most of the English army.  The Welsh victory stalled Edward’s plans and de Clare was replaced by William de Valence 1st Earl of Pembroke.

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Born this day 1773 in London

William Madocks , the Georgian entrepreneur who built the Cob across the Glaslyn Estuary and who was also instrumental in creating the communities of Porthmadog and Tremadog

Madocks's connection with Wales had begun when his father had inherited property at Llangwyfan and Wrexham and he would have spent time there in his childhood, he later became an MP in Lincolnshire and Wiltshire, but when he inherited his fathers lands, his interest turned to Wales and especially improving its road and communication links.  To this effect, he proposed an embankment (later known as the Cob) across the Glaslyn estuary, which would connect Mid-Wales and the Llyn Peninsula.  Its contruction was long and difficult and had put Madocks into considerable debt, but it was completed in 1811 and Maddocks organised  a four-day feast and eisteddfod in celebration.

The diversion of the river caused a natural harbour and a new port  at Ynys y Tywyn (renamed Port Madoc) capable of handling ocean going sailing ships became established as the demand worldwide for Welsh slate began to grow from the nearby Blaenau Ffestiniog's slate quarries,  Maddock died in France on 17 September 1826, whilst on a family holiday and this coincided with the start of the decine in the use of Porthmadoc, because of the development of Aberystwyth and its better rail links and then when World War One broke out in 1914, the lucrative German slate market totally disappeared. 



  

Born this day 1983 in Lisburn, Northern Ireland  (she and her mother moved to Hayscastle nr Fishguard when she was four and she now considers herself Welsh and is a fluent Welsh speaker) 

Connie Fisher, winner of the 2006 BBC talent contest,  How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? subsequently playing the part of Maria von Trap in The Sound of Music in London's West End and has gone on to star in many varied singing roles, even though she suffers from "congenital fusion anomalies" which resulted in her having to undergo an operation on her vocal cords. .  She has also been in a recurring role as Amanda in the TV drama series Casualty and starred in her first TV drama. Caught In A Trap.   In August 2009, she was made a member of the Gorsedd at the National Eisteddfod in Bala.



A research study  by Peter Donnelly, professor of statistical science at Oxford University and published on 17th June 2012, concluded that the Welsh are among the "most genetically distinct" inhabitants of Britain.

500,000 points in the DNA of, 2,000 rural dwelling people who had all four grandparents born in the same area were tested, with the results showing that the Welsh carry more DNA  dating back to the tribes that colonised Britain after the last Ice Age 10,000 years ago, than most other parts of Britain.  However, the most genetically distinctive were the people of the Orkneys, whose genes show them to be of mainly Scandinavian origin.

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Born on this day 1886 in Staylittle, near Llanidloes

Sir David Brunt - regarded as the "Father of Meteorology".

During military service in the First World War, Brunt first got involved in the practicalities of weather forecasting,  following concerns about the irresponsible use of poison gas as no one at the time knew how winds would disperse it.

After the war, he joined the Met Office at a time when the use of aircraft was rapidly increasing and the need for detailed weather forecasting was paramount.  Brunt was a brilliant mathematician and excelled at the collection and analysis of the highly complicated and vast amount of data regarding the temperature, pressure and wind strength of atmosphere. He served as President of the  Royal Meteorological Society  from 1942 to 1944

When nearing the end of his career, Brunt tried to link weather conditions and human health and concluded that the ideal climate for healthy humans is in New Zealand.

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Delphine Richards

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The Seedy Side Of Life In Rural Wales


''A friend is a good egg, even if they are slightly cracked - blessed are the cracked for they shall let in the light''

Buy ''Blessed Are The Cracked'' here

Read our review here

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blessed-are-the-cracked AmeriCymru: Hi Delphine and many thanks for agreeing to talk to AmeriCymru. Care to introduce your recent book in general terms for our readers?

Delphine: My new book Blessed Are The Cracked is the first in a planned series of three set in the fictional west Wales farming community of Llanefa and featuring retired detective Tegwyn Prydderch. It has been described as ''dark crime'' with some disturbing scenes. A reviewer wondered if tourists would think twice about holidaying in west Wales after reading this!

AmeriCymru: 'Blessed Are The Cracked'' consists of a series of five novellas and two short stories. Why did you choose this unusual literary configuration?

