Blogs
This message was received today from Alwyn Griffiths and is the official notification to the winner of the Celticos/AmeriCymru Trail Tour:-
A message from Alwyn
Llongyfarchiadau/Congratulations to Brett Hull
I hope you can soon visit us in Wales to participate in the ameriCymru trail tour, or of course you pass the price on to friends or family..Please feel free to contact me on alwyn@celticos.com to redeem your prize.
It has been enjoyable, exiting experience working with Ceri in creating the competition and I would like to take this opportunity to thank Ceri for his hard work. Diolch Ceri.
The ameriCymru trail is generating a great deal of interest on both sides of the Atlantic, both Ceri and myself will keep the ameriCymru members informed of all latest developments.
The Celticos team is looking forward to meet and give our guests from North America a Croeso Cynnes/Warm Welcome
Congratulations/Llongyfarchaidau to Brett Hull. If you want to learn more about the AmeriCymru Trail Tour go here:-
Celticos/AmeriCymru Trail Tour
"The unpurged images of day recede;
the Emperor's drunken soldiery are abed."
Flirting at the Funeral and Cillian Press are going to Gort Festival!!
Is America named after a Welshman?
On this day 1496, John Cabot received the letter of authority from Henry VII to make a voyage of discovery to North America
It has been suggested that the name, "America" was derived from the name of Richard ap Meryk, anglicised to Richard Amerike a wealthy Bristol merchant of Welsh descent, who was the principal owner of the "Matthew", the ship sailed by John Cabot, the Italian navigator during his voyage of exploration to North America in 1497. However the more widely held view is that America is the named after the Italian explorer, Amerigo Vespucci.
Richard Amerike was born at Meryk Court, Weston under Penyard, near Ross-on-Wye in 1445, Herefordshire and was a descendant of the Earls of Gwent. he came into contact with John Cabot when Cabot came to Bristol in 1495 hoping to find sponsors of a voyage of discovery. At that time, Amerike and other Bristol merchants were trying to find new sources of fish and other resources and so impressed were they with Cabot, that they arranged an audience with King Henry VII who gave Cabot the authority to make the voyage and claim lands on his behalf.
The legend grew that the North American continent had been named for him because he was the main sponsor of the voyage and that his coat of arms was similar to the flag later adopted by the independent United States.
On this day 1295 the Battle of Maes Moydog occurred.
After the death of Llywelyn ap Grufydd in 1282, his brother Dafydd had taken up the mantle and continued the fight, however on his capture and public execution in 1283, Edward I hoped that Wales would be pacified. He also introduced the English shire system and English laws, with The Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284 and poured an enormous amount of money and effort into both the rebuilding of damaged castles and the construction of new ones. The Welsh however resented English rule and rebelled unsuccessfully in 1287 and 1288. Welsh discontent was brought to a head in 1294, when the payment of an unpopular tax coincided with the raising of Welsh troops for Edward's campaign in Gascony.
30th September 1294 - Welsh soldiers assembling at Shrewsbury, due to march to Portsmouth for Edward’s campaign in Gascony, mutinied and killed their English officers, the rebels rallied around a distant cousin of Llywelyn, Madog ap Llywelyn and several Welsh castles were put under siege.
October 1294 - Edward mustered an army at his customary base of Worcester, to send reinforcements to a besieged Brecon Castle.
5th December 1294 - Edward led an army to Wrexham as the Welsh had managed to push the English out of North Wales into Chester. Some 10,000 rebels surrendered and were pardoned on the condition they serve with Edward in France. Madog, however, managed to convince his followers that it was better to die defending their homeland, than in a foreign land.
24th December 1294 - Edward was joined at his new castle on the Conway Estuary by Reginald de Gray’s force of 11,000 men
12th January 1295 - Edward sacked Nefyn, but on the return journey, they were ambushed by Welsh forces near Bangor who retook the booty they had taken from the town. The King and most of his force survived and made it back to Conway, where they were besieged.
5th March 1295 - Madog marched on Shrewsbury and camped at Maes Moydog, near Montgomery. However, 2,500 English from Oswestry under the command of William de Beauchamp approached the Welsh camp and routed the Welsh army. The English lost just 90 men, the Welsh 700
10th March 1295 - The Welsh lost a further 500 men following a midnight sortie of their camp.
