Ceri Shaw


 

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Reprinted from the 'Sancler Times' by kind permission of Alan Evans

The mid to late 19th Century saw a massive increase in emigration from Europe to the United States. Sometimes it was for religious reasons like the Mormons or to escape political persecution as in Russia and Eastern Europe. More often however it was simply a desire to seek your fortune and a new life in the exciting expanding economy of the new world. Often these dreams ended in disillusionment and sadness. For others by dint of ambition and hard work, they achieved their goals and ended up with great success and a life style they might have not achieved had they stayed in Europe. Wales provided its share of ambitious emigrants, and there are many stories of Welsh men and women who did extremely well in their new homeland. One such story that involved a family from Carmarthenshire is that of Jane Rees and her brothers, Thomas, Charles, and James. They came from a well-known Lower St Clears family, several of whom were burgesses and involved in the towns affairs. Their grandfather John and father David were builders and cabinetmakers.


Jane was first to emigrate in 1869 leaving to marry a man called Jeremiah Reeves. Jeremiah was a native of Dorset whom she had met whilst he was studying the trade of boiler making and structural iron working in Wales. Jeremiah had emigrated to Pennsylvania two years earlier in 1867, and had already had found work there. On Janes arrival they were married and set up house together. Four years later in 1873, by dint of hard work, Jeremiah and his brother Jabez who had also emigrated managed to start their own boiler works at a town called Niles in the next door state of Ohio. Their success in this encouraged them nine years later to sell their business and take over the operations of the much bigger, but ailing Dover Rolling Mills in the same state in 1883. They renamed the company The Reeves Iron Company with Jeremiah as its head and Jabez as plant superintendent. Again by dint of hard work and business acumen, they had become by 1896 one of the largest employers in that part of Ohio, employing nearly a thousand workers.

By the turn of the century they were so prosperous that Jeremiah and his son Samuel sold the mills to a subsidiary of U.S. Steel. Samuel formed a new company and called it the Reeves Manufacturing Company, which again produced steel and other metal products. Unfortunately Samuel died tragically soon afterwards, and Jeremiah had to come out of retirement to resume control of the company. The new company continued to prosper, building four new mills in 1912, and then branching out into banking, transport and the hotel industries. By now Jeremiah and Jane were extremely wealthy and besides their splendid Dover residence they had a winter home in Palm Springs Florida. Jeremiah died there in 1920 and Jane died there in 1926.

Undoubtedly the success of their sister and brother in law encouraged Janes brothers James, Charles and Thomas to make the same journey across the Atlantic. James and his wife Amelia arrived in Dover in 1892 time of the plants sale to U.S.Steel, its General Superintendent. James following the family tradition was a skilled builder and cabinetmaker having trained in Liverpool and London, and when the plant was sold he used this experience to remodel the beautiful and large mansion, which had been bought by his sister and brother in law.


J.E.Reeves carriage home house museum This splendid house is now known as the J.E.Reeves Victorian Home and Carriage House Museum and was donated by Jane and Jeremiahs last surviving daughter Agnes to the Dover Historical Society. The society was fortunate also to inherit the original furnishings and heirlooms belonging to the house. The society has been able to restore the house accurately and show visitors how the house looked in 1900, when the Reeves family were at the height of their prosperity. I am indebted to Mrs Patti Feller of Dover Ohio U.S.A. Mrs Feller is the Great Grand Daughter of Jane Reess brother Thomas. Mrs Feller is now a guide for visitors to the Reeves home and is able to explain its connections to Wales. It is now 140 years since Jane Rees left St. Clears. Mrs Fellers visit in 2009 has maintained a link with St Clears that has now survived for four generations. Mrs Feller hopes that her grandsons visit will ensure it is carried on for further generations.
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Reproduced with permission from DavidWestern Lovespoons

After due deliberation David is pleased to announce the winners of the design element competition for this years West Coast Eisteddfod Lovespoon . The finished piece which will be on display at the event at the Barnsdall Art Center between September 23rd and 25th, incorporates three design elements which were selected by popular suggestion and vote both here and on the AmeriCymru website . From an initial list of about 30 suggestions the final slate was whittled down to just five contenders. Here are the three winners:-


3. Cerdd: The harp is seen as the symbol of Welsh music (Cerdd is the word for music in Welsh). The Welsh are renowned for their musicality and music is always an important part of the Eisteddfod experience.


2. The Awen: Awen is a Welsh word for "(poetic) inspiration". Used historically to describe the poetic inspiration of the bards, it is a beautifully apt and very stylish symbol for an Eisteddfod spoon!