Delphine: The novella is making a bit of a comeback by all accounts and this appealed to me as I have enjoyed a few ''shorter'' novels. I read somewhere that people lead such busy lives these days that they don''t want to commit themselves to a very long novel and I thought it was worth trying. However, my courage failed me when I thought about writing a single novella as I''m not convinced that such a work by an unknown writer would hit its mark. I have enjoyed books such as ''A Visit From The Goon Squad'' (Jennifer Egan) and ''Hearts In Atlantis'' (Stephen King), where a series of novellas were combined and inter-linked through characters and over several decades. The more I thought about it, the more apt this seemed for ''Blessed''. I pretty well let the stories set their own length which explains why they range from 10,000 to 22,000 words (for the novellas). Of the two short stories, ''The Family Man'' just seemed right at its length but ''The Perfect Wife'' wanted to run for longer. I decided against it because it is written entirely in dialect and, although I can hear the voice clearly in my head, I wondered if readers would find it difficult to follow if it went on for many more pages.

AmeriCymru: We know that you draw on your experience as a police officer in rural Wales for inspiration. Can we ask if there are any particular cases which are reflected in the stories in ''Blessed''? One shudders to think that the events related in ''Donald''s Cat'' for instance, might have had a basis in fact.

Delphine: Sadly, abuse is common to all police officers, so there is nothing in those stories that I have not dealt with at some time. ''Donald''s Cat'' (Donald is named after my horse, by the way!) is not based entirely on real events but I have had dealings with people becoming trapped in some way - with varying outcomes. As far as the explosives store is concerned, at one point I was involved with going to inspect explosives stores at local privately owned coal mines. They had a regular inspection by police and the security aspect was very rigorous - the earth bank for instance, as mentioned in the story, was a definite guideline. I am a bit claustrophobic and it used to make my hair stand on end every time I saw the explosives store and I used to wonder how awful it would be to become trapped in one.

The story that mimics real life the closest is ''Heatwave (Tegwyn''s Story)'' which was extremely similar to an event I remember as a young teenager. My father worked for the Electrici ty Board and he came home one day and told us about a Meter Reader who had been attacked by a hippy on drugs (though not to the extent it happens in the book). There had also been a murder there that day. It was a big wake-up call to all of us who lived in the area and had never had to lock our doors and cars.

AmeriCymru: ''Blessed Are The Cracked'' is a superb title. How did you come by it?

Delphine: Much as I would love to take the credit for this, ''Blessed are the cracked, for they shall let in the light'' is a quote from Groucho Marx. When I was halfway through writing this book, I had a jokey email from a friend. It showed animals and people doing the daftest things. It contained that quote and then added ''A friend is a good egg, even if they are slightly cracked - blessed are the cracked for they shall let in the light''. The email formed part of the story where Kay receives it from her best friend - the reasons becoming apparent as the story continues! It sort of stuck in my mind and I eventually changed the title to its present form. Strangely enough, the first thing people say is how much they love the title - it has convinced me that I made the right decision! I think it also sums up its slightly off-beat tone.

AmeriCymru: You will be visiting the US in the near future. Can you tell us more about your itinerary?

Delphine: Having never been on a plane until 1998, I have found that I love travelling! A major operation prior to that date made it impossible to fly, so when that medical decision was turned around, there was no holding us back. My husband and I have been to the US twice before but I have never been to New York. So, next April, we are going to an event and meeting up with friends at Lancaster, Pennsylvania but going to New York first. I''m hoping that there will be some interest in my book and I will be able to sell/sign a few while there.

AmeriCymru: Do you read crime fiction? If so, who? What other genres or authors currently interest you?

Delphine: I have a fairly varied choice of reading. I love Nicci French, Sophie Hannah, Ruth Rendell (especially Rendell''s non-Wexford novels - she always creates some kind of weirdo that hooks me like a magnet!). I''m reading a Jodi Picoult book at the moment - I came across her books in South Africa three years ago and I am working my way through them. You will not be surprised to hear that I also like Elmore Leonard - thank you for your kind review on that topic! I am also a huge Stephen King fan - will I sound like a stalker if I say I''ve had a photo taken outside his house? (But, hey, he''s welcome to come and have a photo taken outside MY house!)

AmeriCymru: We know that you are currently working on a follow up to ''Blessed Are The Cracked". Care to tell us more?

Delphine: The follow up to Blessed is to be a complete full length novel rather than the series of novellas (unless I am convinced to do otherwise). I am already well into it though as it goes back a year or two before Blessed, I''m constantly checking the timeline - not as easy it sounds - some characters just WANT to be there but when I check, they''ve already been killed off!

The third book (optimism is a fine quality in a writer, don''t you think?), goes forward to events that Tegwyn Prydderch becomes involved with after Blessed. I''m hoping that Blessed continues to sell well enough to make these two ''new'' books a reality. So far, Blessed has reached No 36 in the Amazon Top 100 in its category, but there is a long way to go yet! Check out the link to my author page and details on Cambria Books or Literature Wales and look up Writers'' Database.

AmeriCymru: Any final message for the readers and members of AmeriCymru?

