South Pembrokeshire
Transcription
South Pembrokeshire
SOUTH PEMBROKE SHIRE MARY BEATRICE MIRE HOUSE THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID PROF. CHARLES A. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE ' SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE SOME OF ITS HISTORY AND RECORDS BY MARY BEATRICE MIREHOUSE LONDON DAVID NUTT, 57-59 LONG ACRE, 1910 i^V^ W.C. — PREFACE me It seems to to be the duty of and preserve the records collect may story of the ages care to read love, and To all and ; case, has been a labour of instruction. down I dedicate this book as facts to fill any theories of facts recorded in the chronicles. Camden's ' ; in my which I own, nor in the pictures faintly outlined chiefly indebted to the following For these I am : Britannia.' Lewis Dwnn's ' of the past, so that the are interested in unravelling the story of who made any attempt by the my and full of interest set in every age to run on unbroken for those who this, in the days that are gone have not some ' Visitation of Pembrokeshire.' George Owen. Description of Pembrokeshire.' Tour through Pembrokeshire.' R. Fenton. E. Laws. 'History of Little England beyond Wales.' James Notes on the Sheriffs of Pembrokeshire.' ' Historical ' Allen, M.A., ' Private Letters of the late Esq., Chapter I and Egerton and I. have written Allen. Dean Allen, of G. A. Holme, others.' contains the General History chiefly of places too ; in Chapter IL remote to have attracted 1^3171763 PREFACE vi more than passing notice from most historians, records nevertheless should not be forgotten deals with existing, of names, and which I the quaint ; but whose Chapter provincialisms only mention those which I III. still have myself heard used. M. B. M. Angle, April, 1910. CONTENTS CHAPTER I PAGE HISTORY I CHAPTER II RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES CHAPTER ... 34 III OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS. . . 70 SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE SOME OF HISTORY AND RECORDS ITS CHAPTER I HISTORY In 843 Rhodri Mawr, son of Mervyn, the Freckled, King Mona of (Anglesey), married Angharad, daughter and a.d. 843. Rhodri Mawr, King heiress of Meurig, Dyfed and Cardigan, and of inherited practically the whole of Wales bind it but he did not together into one kingdom, and the Kelts con- tinually fought each other. reign, ; also was slain Rhodri, after thirty years' one Sunday in Anglesey by Saxons. His three sons fought against each other and devastated the land. Hubba In 877 the Viking, one of three brothers who overran England from the East Coast, spent the winter on Milford Haven, giving Hubberton ; his Popton (Pebba's followers ton), his also Hubba warships, and slain. sailed left to Hubberstone and behind at theirs Studdock (Studda's Dokk or Wogaston (Wogan), Harding's others. name Hill (Hardingr), from Milford with met the Saxons in pit), and many twenty-three the Severn, was defeated 877. Hubba. ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 2 Hywel the Good, HyweiDda. Hywel Dda, grandson or Rhodri of Mawr, married Elen, daughter of Llywarch ap Hyfaidd, King of Dyfed, and so acquired it by marriage, as his grandfather had done before him. 948. Hywel Dda was King Hywel Dda. good laws, which he went to 948, in 905, Hyfaidd 892. his father Owain. Llywarch died and his of all South Wales, he made Rome to learn it he died in son Owain inherited Dyfed and Cardigan. from Aberffraw in and they took refuge in In his time the Gaels were driven Anglesey; ; was destroyed, Dyfed. In 981 the Danes landed and destroyed 981. 983. "^ Mered^dd. David's, St. but were beaten off by Einion, Owain' s son. Owain died 983, and Einion the year before, 982 his brother Meredydd succeeded, but died 994, leaving an only daughter, Ang; On barad. his death the Glamorgan men, aided by Danes, and burnt Narberth and invaded Dyfed, and the land was again torn with hideous David's St. strife and blood- shed. In 1021 Olaf Haroldson, 1021. oiaf~orNor''*^" Dyfed, and again pillaged King St. Norway, invaded of Many David's. of his Vikings settled afterwards along the coast, giving their names places to Islands, Caldy, such Ongull as Angel or and Skokholm hook), (a Hasguard, Tenby (Dane-bi, Dane's house) derive Tenby from Denbigh of northern Denbigh), brandston, the fel, rock, fell), thus fishes, Fishguard, some, again, Dinbych-y-Pysgod, distinguished from Hakin (Haakon), Haroldston, Thorney (Havard's Fiord), Welsh the ; Grasholm (Thorn Orielton Skyrme Ey or Island), (Oriel-ton), (Skroemi, of Her- Haverford Scourfield name the a (Skergiant) ; — HISTORY