1. This lovely design by Laura Gorun includes the ever popular Welsh Daffodils and leeks. These iconic symbols of Wales are always a beautiful addition to any lovespoon design!









The Harp design won outright with 24.36% of the vote whilst the Daffodils and Awen both tied for second place with 21.79%. The winners each of whom will receive a copy of David's book, "The Fine Art of Carving Lovespoons" are:-


  1. Jennifer Brodeur
  2. Brian Y Tarw Lwyd
  3. Laura Gorun


Many thanks to all who contributed designs and/or voted in the competition. We will present the first two named winners with their prizes at the West Coast Eisteddfod in September and Laura's copy will be mailed.

Please don't forget that the principal purpose of all this is to raise funds for this years event. So if you have a few ( or many ) dollars to spare please consider buying a few tickets for the grand prize draw which will take place at the Eisteddfod. You can enter the prize draw via the 'Donate' button in the right hand column on David Western's Lovespoon Blog or in the left hand column on the home page on AmeriCymru.net.

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New Tom Jones Biography


By Ceri Shaw, 2010-10-27

tom jones still rockin front cover detail A new warts-and-all biography tells the full story of Tom Jones' amazing career: his innumerable affairs, his friendship with Elvis, and his brush with Charles Manson. It decscribes how he hit the heights, outselling Frank SInatra at the Copacabana night club, New York and the 5,000 bedroom keys that got thrown at him at Caesar's Palace, Las Vegas.

However there were many lows as Tom Jones continually reinvented himself from young rock-and-roller in Pontypridd to sixties hip-swiveller to seventies cabaret king, and then, under the strict direction of his own son Mark, to mature rocker and born again gospel singer with the recently released Praise and Blame .

Now 70 years of age, Tom Jones says, "I'll still be belting out tunes when they're trying to nail me down." The biography also highlights Tom's attachment to his Welsh roots and to his wife and childhood sweetheart, Linda Trenchard -- which is, according to the author, "the craziest thing of all in the rascal's ultra-crazy life."

Author Aubrey Malone, says: "Tom is a flawed icon but an irresistible one, going up the down staircase, refusing to stay down for long. His huge belief in himself as The Voice made this the thing people would always remember when the knicker-throwing stopped."

Aubrey Malone has also published biographies of Ernest Hemingway, Charles Bukowski and Brendan Behan. This biography, Still Rockin' , sells for 6.95 and is published by Y Lolfa at www.ylolfa.com .

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From the Ning Blog:-"The 6pm release will include the following updates to our Chat feature:* Chat will now match the theme or CSS of your network.* Emoticons and icons have been updated to work more seamlessly with dark backgrounds.* An online/offline flag will be available for you to toggle your status while you are on a page with Chat.* The More feature will be fully functioning and you should be able to switch between pages of members in your Chat feature.* Server updates to improve availability and stability.This week we will also be adding a clear messages option for Network Creators and Administrators to remove current text in a chat room.Along with these major updates, weve fixed a host of smaller bugs and issues throughout the weekend. While there will be some hiccups with Chat today and this week as we continue to optimize this new feature, it should be increasingly stable and polished with each passing day.Thanks to all who worked with us this weekend on the beta release, reporting issues and providing feedback! Please continue to let us know as you find issues with Chat and we will address them as soon as we can. Well have another update once we complete Chat release this evening Pacific time."
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Welsh poet Paul Steffan Jones won this year's (2012) West Coast Eisteddfod Online Poetry Competition with his entry  When You Smile You'll Be A Dog No More . Read the winning entry below. AmeriCymru spoke to Paul about his winning entry and about his work in general.



AmeriCymru: Congratulations/Llongyfarchiadau on winning the 2012 West Coast Eisteddfod Poetry Competition and many thanks for agreeing to talk to AmeriCymru. Your poem 'When You Smile You'll Be A Dog No More' was the winning entry. Care to tell us more about the poem?

Paul: Diolch. I am delighted to have won this competition. The poem is a reaction to the death of my mother in July 2011, the Gleision mining disaster later that same year and the 1938 murder of my Treherbert ancestor Thomas Picton by Spanish war criminals. It deals with grief and how it affects the personality and one's core beliefs.

AmeriCymru: How would you describe your relationship with words, with the raw matter of your craft?