Delphine: I think it''s great that a country the size of the US has some affinity with Wales (which is only slightly bigger than New Hampshire, I believe). If American readers are supporting Welsh writers by buying their books, then I feel very humbled and grateful. I also hope that writers can give something back to those who live in the US but are ''missing'' Wales. Diolch i chi gyd.

Delphine Richards.


16th June


By Huw Llywelyn Rees, 2013-06-16

Nelson Mandela received the Freedom of the City of Cardiff on this day 1998

His visit to Wales attracted a huge public interest and during a walkabout prior to the ceremony, he took time out to sing with a group of local schoolchildren.

Accepting the honour, Mr Mandela acknowledged the magnificent support that the people of South Africa had received from the people of Wales, during their struggle against apartheid.

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Today is the feast day of Saint Quiricus (Gwyl Giric)

The cult of "St. Giric" was widespread in post-Roman Wales and his feast day was one of the principal Welsh holidays, as codified by the laws of Hywel Dda.

Saint Julietta and her son Saint Quiricus (Giric) were martyred in AD 304 in Tarsus in south-central Turkey, according to legend, Julietta and the three-year-old Giric had fled to Tarsus and were identified as Christians. Julietta was tortured and when Giric, who was being held by the governor of Tarsus, scratched the governor's face, he was killed by being thrown down a set of stairs. Julietta however then celebrated  her son's death as he had died a martyr.

In anger, the governor then decreed that Julietta should be beheaded and her sides ripped apart.  Their two bodies were later rescued by two maids, from a heap of criminal's corpses and buried nearby.  In Wales, there is a least one church dedicated to the saints, in Llanilid, Mid Glamorgan, but named as St. Ilid and St. Curig.

 



On 16th June 1982,  Welsh miners and seamen backed health workers' demand for a 12% pay rise and brought the South Wales coalfield to a standstill.

 24,000 miners downed tools, with some also joining health workers on picket lines, because they regarded the Conservative's policies, unjust and hostile to both of their interests.  Also, more than 15,000 people, including building workers, civil servants and gas, electricity and water board workers, marched through the streets of Cardiff in support.

 



16th June 2013 was the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World's 30th anniversary. 

The  competition  takes place every two years at St David's Hall, Cardiff and attracts the world's finest classical singers at the start of their careers.  It is organised by BBC Cymru Wales and is televised by BBC Four and BBC Wales TV and broadcast over radio channels BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio Wales and the Welsh language BBC Radio Cymru. It is supported by Welsh National Opera and the City and County of Cardiff. 

The 1989 competition was particularly noteworthy with Welsh baritone Bryn Terfel winning the Lieder prize. Many prominent singers have served in the jury, including Carlo Bergonzi, Geraint Evans, Marilyn Horne, Gundula Janowitz, Sherrill Milnes, Christoph Prégardien, Dame Joan Sutherland, Dame Anne Evans and Dame Gwyneth Jones.  On the day between the two competition finals, some of the jury members give master classes to some of the non-finalists, which are open to the public.



Born this day 1899 in Blaina 

Jack Gore , former Wales rugby international.  Gore played all his rugby union for Blaina, at a time when the Welsh selectors would often choose tough manual workers for the forward positions.  He switched rugby league, later joining Salford in 1925, but eventually returned to Blaina where he ran the local Kings Head pub.  Jack was often suspected of being a rugby league spy for Salford and that he was instrumental in Dai Watkins, also from Blaina, following  him to Salford.


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15th June


By Huw Llywelyn Rees, 2013-06-15

 

Terra_Nova_ship_by_Herbert_Ponting,_1911     300px-Scottgroup

 

On 15th June 1910 the Terra Nova (Scotts's Expedition to the South Pole) sailed from Cardiff

Welsh connections to the British Antarctic Expedition

 The Terra Nova Expedition also known as the British Antarctic Expedition was led by Robert Falcon Scott with the objective of being the first to reach the geographical South Pole.  However when they reached the pole on 17th January 1912, they found that the Norwegian team led by Roald Amundsen had beaten them to it.  All of Scott's party subsequently perished on the return journey and  a memorial lighthouse, erected in 1915, still exists on Roath Park Lake in their memory.

*  Lieutenant E R G R (Teddy) Evans whose grandfather was born in Cardiff, was Scott's second in command and had been planning his own Antarctic expedition before he heard about Scott’s plans.  The Cardiff connection with the expedition owes much Evans's efforts as he decided that Wales could play a valuable fund-raising role for the expedition. It was estimated that  £60,000 would be needed to fund the expedition and with no government funding, the money had to be raised by public donation. The Western Mail gave him publicity and he spent much of 1909 at speaking engagements in the Cardiff  area, eventually raising  £2500, from mainly Cardiff's ship owners and industrialists, which was more than any other city in Britain raised.  On the evening of June 13, Scott and his officers were given a spectacular farewell dinner at the Royal Hotel in St Mary's Street, however, the rest of the crew having to make do with dinner in the  Barry Hotel.  Then at one o'clock on, June 15 1910, in front of a huge crowd the Terra Nova was towed out of Roath Dock, flying the flag and coat of arms of Cardiff and the Welsh dragon.  Scott promised that the Terra Nova would return to Cardiff, which she did on June 14, 1913, but under the command of Teddy Evans.  Evans later had a distinguished naval career and was created Lord Mountevens in 1946.  