also Danish and Norse names to things in common use, such as In Lake Laekr, running water. Creel Krili, Grip Grip, a ditch. Miskin Myki, muck-heap. Haggard Hayguard, hay-store. Rhys 1077 Rhodri's eldest son, a basket. Tewdwr, descended from Cadell, came from Brittany, was joined by at 1077. Rhys ap Tewdwr, Grufudd ap Kynan, descended from Anarawd, Rhodri's second son, and between them they conquered and divided South Wales. In 1081 William the Conqueror his Normans as were the ; came to South Wales with lo8ii he was descended also from the Norsemen, William men of Pembrokeshire, them, and threw off allegiance to they therefore welcomed the Kymri. entertained at St. David's by Bishop Sulien. William was William died and shortly afterwards Rhys ap Tewdwr was driven away to Ireland but he collected an army and returned, and reconquered the land in a great battle at Llechryd in 1087, ; and another I. 1087. William I. Rhys ap Tewdwr, The Normans, however, and he was defeated and beheaded at St. Dogmael's. prevailed in the long run, near Brecon, leaving a son, Grufudd, and a daughter, Nesta. In 1094 Martin de Turribus, or Martin Norman baron, landed at Fishguard, Tours, le a and estabhshed 1094. Martin Le Tours. himself as Lord Marchier of Cemaes, making with Newport as the capital. Sir a march, it Marteine Lloyd, present owner, traces his descent direct from Martin Tours. Some trace Castlemartin and also to Martin le Tours, others to Martin's Mordyn, or the ' the le Haven seaman,' B 2 SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE as the guardian of the coast in ancient days Roger de Montgomery, Earl wife, Mabel, Montgomery, and and and five son his Shrewsbury, had a of He had wicked sons. Robert (caUed For Kilgerran, trying to drive out the Welsh. Arnuiph de called, Mordyn. his habitation Gastell wicked was de taken Belesme) this purpose another son, Arnulph de Montgomery, landed in Milford Mont- Haven, and gomery though his Castle, WlUiam I. Gerald de Windsor. was but a very simple one earthworks fortress First siege of fortification Pembroke and green turf. Pembroke is derived from Pen-vro, the High Rock. Arnulph de Montgomery's of 1090, the site of the present fortified was built in logo, and was handed over to the command of Windsor. In 1092 the Welsh again overran Dyfed and Gerald de Windsor, formerly Castellan of bcsieged Pembroke, the garrison were hard pressed, with only four pigs left ; these Gerald de Windsor cut threw contemptuously over the was more plentiful within were not deceived ; show that food than without, but the Welsh however, a letter he caused to be found near the Bishop's Palace at was walls, to up and his enemy), telling Lamphey (Lanfey, the Bishop, Arnulph de Montgomery he needed neither stores nor reinforcements for four months, tricked and the siege was raised. In 1094 the Welsh again rose, and this brought William Rufus to Wales, and again in 1095 William met his death them 1094. WUliam 11. 1095. Henry I. successfully, ; by Tyrrell's arrow shortly afterwards, and was succeeded by Henry I., Beauclerc. Arnulph de Montgomery and his brother Robert de Belesme conspired against Henry, and Arnulph strengthened Pembroke, and sent Gerald de Windsor to ask help of the Irish ; he joined with his old enemies the Welsh (among them Grufudd, son of Rhys at Tewdwr), ; HISTORY and 5 Norman-Keltic-Kymric host grievously harried Amuiphde this Henry besieged de Belesme at Shrewsbury, and banished de Belesme and Arnulph, the latter the Midlands. took it, to Ireland. Gerald de Windsor, of course, also lost the Pembroke Castellanship of his place, but not for long) ; (a who had been Henry's Henry forgave Gerald and Pembroke giving him also Carew as his and, for her sake, ; reinstated him at dowry, where Gerald built the wife's Saer taking he married Nesta, the beautiful daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr, mistress named knight ceraw de Windsor. castle, also the early Castle of Manorbier. About 1 107 a part of Flanders was overwhelmed by H07. the sea, and the survivors emigrated to England, finding Flemish colonisation. already many compatriots there, who had come William the Conqueror's queen, Matilda of over with Flanders they begged Henry to assign them a place to dwell He Henry in. i. them on the Tweed, but after four years bethought him of making them useful as a check on the ever-turbulent Welsh, and so assigned them the first established strip of land lying along the coast of Pembrokeshire between Tenby, Pembroke, and Haverfordwest. (Hwlfordd, Kymric corruption of the old Norse Havard's Fiord sometimes mentioned as Hwlfordd East.) ; Hereford is In those days the Flemish and English languages were not more unlike than are the dialects of Yorkshire and Somerset now. Cadwgan ap Blethyn, Prince of Powis, held an Eisteddfod at Cardigan, and the bards sang At Christmas of the much off. nos. 1108, beauty of Nesta, the wife of Gerald de Windsor, so that Owain, Cadwgan's son, determined to carry her Claiming kinship with her through her father, Rhys ap Tewdwr, he was kindly received at Pembroke (some Henry . i. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE Owaln ap Cadwgan. Owain ap Cadwgan. GUbert Clare. HISTORY two brothers, Meredydd and Rhys, in revenge took Tenby, and put its defenders to death. So the racial war waged on from generation to generation, the land perpetually torn and harassed by the struggle grievously injured ; his and the taking and re-taking of castles and strongholds. Henry H. Plantagenet succeeded Stephen in 1155, and The Flemings sent yet more Flemings into Little England. 1155. Henry II. introduced weaving, also the long-handled, heart-shaped In shovel, found besides only in Belgium and in Ireland. 1157 Rhys ap Grufudd and Henry being Grufudd' s only surviving son II. ; made peace, Rhys but the peace lasted II57- Rhys ap Grufudd. but a very short time, and fighting broke out again. In 1 169 Dermot, King of Leinster, came to Bristol to him to his kingdom. Richard de Clare, Earl of Pembroke and Lord of Striguil, surnamed Strongbow, made a pact with him, and they were joined by three of the grandsons of Henry II. by Nesta. Gerald de Barri, grandson of Gerald and Nesta, better petition Henry's help to restore known as Giraldus Cambrensis, the historian, 1 169. strongbow. born at Manorbier 11 46, was then a lad of sixteen he did not go with the expedition to Ireland, but two of his brothers ; went with it. All these grandsons of Nesta founded the famihes of Fitzhenry, Fitzgerald, Geraldine, and Carew or They Nesta and Carey, which are to be found in Ireland to this day. ^^^^ were led by Robert Fitzstephen, grandson I'^^^l^^^ of Stephen, CasteUan of Cardigan, and sailed in three ships from Nangle in April 1170, Henry II. himself being with They met with success, and were afterwards reinforced by a large force of Welsh and Flemings under them. Earl Strongbow, Eva. Henry II. who married King Dermot' s grew jealous, lest Earl daughter, Strongbow should °^ 1 1 70. Henry II. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 8 become King Ireland, of and therefore stopped sending upon which the tide of success turned. Then King Dermot died. Henry summoned Earl Strongbow to England, and the quarrel was patched up then supplies to the army, ; Henry passed on to Pembroke (where the hawking and hawks particularly pleased him), and on October 18, 1172, 1172. Strongbow. Second Invasion of again set from Nangle to Ireland, with a large company. sail Earl Strongbow was made Governor and died of Ireland, Ireland. June 1177. I, The 1 177. following brokeshire and Ireland are common Stacpoole. de Barri Barry. Roch Roche. Canton Canton. Bosherston Bosher. Nangle Nangles of Meath. Castlemartin, Pem. Castlemartin, Meath. of Bangeston Beneger. Synnet Synnetts of Wexford. Gwyn Wynne. Giraldus Cambrensis was in due time appointed Canon He was of Hereford. livings of Henry Rhys ap Richard Coeur de Lion. II97- I., Pem- : a reformer, and particularly bitter against the marriage of the Welsh priests Grufudd. to Stackpole Beneger Glraldus Cambrensls. names ; he held the Llanwnda, Tenby, and Nangle. Rhys ap Grufudd then again attacked West Wales, his son Maelgwyn took and burnt Tenby. Pembroke, Wiston, Lamphey, Manorbier, and Carew alone held out, all the rest he overran. He died of II. died 1189, and the plague in 1197, his daughter Gwenllian married fed Fychan or Vychan (Kymric, small), and her son, EdwyGrono HISTORY ap Edwyfed, was the Owen great, 9 great, great-grandfather of Tudor, grandfather of Henry VII. of St. David's, Peter de Leia, Bishop '^ part of the present cathedral, who died in built a great 1199. Giraidus Cambrensis, Giraidus Cambrensis greatly wished to succeed him, but his wish was not realised. Isabel, ' He died in 1220. Countess of Pembroke, only child of Earl Strong-^ bow and Eva, daughter ° of WiUiam Marechal, Master He Earl of Pembroke. King " Dermot, married of the Horse, who in 1189 probably built the whole of the ; the great King John began to reign in 1199. He granted Pembroke a new charter, and Pembroke Castle He came to Pembroke in Mill to the Knights Templars. 