Paul: My relationship with words has become more flexible, more trusting over the last two years. I am favouring a partly abstract approach to writing because I feel that what's going on at present in the UK doesn't make much sense and it's my job to reflect that feeling of nonsense to some degree in my work. It's good I feel to deconstruct a narrative so much that the narrative disappears leaving the naked and mad beauty of words that seem not to belong together but somehow work against the odds. I allude to this in When You Smile You'll Be a Dog No More. It is even more challenging when reading this type of poem to an audience. I believe it's important to try to find new ways of conveying messages, creating tension and provoking reaction.

AmeriCymru: Your blog features a number of original works. Will they be anthologised? How satisfactory/useful are digital media for poets?

Paul: Some of my blog writings have appeared in collections and others may do so in the future. I have found that having a blog has provided me with feedback that I would not otherwise have had. It provides additional encouragement in a fairly lonely genre.

1367_blogs.jpg AmeriCymru: Your first anthology Lull Of The Bull was published by Starborn Books. Where can readers obtain a copy?

Paul: A small number of copies of Lull of The Bull are available at www.starbornbooks.co.uk and a few book shops in West and South Wales.

AmeriCymru: What's next for Paul Steffan Jones?

Paul: My second collection, The Trigger-Happiness, will be published by Starborn Books in the next few weeks. A third collection, Junk Notation, has already been written, a reaction to relationship breakdown, poems punctuated by short stories. I am working at the moment on a potential book called Ministry of Loss which again deals with grief and also the massive population change in rural Wales since the 1960s. I look forward to taking The Trigger-Happiness to a wider audience. I hope that one of its poems will feature in an exhibition in Kyoto, Japan next month.

I will continue to fight the UK Coalition Government's austerity measures from within the ranks of the Trade Union movement.

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

Paul: There are a lot of good but unknown poets in West Wales who deserve to be heard. I'm sure that a similar situation exists in the U.S.A. I would like there to be closer links between lesser-known Welsh and American poets.



When You Smile You'll Be A Dog No More

I wake up

I wake up dead

I had been dreaming of cardboard

home made signs on unclassified roads

which directed me to 20,000 saints

or 20,000 whores

its hard to decide

everything is everything else

nothing is nothing

let me sleep

my bed my kingdom

Im sick of having to make sense

if theres still such a thing

the holes and the cracks

that await filling or recognition

our father gives us brown envelopes

containing our mothers careful accretion

we have all done loot

I will glory in her memory

decorate those who have managed

to live to retirement age

who have lived before death

I am overdue a bombweed and overgrown motte

Grand Tour

with a redundant cinema gravedigger hunchback

to disinter Nazis to kill them all over again

the art of leaning on a farm gate to view

wood lice jigs

the tail end of a hurricane

mould and its cousins

fungicide and its offspring

cry when miners die in the sides of hills

in the tombs of the underworld

in the caress of water

cry when they say your name

when the pain overpowers

when the clues expire

cry as men cry

faces to the wall

the tears of candles

the clowns of town down

the anti-condensation flotilla at full tilt

freelance apologists freely lancing

cwtsh into the huddle

taste her tears so near

impressing me as much

as I had expected

but not in the manner anticipated

women with bruised faces

the views from floors

fight for your smile

you know the one

and I will fight for the right to fail

and the secrets we think we are keeping

removing my shirt though its cool

nakedness of diaphragm

for what I am

the long arms of brambles through fencing

Impressionist paintings in river reflections

the source of the Nile

the source of fibre

persisting with bent nibs

everybody lies

everybody smells

everybody disappoints

this towns got much to answer for

eat what you are

food replaces sex

those poached brains

shopping as sport

lions as lambs

distance will bring us together



Paul Steffan Jones

Interview by Ceri Shaw


Cymraeg yn dilyn (Welsh follows)

ADVANCING 101: HOW TO HAVE A GREAT SHOW BEFORE SOUNDCHECK BEGINS...
Been invited to play at a festival? Putting on gigs? Looking to play live more?
Next week
were inviting bands, musicians, managers and promoters to hear practical hints and tips on the nuts and bolts of performing at festivals and other gigs. The organisers of
Swn are here to help you find out the essentials and understand the jargon involved with playing a show - from sorting out tech specs to learning about input lists...be clued up and prepared for what promoters may ask of you and how to make their (and your own) lives easier.
Good practice advice and discussion so you're ready and switched on from the beginning - when applying to play...right through to show time.
Led by Tour Manager Fionna Allan who's worked with LCD Soundsystem, Beth Ditto, Hot Chip, The Pipettes and The Kills amongst others. As well as working on Swn, Fionna's also been involved with Green Man Festival and the Melbourne International Film Festival.
FREE session
14th December 2011
16:00 17:00
Dylan Thomas Centre
1 Somerset Place
Swansea
SA1 1RR
Spaces are limited. Register HERE
(N.b. This is the rescheduled Advancing 101 from 28th October 2011)
Please also see details of our Stakeholder Meeting in Swansea later that day, from 6pm,
HERE .