 The expedition built its headquarters on  a rocky cape on Ross Island, which Scott named Cape Evans, after Lieutenant Teddy Evans.

*  Edgar Evans from Middleton Rhossili was a member of the  e xpedition and was selected for the final expedition push that attained the Pole on 17 January 1912.  He is described as "a huge, bull-necked beefy figure"  who was "running a bit to fat" and was nearly left in New Zealand when he drunkenly fell into the water while boarding the ship.  However, he was held in such high regard by Scott, that he decided to overlook the incident.  

Evans cut his hand in an accident and the wound did not heal and subsequently began to deteriorate mentally and physically on the return journey.  As well as suffering from frostbite, he is also thought to have suffered a head injury in a fall into a crevasse, sustaining serious concussion which caused his condition to rapidly worsen.  Then according to Scott's diary, on 16 February 1912, Evans collapsed and was unable to continue.  The remainder of the party made it to the next supply depot, but when they returned to collect him, Evans's condition was critical and he died in the tent that night.

 His widow, Lois (they had married in 1904 and had three children), had a memorial plaque placed, in the church at Rhossilli and he is also remembered, with  the Edgar Evans Building at the naval establishment on Whale Island, Portsmouth.  



  David_Hughes_Parry      Bwrdd_yr_iaith_Gymraeg

15th June 1965 saw the publication of the Hughes Parry committee report on the status of the Welsh Language. 

 During the years 1963 to 1965, Professor Sir David Hughes Parry chaired a government committee whose task was to make recommendations on the legal status of the Welsh language.  

Hughes Parry was the chief architect of the report that led to the Welsh Language Act of 1967, which established in law the principle of equality between English and Welsh.  This was to begin a process of restoring Welsh as a civic language, and the Welsh Language Measure which recently passed through the National Assembly. 



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Born this day 1561 in Llansawel, Carmarthenshire

Griffith Powell - Philosopher and Principal of Jesus College, Oxford from 1613 to 1620.

During his time as Principal he "requested" various "worthy personages" to contribute to the construction of the chapel, hall, buttery and kitchen of the college, He raised £259 from merchants and gentry of London, £160 from citizens of Oxford, £341 from people in Wales and the borders, and £78 from seven members of the clergy in Wales (Richard Parry, Bishop of St Asaph, giving £66 13s 2d of this sum).  The hall still has the original panelling, three tables and two benches from the time of this work.

His careful approach to college finances also made it possible to increase the numbers of resident fellows and scholars and the college was popular with students from South Wales in particular during his time as Principal.  Powell died in 1620 and  he was buried in the Church of St Michael at the Northgate near the College.  He left his whole estate to the college.    



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Born on this day 1963 in Cardiff

Nigel Walker -  former athlete, who competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics in the 110m high hurdles and Wales rugby international.  He is currently National Director of the English Institute of Sport. 



    410px-Arms_of_the_Prince_of_Wales_(Shield_of_Peace)_svg    Battle_of_Crécy_-_Grandes_Chroniques_de_France_(c_1415),_f_152v_-_BL_Cotton_MS_Nero_E_II

 

Born this day 1330 at Woodstock Palace, Oxfordshire 

Edward the Black Prince, the eldest son of Edward III and Queen Philippa

Some of the Black Prince's connections to Wales;

1343  Edward was created  Prince of Wales,

1344   The prince was called on to furnish troops from Wales for the impending campaign in France (as part of  the hundred years war 1337 to 1453 between England and France for control of the French throne)

1346  At The Battle of Crecy, the prince  took command of the right of the army, which included a thousand Welsh foot soldiers.  It is said that the prince was thrown to the ground and was rescued by Richard de Beaumont, carrying the banner of Wales,  which he threw  over the prince and beat back his opponents.

1355   Edward III determined to renew the war with France, ordered the prince into Aquitaine, again accompanied by a large body of Welsh foot soldiers. 

1356   The prince conducted many scorched earth raids from his base in Aquitaine, burning numerous towns to the ground and living off the land, until arriving at  Tours, which they were unable to take, due to torrential rain.  The delay allowed King John II of France to catch up with them, culminating in The Battle of Poitiers.