15th April 1295 - Edward sent a force to occupy Anglesey and ordered the construction of Beaumaris Castle.
Edward received surrenders and pledges of allegiance from all over Wales. Madog went on the run but was eventually forced to surrender and imprisoned in the Tower of London for the rest of his life.
Born this day, 1886 in Pontypridd
Frederick Hall Thomas, known as Freddie Welsh - World lightweight champion.
In the early part of the 20th century, the area around Pontypridd produced more champions than any other comparably sized region in the world and Freddie Welsh was one such champion.
Freddie was a sickly child, suffering from consumption and his parents were advised for him to take up boxing to strengthen his lungs. Freddie was a natural and when aged sixteen, he decided to further his career in America, where initially, he just earned enough to live as a hobo or migratory worker, jumping trains to avoid paying the fare, but he soon became a professional boxer and his fortunes changed.
To start with, he took the name Freddie Cymro but changed it to Freddie Welsh on the advice that the pronunciation may confuse the American public and soon established himself on the East Coast. However, Freddie then returned to Wales to look after his seriously ill mother and subsequently became British and World lightweight champion.
The Britannia Bridge connecting Ynys Mon (Anglesey) with the rest of Wales was opened on 5th March 1850.
The tubular, wrought iron box section bridge was designed and built by Robert Stephenson for carrying rail traffic but was rebuilt as a steel truss arch bridge to carry both road and rail traffic, following a fire in 1970.
When sharp-shooting Annie Oakley and the legendary Buffalo Bill Cody visited Wales at the beginning of the last century, the crowds just couldn’t get enough of them. Pont Books author, Phil Carradice, has always been fascinated by their story and was inspired to write an account of their visit through the eyes of a young street boy. The Wild West Show follows the adventures of a young boy called Sam who finds himself embroiled in a dangerous situation when he witnesses a coldblooded murder…
When Buffalo Bill bursts into town with his band of Indian braves and sharp-shooting cowboys, crowds throng the streets of Cardiff. They all want a glimpse of the world-famous Wild West show. Amongst them, enjoying the colour and excitement, is young Sam Thomas. But it isn't long before he's in danger. Without a home or family to turn to, who can Sam trust and where will he find a place to hide?
This adventure story is sure to keep the readers engaged with its many twists and turns and Sam’s survival is uncertain until the very end of the novel. The book also includes a section entitled For the Historical Record for those interested in learning a little more about the history that inspired the author to write The Wild West Show.
Phil Carradice is a freelance writer, consultant and broadcaster. He regularly holds creative writing workshops in schools and colleges. A former teacher and headteacher, he hails from Pembroke Dock, but now lives in the Vale of Glamorgan. Phil has a strong interest in history and writes a regular blog for the BBC Wales website – Phil Carradice on BBC Wales
The Wild West Show is available from all good bookshops and online retailers.
For more information, please visit www.gomer.co.uk
Hollywood and music legends unite for charity single in aid of the Welsh National Coal Mining Memorial. Rugby fans will be given an exclusive first look as the music video is launched ahead of the Wales v England game at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
The single, which so far has been kept strictly under wraps, will feature the singing talents of: Aled Jones, Caroline Sheen, Daniel and Laura Curtis, Dennis O'Neill, Darren Parry , Ioan Gruffudd, Iris Williams, Jamie Pugh , John Owen Jones, Jonathan Pryce, JP Jones , Mark Llewelyn Evans , Matthew Rhys, Paul Child , Paul Potts, Rebecca Evans, Rhys Meirion , Samantha Link , Sian Phillips, Tom Lukas, Wynne Evans . With special spoken contributions by Michael Sheen, Boyd Clack, Joe Calzaghe and the late Richard Burton with the kind permission of the Dick Cavett Show. The song also features over three hundred local musicians, choirs and bands from around South Wales including BTM Brass Band, The Gentlemen Songsters Choir, The Richard Williams Singers, The Aber Valley Male Choir and one hundred and twenty school children. The bass guitar on the song is played by World renowned musician Pino Palladino.