ADVANCING 101: SUT I SICRHAU SIOE WYCH CYN DECHRAU EICH YMARFER SAIN
Wedi eich gwahodd i chwarae mewn gyl? Yn trefnu gigs? Hoffech chi berfformio fwy yn fyw?
Wythnos nesaf ydym yn estyn gwahoddiad i fandiau, cerddorion, rheolwyr a hyrwyddwyr i ddod i wrando ar gynghorion ac awgrymiadau ymarferol yngln manylion perfformio mewn gwyliau a gigs eraill. Mae trefnwyr SN yma ich helpu i ddysgu am hanfodion perfformio a deall jargon y maes - o tech specs i input listsfelly dewch draw i ddallt y dalltings ac i baratoi eich hun at ofynion posibl hyrwyddwyr a sut i hwyluso pethau iddyn nhw - ac i chwithau!
Cyngor ymarfer da a thrafodaeth fel eich bod yn barod amdani or cychwyn cyntaf o gyflwyno cais i chwarae ir perfformiad ei hun.
Arweinir y sesiwn gan y Rheolwr Teithiau, Fionna Allan sydd wedi gweithio gyda LCD Soundsystem, Beth Ditto, Hot Chip, The Pipettes a The Kills ymhlith eraill. Yn ogystal gweithio gyda SN, mae Fionna hefyd wedi bod yn gysylltiedig Gyl y Dyn Gwyrdd a Gyl Ffilm Ryngwladol Melbourne.
Sesiwn AM DDIM 14 Rhagfyr 2011
16:00 17:00
Dylan Thomas Centre
1 Somerset Place
Abertawe
SA1 1RR
Mae llefydd yn brin. Cofrestrwch YMA
(D.S. Dymar digwyddiad Advancing 101 a gafodd ei symud o 28ain Hydref 2011)
Gweler hefyd fanylion ein Cyfarfod Rhanddeiliaid yn Abertawe yn ddiweddarach y diwrnod hwnnw, o 6 pm ymlaen, YMA .


Welsh Music Foundation Ltd.
33-35 West Bute Street
Cardiff Bay
Cardiff
CF10 5LH
Tel: 029 2049 4110
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A highly acclaimed writer and academic, whose memoirs recall scenes from a varied and exciting life in many countries, will again find himself in a politically delicate situation when he takes his new book to the Istanbul Book Fair.

Ned Thomas is renowned as founder of the Mercator Institute in Aberystwyth, and leader of the campaign to establish a Welsh daily newspaper, Y Byd ( The World ) says Meleri Wyn James from the Lolfa press. He will be travelling to Istanbul on the 28 th of October to take part in a public debate about literature and publishing in minority languages. This is an area in which Ned and the Mercator Institute have considerable expertise.

Its a controversial subject because of the Kurds present situation, says Ned Thomas. "The Turkish government, having applied to join the European Union, is keen to be seen to conform to European standards in the treatment of its minorities, but there is still a lot of opposition to the public presence of Kurds as a distinct group, and it is unlikely that they will be taking part in the discussion on the public stage in Istanbul.

But representatives from Western European minorities, including myself, will in any case meet with Kurdish cultural movements on the festival fringe. They are on the threshold of exciting times in the history of their language and culture, and deserve our full support.

Ned Thomas will be amongst a small group from Wales attending the Istanbul Book Fair including Mari Sion and Nia Davies form Mercator and Sian Melangell from Wales Literature Exchange. The Book Fair attracts over 500 publishers and will be the setting for the international launch of Ned's book. The Wales launch takes place in Aberystwyth on November the 4th.

Ned Thomas, who now lives in Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, spent a migratory childhood in Wales, England, Germany and Switzerland. These early experiences fostered a spirit of adventure and in his book Bydoedd ( Worlds ) we follow him on several journeys visiting the Pope as a child, avoiding the enticements of female KGB agents in Moscow and meeting members of ETA in the Basque Country. Back in Wales he is accused of being a spy, sets up Planet Magazine, and switches off the TV mast at Pencarreg during the campaign for a Welsh television channel in the company of Dr Meredith Evans and Principal Pennar Davies.

a unique and penetrating autobiography, Gareth Miles, Taliesin
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