1376   On his death bed, the prince, was urged by the Bishop of Bangor to ask for the forgiveness of God.  At first, the prince refused, but did finally join his hands and prayed that God and man would grant him pardon

*  The Prince of Wales's feathers can be  traced back to the Black Prince, as he bore  a shield of  three ostrich feathers, described as his "shield for peace" when jousting.  

 

Prince_of_Wales's_feathers_Badge_svg
 

The Prince of Wales's feathers is the heraldic badge of the Heir Apparent to the Commonwealth realms thrones.  The badge consists of a gold coronet, bearing the motto Ich Dien, with three white feathers emerging from it.

 The Prince of Wales's feathers is  traced back to the Black Prince, as he bore  a shield of  three ostrich feathers, described as his "shield for peace", which he probably used for jousting.  These arms can also be seen on his tomb chest in  Canterbury Cathedral.  The feathers had first appeared at the marriage of his parents Edward III and Phillipa of Hainault and it is, therefore, likely that the Black Prince inherited the badge from his mother.   The prince attached the  motto Ich Dien from the old English  'Ic dien,' that is 'I serve,' 

*  Philippa was descended from the Counts of Hainault, whose eldest son bore the title "Count of  Ostrevent", the ostrich (French: autruche) feathers perhaps being a pun on that name.

*  It is also suggested that the badge may have derived from the Counts of Luxembourg, from whom Philippa was also descended, and who had used the badge of an ostrich.

*  Edward III himself occasionally used ostrich feather badges and the Black Prince's brother, John of Gaunt also used  a similar coat of arms, using ermine feathers instead of ostrich.

*  The first Prince of Wales to use the badge in its modern form was Prince Arthur (1486–1502), eldest son of  Henry VII.

*  It was used by Edward VI, son of  Henry VIII, although he was never formally created Prince of Wales.

*   Only from the beginning of the 17th century did the badge become exclusively associated with the Prince of Wales.

*  Surrey Cricket Club also use this emblem as the Oval is owned by the Prince of Wales.

*   Many regiments of the British Army which have a historical connection with the Prince of Wales use the emblem as an element on their regimental badges

*   The badge is used by the Welsh Rugby Union, however, its use as such is controversial and rejected by some as a symbol of Britain rather than of Wales.


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Author of 'A Discerning Womans Guide To Manhunting'



Bel Roberts

" I am interested in the demonstration of human resilience in the face of failure and in the saving grace of humour "

AmeriCymru spoke to Welsh author Bel Roberts about her writing, travels and future plans. Works by Bel Roberts:-

BOOKS BY BEL ROBERTS

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A Discerning Womans Guide To Manhunting by Bel Roberts AmeriCymru: Hi Bel and many thanks for agreeing to be interviewed. You started writing, or at least publishing, quite late on in life. Were you always a writer? Did you always have it in mind that you would one day publish your first novel?

Bel: Whilst I was an undergraduate at Aberystwyth University (1959-62), I wrote comedy sketches and acted in them during annual Rag Week Charity Events. Later, as a qualified teacher, I taught English up to GCSE ‘A’ Level standard to pupils in 7 secondary schools in England and Wales over 30 continuous years and also achieved the position of Deputy Head Teacher in 2. In some of these schools, I contributed articles for school magazines and wrote pantomimes and sketches for end-of-term concerts, but it was only when, following spinal surgery, I retired prematurely from teaching in 1993, that I had time to write fiction with the intention of getting it published. My first short story, A Touch of Gloss, won second prize in a national open short story competition judged by novelist, Beryl Bainbridge and was broadcast twice on BBC Radio 4 during Armistice Week in 1995. Between 1995 and 2004, I won 5 national open short story competitions and further short stories were included by Honno Women’s Press in 3 of their anthologies, Catwomen From Hell (2000), Written in Blood (2004) and All Shall Be Well (2012). I have had several poems published in various anthologies. In 2000 I was awarded an MA in Creative Writing by Bath Spa University.

AmeriCymru: Can you tell us a little about your first novel ''A Discerning Woman’s Guide To Manhunting''.

Bel: T.V. sit-com series scriptwriter of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrrin and prolific novelist, David Nobbs, was my tutor on a Creative Writing Course in Ty Newydd in Gwynedd. He appreciated my robust sense of humour and encouraged me to write A Discerning Woman’s Guide to Manhunting, which took me 30 years as a serial manhunter to research and 3 years to write! It traces the desperate attempts of Geri, a retired sixty-year-old ex-teacher, to find an intellectually stimulating and sexually active partner. She is DISCERNING, so she’s looking for Mr Right – Mr Will Do just won’t do! The book is about starting again, re-defining self in middle-age and facing real limitations and challenges with a spirit of optimism. Geri not only becomes a mature student, studying alongside teenage students, but also acts as part-carer for her octogenarian mother who has the first stages of dementia but who adamantly resists going ‘into care’. Geri is typical of many middle aged women today who multi-task and get little acknowledgment for their selflessness but Geri is unusually head-strong, non p.c. and outrageously funny. She is not a defeatist, a whinger, or a dignified dear old lady. This woman is dynamite.