The recording of the song has taken place at locations all over the World. Co-producer and composer Laura Curtis said We wanted to reach out to Welsh artists across the world and invite them to take part. Many of these artists have hectic schedules due to them being in the middle of filming TV series or films. Going into a recording studio wasnt an option for them, so we came up with the idea of using iPads and iPhones for them to record their lines. The quality once mixed into the song is really high and the results have been brilliant.
The song has been written and produced by Daniel and Laura Curtis from Caerphilly. This is not their first mining related project, in September 2012 they organised an underground concert in a mine to honour those who lost their lives in mining disasters. The concert involved lowering a piano 300 ft underground for the first time.
After being made redundant in 2011, Daniel Curtis made the decision to follow his life-time passion and become a self-employed professional musician and project manager, specialising in music events. Due to close family ties with coal mining he decided to put his efforts into a project that would raise money for a cause that was very important to him.
Daniel Curtis said My two great grandfathers died in mines and after the emotional experience of performing the concert underground last year I wanted to create a song that paid tribute to the legacy of coal mining. The response that we have received has been amazing and we have tried to involve everybody who has wanted to take part. Each artist has added their own personal style to the recording and made the song something very special. We are delighted with the way that it has turned out.
Dan and Laura with Michael Sheen
Michael Sheen OBE said I want to lend my support to this incredibly worthy cause that is part of our history and our heritage. I hope that everyone will get behind this and give it the boost it deserves."
The Prime Minister, David Cameron has also expressed his support saying; We owe a great debt to those who were, and continue to be, involved in the industry. We cannot forget those who lost their lives in mining related disasters over the years, including Senghenydd. I wish the single every success.
The National Coal Mining Memorial will be unveiled on the 100th anniversary of the Senghenydd disaster where 440 people died in the UKs worst ever coal mining disaster. The National Memorial will be a national monument to remember the over 8,000 people who have died in Welsh coal mines. The memorial is costing over 220,000 and will contain a walk of remembrance, monument and garden.
The song will be available to buy from the 16 th March in Tesco on iTunes, Amazon and many other outlets nationally. The song can be pre-ordered from www.nationalminingmemorial.co.uk
The production of the single has been sponsored by a number of local businesses. The two primary sponsors are Giovannis Restaurant in Cardiff and Foy Wealth.
Storming review of Flirting at the Funeral in NWR99: Keil writes beautifully..... Thank you very much!
Author Returns to a Time When Kids Could Play Outside
Tom Evans new book hearkens back to a time before parents saw threats behind every tree


OXFORD, England (PRWEB) November 01, 2012
Tom Evans new book When Kids Could Play Outside (published by AuthorHouse) is a true, controversial account of a young boys journey through his formative years, transporting readers back to the 1970s, when playing outside in the South Wales Valleys had very few rules or restrictions. It was an era, Evans says, full of fun, freedom, pranks, competitiveness, danger and discovery.
An excerpt from When Kids Could Play Outside :
Three old women have gone to the trouble of carrying their wooden dining chairs out into the street and are sitting in the sunshine supervising the activities like lifeguards on watch at the local swimming pool. The street seems to be a hive of activity, laughter, and fun.
The energy, the sound, and the smell are exhilarating as I stand there silently savoring every minute, frightened that it may be taken away from me at any time. I am home, and this is the best time in my life. Maybe I am in heaven.
You know, its strange, but I have no recollection or very little memory from before this moment in time. Somehow it feels like my young body was an empty shell, just waiting for this moment, my arrival, and my rebirth.
Evans hopes that readers will find that When Kids Could Play Outside transports them back to a time full of fun, freedom and danger! It will make them laugh at the pranks and inspire them to encourage their own children to get off their PCs and get out in the sunshine .
About the Author
Tom Evans was brought up and educated in Mountain Ash, Mid-Glamorgan, then moved to Witney, Oxfordshire, England. For the past 25 years, Evans has worked in manufacturing, after training as a work study engineer with Japanese giant Hitachi in the 1980s.
Evans has been happily married to Deborah, his high school sweetheart, for over 25 years. They have three children: Curtis, Sadie and Tayah.
Evans decided to write When Kids Could Play Outside after noticing just how much fun and freedom the young generation of today have been deprived of.
AuthorHouse, an Author Solutions, Inc. self-publishing imprint, is a leading provider of book publishing, marketing, and bookselling services for authors around the globe and offers the industrys only suite of Hollywood book-to-film services. Committed to providing the highest level of customer service, AuthorHouse assigns each author personal publishing and marketing consultants who provide guidance throughout the process. Headquartered in Bloomington, Indiana, AuthorHouse celebrated 15 years of service to authors in Sept. 2011.For more information or to publish a book visit authorhouse.com or call 1-888-519-5121. For the latest, follow @authorhouse on Twitter.
Born this day 1800 in Risca
William Price - Physician and eccentric (pictured in ritual, Neo-druidic attire whilst on stage)
He trained as a doctor in Caerphilly and after qualifying from the Royal College of Surgeons in London in 1821 he returned to Wales to practice. He became involved in Chartist politics, becoming a local leader and after the Chartist march on Newport in 1839, he fled to France disguised as a woman, whilst in France, he visited the Louvre museum, where he became highly interested in a stone with a Greek inscription that he interpreted as a prophecy given by an ancient Welsh prince named Alun, who would liberate the Welsh people. Feeling that that the prophecy applied to him, Price returned to Wales to free his people from the English-dominated authorities.
Upon his return, he began to get increasingly interested in Welsh cultural activities, he scorned orthodox religion, claimed to be an arch-druid and performed ancient rites on the Pontypridd rocking-stone. Price was also responsible for the building of the famous "Round houses" in Pontypridd, persuading a local builder to build them, even though he didn't own the land. At this time he had taken to wearing a white tunic, covering a scarlet waistcoat, green cloth trousers and a huge fox skin hat, he neither shaved or cut his hair.
After another spell in France, he returned and opened a medical practice in Llantrisant and in 1881 at the age of 81 married Gwenllian Llewelyn, who was only 21 and she bore him a son, whom Price named Iesu Grist (Jesus Christ), however, the infant died after five months and Price decided to cremate his son’s body upon the summit of a hill outside Llantrisant. Cremation at the time was unlawful and Price was arrested and put on trial for the illegal disposal of a corpse. However, he successfully argued that there was no legislation that specifically outlawed it and this paved the way for the Cremation Act of 1902. On his release, Price returned to Llantrisant to find a crowd of supporters cheering for his victory and in 1892 he erected a pole which was over sixty feet high, with a crescent moon symbol at its peak, on top of the hill where the cremation had taken place.
William Price died on 23rd January 1893 and 20,000 people attended his cremation on a pyre of two tons of coal, on a hillside overlooking Llantrisant.
A relatively unreported and serious riot took place on 4th March 1919 in the Canadian Army Camp at Kinmel Park, near Abergele in North Wales.
There was discontent among the 15,000 Canadian soldiers waiting to be repatriated after World War One, as the place was a sea of mud, sleeping conditions were cramped and blankets in short supply. On top of this, food rations had been halved and many had not received their pay for over a month. The tipping point seemed to be when it was announced that the ships designated to take the Canadians home had been allocated to the Americans.
The men at Kinmel were infuriated and after nothing was done following several protests, the mood turned to outrage. Some of the soldiers looted and started fires in Quartermaster's Stores and officers' messes. Rifle shots were exchanged with officers resulting in the deaths of three rioters and two guards, with many others being wounded.
The mutiny was put down the following morning and 78 of the Canadian soldiers were arrested. However the incident was "hushed up" and the remaining Canadians had been transported home by 25th March.
Born this day 1948 in Ely, Cardiff
Shakin' Stevens, (born Michael Barratt) "Shaky - Pop and rock and roll singer and songwriter who was the biggest-selling singles artist in the UK in the 1980s, entering the charts on 33 occasions.
Born this day, 1955 in Llandudno
Joseph Patrick "Joey" Jones, former Welsh soccer international, who won 72 caps. He also won the European Cup with Liverpool and is best remembered for his uncompromising style of play and committed attitude.