AmeriCymru: You have travelled and taught in South Africa and elsewhere. Care to tell us a little about your experiences there?

Bel: My partner and I first visited South Africa as tourists on a fortnight’s sight-seeing holiday at Christmas 2001. On the second day of our visit, we decided that we would like to spend our long, wet British winters there, so we invested in a small coastal shack in the Eastern Cape. Between 2002-7, we spent 6 months of the year there as ‘swallows’ ie fliers migrating to the warmth of an African summer; Chris becoming a typical ex-pat (ie spending most of his time on the Bowls’ Club green, or in its bar!), while I assisted in teaching school leavers English at two township schools. I also did a little relief work at peak holiday periods at a local AIDS & TB children’s clinic, but I had no specific duties to perform there.

I have travelled extensively abroad: New Zealand, Australia, Goa, Hong Kong, Macau, Thailand, Canada, Mexico, W. Indies and sailed down the Amazon as far as Manaus. On my retirement from teaching and as a mature student of the German Language, I visited most cities in Germany as well as other European destinations in Italy, France, Portugal and Greece. Having the time to travel is the main advantage of old age. Despite the current inconveniences at airports etc, I feel a compulsive need to travel whilst I am still mobile. I have a weak back (supported by 2 titanium posts and 8 titanium screws) but I don’t allow it to stop me doing anything. I love seeing new places and meeting different people. I attend a gym every other day and I am full of energy and enthusiasm for new ventures and experiences.

AmeriCymru: You won a number of prizes for your short stories prior to the publication of your first anthology ''Opportunity Mocks''. How did it feel winning The Bill Naughton Short Story Competition amongst others?

Bel: In 1999 I was a runner-up in the Bill Naughton Short Story Competition and in 2000 I was awarded first prize and had a second story entry in the same competition highly recommended. The winning stories were published in ‘Splinters Winners Collection’ (Waldron Dillon 1999 and 2000) respectively. It was an immense honour to win successive Irish literary awards, especially those in honour of Bill Naughton, playwright and author ( 1910-92).

AmeriCymru: Could you tell us a little about ''Opportunity Mocks''? What can readers expect to find between the covers?

Opportunity Mocks by Bel Roberts Bel: ''Opportunity Mocks’ is an anthology of diversely themed short stories, some autobiographical; some fictitious. Three of the sixteen stories are written in the ‘voice’ of a frightened, bewildered child from the past, others include that of a depressed stalker, an eccentric spinster, a victim of a confident trick and a street-wise petty thief. The protagonists of the stories, whether motivated by good or bad, are humans driven by obsessive promptings which dictate their actions and mould their characters. They are all searching for something they desperately want: love, security, survival, superiority, revenge, identity and they all fall short of their target. I am interested in the demonstration of human resilience in the face of failure and in the saving grace of humour.

AmeriCymru: What can you tell us about ''Surfing Through Minefields''?

Surfing Through Minefields by Bel Roberts Bel: ‘Surfing Through Minefields’ belongs to the hybrid genre ‘reality fiction’. I have set the story in a fictional contemporary comprehensive school in Monmouth and have researched the facts surrounding the Senghenydd Pit disaster of 1913 in such a way that the history of the event is seen from the prospective of a modern teenager and by the residents of an old people’s home who have actual mementos of the tragic event. The heroine, Lauren, is an English teenager sent to stay with her grandmother in Wales while her parents sort out their various problems. The book shows the challenges she faces settling into a strange environment and her relationship with her new school mates who are not all friendly. In History, she chooses as her special topic the Senghenydd Pit Disaster of 1913. The dreadful living standards and inhuman conditions of the miners (some younger than her when they became victims of the tragic accident) make her question her own comfortable background and middle class values. The book contains humour and champions the triumph of the human spirit over adversity.

AmeriCymru: We learn from a recent newspaper article that you intend to donate to the Aber Valley National Mining Memorial Fund. Care to tell us a little about the fund and your personal reason for supporting it?

Welsh National Coal Mining Memorial Bel: The Aber Valley Heritage Committee has set up a fund to finance a new Universal Colliery Memorial Garden which will be officially opened to mark the centenary of the October 1913 Universal Colliery disaster, the worst pit disaster in UK history. Sponsors have been buying ceramic tiles, made by local school children and bearing the names of the victims of the pit explosion. I have donated £80, the reading fees I’ve been offered by local groups, such as the Caerphilly Women’s Institute, in lieu of expenses. I have further book readings planned and I shall donate more profits to the fund from the proceeds of the book, if sales increase. My father was from north Wales and had no mining connections, but the men in my mother’s family were all coal miners. I have in my possession a death certificate issued to a cousin, who began working in the mines at 14 years of age and who died at 26 years, as recently as 1951. The causes of death are given as ‘Exhaustion and Pulmonary Tuberculosis’. I feel a sense of anger at such statistics. I was born in the Rhondda Valley, a place synonymous with coal mining; I have a great respect for all miners working underground anywhere, both present and past.

AmeriCymru: What''s next for Bel Roberts? When can we expect to see your next title in print?

Bel: I am currently working on a fictional novel influenced by my post-war childhood in the Rhondda. The MS needs to be double its present length and to give a more focused sense of ‘place’. If I were to cut down on my travelling, the book might be finished by early 2014. I am constantly torn between the two priorities in my life: writing and travelling. I am also re-editing half a dozen poems that have been lying dormant for a decade.

AmeriCymru: It is always of interest to know what our favorite authors are reading currently. Any recommendations?

Bel: I loved Hilary Mantel’s biographies of Thomas Cromwell: ‘Wolf Hall’ and ‘Bring Up The Bodies’ and eagerly await publication of the last book of the trilogy. By contrast, I’ve recently finished reading and reviewing Duncan Whitehead’s debut novel ‘The Gordonston Ladies’ Dog Walking Club’, a black-comedy crime story, which I found hilarious. Duncan is an English ex-pat now living in Florida.

AmeriCymru: Any final message for the readers and members of AmeriCymru?

Bel: I am pleased and honoured to be part of the cultural twinning of Wales and America through Americymru. I wish you full success with the Eisteddfod Poetry Competition and I look forward to reading more of the entries online. I will do my best to keep updating my membership page and to keep abreast of your news, so that I bolster my friendship with authors and readers across the mountains and The Pond that separates us. It warms my heart that there are readers so far from Wales who are interested in, and who appreciate, what I write. It makes the backache worthwhile. Diolch!


BRG - One Day Collective


By Jacob Whittaker, 2013-06-14

WATCH A VIDEO OF THE ONE DAY COLLECTIVE ON CULTURE COLONY -
http://www.culturecolony.com/videos?id=12731

ONE DAY COLLECTIVE is a project by BRG
that took place on the 24th March 2013 throughout
public spaces in Cardiff.

BRG is a practical
investigation and research group focusing on
collaborative processes.

ONE DAY COLLECTIVE was part of 'Intercourse'
a project curated by Elbow Room that explores
participation as an artform.



ONE DAY COLLECTIVE is:
Rosie Benn-Squire
Elen Llwyd Roberts
Georgia Hall
Sara Hexter
Leo Garcia
Jess Matthews

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The Cellar Bards


By Jacob Whittaker, 2013-06-14

The Cellar Bards are a diverse group of poets and prose writers whose philosophy it is to both share their own words and give support to fellow writers respectfully and inclusively. They were formed in June 2012 and meet monthly at The Cellar Bar in Cardigan to enjoy a lively and vibrant evening of live literature over a pint or a coffee. Part of the audience is made up of writers who regularly contribute their own work, while the remainder are there purely to listen and experience the spoken word in its many forms, from poetry to short prose to novel extracts. All who choose to attend can be sure of the space and the attention they deserve to share what they have written.

The Cellar Bard group has a thriving and active facebook site, with over 140 members from across Britain and the wider world, a large percentage of whom regularly post their work and offer support to other writers. In this way, the community exists both in the "real" world and in the virtual one.

Watch performances from the bards on Culture Colony - http://www.culturecolony.com/videos?id=12827

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Sean Harris , whilst hailing from abackground inprintmaking, is perhaps best known for his work in animation - and mesmeric images which uniquely combine print, landscapes and prehistoric objects. In creating experimental films that explore both personal and wider cultural mythologies, he has collaborated extensively with major museums across the world including The British Museum and the Smithsonian Institution.

At Oriel Mwldan, he presents a new and very personal piece The Wild (made with financial assistance from the Arts Council of Wales) alongside other works which explore both the human impulse to 'capture' resonant moments in time andthe timelessness of the creative process itself.

Watch a video about Sean Harris and his work on Culture Colony - http://www.culturecolony.com/videos?id=12803

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Absent But Not Forgotten is an ongoing collaborative art project between west Wales artists, Kathryn Campbell Dodd and Jacob Whittaker.

Belief in the paranormal can be controversial; but there is a strong human desire to find pattern and meaning in the unexplained. Absent But Not Forgotten uses video and sound experiments, textiles, furniture and technical objects to evoke the world of ghost hunting through site-specific installations. The project considers the associations, clichs and influences of TV and films on the phenomenon.