Born this day 1924 in Rhuthun
David Oswald Thomas, who was a philosopher, best known for his interpretation of the work of the philosopher Richard Price.
After his early education at Denbigh Grammar School, he became a bank clerk, followed by military service in the RAF. After demobilization he entered the University College of Wales at Bangor, where he studied philosophy, taking a particular interest in the political philosophy of Richard Price. Thomas felt that thinkers like Price had received insufficient attention and made the eighteenth-century Welsh philosopher his life's work. In 1977, he published the definitive study of Price, The Honest Mind.
The Statute of Rhuddlan was enacted on this day 1284.
After the defeat and deaths of Llywelyn and Dafydd ap Grufydd, Edward I, had all but conquered Wales militarily and consolidated his position by completing his castle-building program, with Caernarfon, Conwy, Harlech, Beaumaris, Flint and Rhuddlan forming a defensive ring. Boroughs were created around these castles and English traders invited to settle. The Welsh, however, were forbidden to inhabit the boroughs, or to carry arms within their walls.
Edward then turned his attention to dominating Wales politically and gradually sought to undermine the Welsh legal systems, part of this process was the enactment of The Statute of Rhuddlan, which created laws regarding debt, inquests, pleas, trials, and juries, all in accordance with English common law and administered by Sheriffs. The statute established the counties of Anglesey, Caernarfonshire and Merionethshire, to be governed by the Justice of North Wales, Flintshire to be governed by the Justice of Chester and Carmarthenshire and Cardiganshire governed by the Justice of South Wales. The rest of Wales came under the governance of the Marcher Lords as their reward for their part in defeating Llywelyn and became more or less quasi-independent. Another significant aspect of the statute involved the Welsh system of dividing property among all male heirs, this was allowed to continue, to prevent the building up of large Welsh-owned landed estates, but illegitimate sons were not permitted to inherit, however if there was no male heir the inheritance could pass to females. Also, females had the right to a dowry for the first time in Wales.
Throughout the 14th century, the draconian English rule eased as the Welsh adapted to English domination, with many native Welsh, especially on the Marches, holding positions of importance and many Welsh mercenaries, with their legendary skill with the longbow, finding employment in the campaigns in France. Yet under the surface, all was not what it seemed, resentment of the English regime was deep rooted and was to resurface on the death of Edward III and the arrival of Owain Glyndwr.
On this day 1927, J.G.Parry Thomas died attempting to break the Land Speed Record.
John Godfrey Parry-Thomas was born in Wrexham in April 1884, the son of a vicar. From an early age, he was fascinated with engineering and studied electrical engineering and by 1908 he had designed an infinite ratio electrical transmission (now viewed to be 70 years ahead of it’s time) which was used in London buses and railcars. Parry-Thomas was also much in demand on government advisory boards during WWI and later became the chief Engineer at Leyland Motors and designed the Leyland Eight luxury motor car, owners of which included the Maharajah of Patiala and Michael Collins, the Irish revolutionary leader.
Thomas then decided to become a professional racing driver and by 1925 had switched his attention to the Land Speed Record, which the following year he broke, driving his car "Babs" at 170mph on Pendine Sands. However his great rival Malcolm Campbell soon regained it, so on 3rd March 1927, Thomas arrived back in Pendine, unwell with flu in an attempt to re-take the record, but during the attempt, the car skidded, rolled over, slid along the beach and burst into flames.
Thomas was killed and Babs was buried in the beach. However in 1969 Babs was dug up and restored by Owen Wyn-Owen an engineering lecturer from Bangor Technical Collage and is now on display at the Pendine Museum of Speed.
Born this day 1863, in Caerleon.
Arthur Machen, author and mystic, who is best known for his supernatural fantasy "The Great God Pan", which was described by Stephen King as "Maybe the best horror story in the English language"
In a referendum held on 3rd March 2011, the people of Wales voted in favor of extending the law-making powers of the National Assembly for Wales.
The winner of the Celticos/AmeriCymru Trail Tour competition is Brett Hull who nominated Thomas Jefferson. A representative of Celticos will be in touch with you shortly. Congratulations/Llongyfarchiadau Brett