Exploring the aesthetic language of ghost hunting, paranormal documentary and horror film, the work questions the urge towards paranormal interpretations for uncanny or unexplainable phenomena and makes parallels between the obsessive nature of processing the data from paranormal experiments and the artists creative process.

Be our guest, Oriel Davies, Newtown.
29 June 2013 - 04 September 2013


Who is this who is coming takes as a starting point the idea of the haunted B&B; many such establishments are rumoured to have a resident ghost and indeed, it is often a selling point to prospective visitors.

This new installation references the classic 1968 television play Whistle and Ill Come to You directed by Jonathan Miller from the original ghost story written by MR James in 1904. It features the breakfast scene in a guest house whereby an empirically minded Cambridge Professor declares his scepticism regarding the supernatural but later comes to find himself prey to a terrifying otherworldly force.
The plays simple but haunting treatment conjures an atmospheric cautionary tale which warns against the rigidity of fixed academic opinions as the professor illustrates with his self-satisfied corruption of Shakespeares quotation from Hamlet, There are more things in philosophy than are dreamt of in heaven and earth*

* There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.

Hamlet (1.5.166-7)

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Burry Port courier company Celtic Couriers Ltd has fought off stiff competition to be crowned South West Depot of the Year 2012.
Part of the APC Overnight network, which consists of 115 depots across the UK, Celtic Couriers Ltd was identified as the best performing company in 2012 - fending off competition from more than 17 contenders throughout the South West.
Accepting the award from Olympic medallist Kriss Akabusi at a glittering awards ceremony held at the Hilton Metropole in Birmingham, Depot Principal Gail Skinner said: This is a fantastic result and the perfect way to end a really successful year.
Since founding the business in 1989 and joining the APC Overnight network in 1994, the business has gone from strength to strength.
We have a really strong group of local customers. We know that, for them, our ability to offer next day delivery throughout the UK from our base in Burry Port is a key advantage.
Were now hoping to make 2013 even more successful for the business than last year.
More than 500 people in the APC Overnight network saw the Celtic Couriers team collect the trophy, as part of the companys All Depot Meeting 2013.
Steve Cornwell, the Head of Network at APC Overnight, said: Celtic Couriers Ltd maintained incredibly high customer satisfaction levels and a phenomenal delivery success record throughout 2012.
As an overnight courier company with a reputation for excellence in customer service, we need our depots to reflect these values which is exactly what Celtic Couriers does day in, day out.

About Celtic Couriers:
We've built our reputation through providing innovation and believe in having close contact with our customers to ensure that both our long-term interests are met. Frequent, fast, flexible and efficient, we can take everything from documents through to 1250kg pallets and transport them to local, national and European destinations.
Our delivery times cover next day before 9am, before noon, before 5pm or at a time specified by you. If you want service levels like these that are second to none - talk to Celtic Couriers.
Celtic Couriers was formed in 1989 by Gail and Ivor Skinner who are still the directors of this local company. Celtic Couriers cares passionately about all its customers and is always endeavouring to seek ways to enhance its service levels.
We are shareholders in APC Overnight, the largest next day parcel delivery network with more than 120 depots in the UK.
Celtic Couriers are also licensees for the Fortec Pallet Distribution Network, the premium next-day and economy pallet distribution service.
Contact details
Call: +44 (0) 1554 835490
Email: info@celticcouriers.co.uk
Fax: +44 (0) 1554 835059
Celtic Couriers Limited, Unit 1 Burry Port Industrial Estate, Burry Port, Carmarthenshire, SA16 0NN
Website
http://www.celticcouriers.co.uk
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/celticcouriers
Twitter - @CelticCouriers

About APC Overnight
APC Overnights network is unique. It is owned and run by independent local delivery specialists connected into a strong managed system, so customers will always talk to someone local to them.
APC Overnight is investing 16.5m in a brand new national sortation centre, which is currently under construction. The new centre will more than double the companys current capacity.
APC Overnight was named the Express and Stars Business of the Year in 2012 and 2013, making it the only company to have won the same award twice.
For more information on APC Overnight, visit
http://www.apc-overnight.com/


Photo:
(left to right)
Gary Hall, APC Overnight national network manager, Gareth Jenkins, general manager Celtic Couriers, Gail Skinner, Depot Principal Celtic Couriers, Olympic medallist Kriss Akabusi, Cindy Jenkins, account administrator Celtic Couriers, Liz Thomas, traffic supervisor Celtic Couriers, Sally Milligan, administration Celtic Couriers, Ivor Skinner, Celtic Couriers co-founder and director, and Syed Ziaullah, chief executive APC Overnight. Front, Mark Westacott, driver Celtic Couriers.
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