1210, to is certainly his. and summoned the men meet him at Holy J Cross, of South Pembrokeshire by J the east gate of the town, ° near a hospital called Marian's Chapel, pulled in 1800 by the Adams family called Holyland. Pembroke. thus became present castle, between that date and 1219 Donjon wiiiiam, Marechal, gari of down "99. John. 1210visit to Pem- broke. early to build their house, thence King's Bridge, close by, was thus called John's from King ° ' visit. He sailed from Pembroke to King John at Pembroke. Waterford, returning later via Fishguard. made war on Llewelyn ap lorwerth, Prince North Wales, who afterwards collected and united all In 1211 he of 1211. Ueweiyn ap lonverth, the Welsh chieftains both of the north and south, and them with great success against King John, but did not take Pembroke or the Castlemartin strongholds. John died in 1216, and William Marechal, Earl of Pembroke, was chosen guardian to the young King Henry III. Llewelyn ap lorwerth again overran the land, and from Haverfordwest demanded the payment of 1000 marks, or vassalage the money was paid. to himself for ever led ; i^ie. Henry iii. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 10 I., died in 1219. left to the of William, Marechal II. Earl Marechal fell in. Henry He monks Pembroke the title of Pembroke Mill, Causey Mill, Tenby, and King's Mill at Castlemartin. He was succeeded by his son, William, Marechal IL Llewelyn ap lorwerth again appeared, and harassed the land, burning Haverfordwest to the castle gates, and destroying Narberth and Wiston castles. While this was going on, the great tower of St. David's Cathedral, built by Bishop Peter de Leia, William, Marechal 1219. III. II. collected and the war raged to and a large force in Ireland, King Henry fro. at last III. patched up an agreement between the Earl and Prince Llewelyn ap lorwerth, handing over Cardigan and Carmarthen to the 1231. latter, and for a while William, Marechal peace. II., South Pembrokeshire had died in 1231, and was buried beside his father, William, Marechal He was London. Richard.Eari was I., in the Temple Church, succeeded by his brother, Richard, in iU-favour at Court, and was refused entrance who to his Pembroke, but besieged and took it after a nominal resistance. As he and King Henry were such bad He burnt the town of friends, the Welsh let him alone. castle St. at David's during a quarrel with the bishop, and was treacherously murdered in Ireland, at Henry's instigation, he was succeeded by his brother Gilbert. Prince 1234. in 1234 12^0. Llewelyn ap lorwerth died in 1240; he had married Joan, ; Earl Gilbert greatly strengthened Giib^Eari daughter of King John. Marechal. pembrokc Castle ; he died from an accident at a tourney and was at Hertford in 1241, Church. :245. His Goodrich Castle in 1245 Descendants him Marechal' Marchal for elcveu I., Walter brother days and ; ; succeeded, who Temple died at his brother Anselm only succeeded he was the Isabel, also buried in the last of the sons of William, daughter of Strongbow and Eva, HISTORY and the curse clared that thus of the II Bishop of Ferns in Ireland (who de- Wilham had robbed him fulfilled, his sons had all of two manors) was His great died childless. were divided among his six daughters, the possessions Pembrokeshire property the to falling second, married to Warine de Munchensy. He was a man and made many restorations and improvements. Joan, of peace, In 1256 Llewelyn ap Grufudd ap lorwerth, Prince of "56- North Wales, made war on the south, but did not attack Pembrokeshire ; previous to had again destroyed St. this, in 1248, an earthquake David's Cathedral. In 1260 he i^^o. Tenby. Meanwhile the Wars Henry in. plundered and destroyed ^ J ^ Wars of the In 1264 Warine Barons. of the Barons were raging in England. de Munchensy, Earl of Pembroke, was beaten at the Battle of Lewes, and went into estates were exile ; and Pembroke Castle and handed over to the Earl of Gloucester. In 1265 Earl William de Valence landed at Pembroke with 150 knights and retook the Henry castle. died III. and was succeeded by Edward I. On Christmas Day, 1277, peace was at last concluded between the English and Welsh, but war broke out again in 1282, and young in 1272, 1265. Henry iii. 1272. Edward i. "77. William de Valence, heir to the Earldom of Pembroke, was slain. Prince Llewelyn ap Grufudd ap lorwerth was also slain in a skirmish at Builth in 1283 Kymric Prince of Wales. ; he was the His descendant, Rhys ap Mere- dydd, kept the flames of war alight for a time besieging him at DrwsUyn last Castle, Sir 1283. Lastlc^mric ° ; while wa°es. Wilham Munchensy (Joan Marechal's son) was buried alive in a mine. In 1292 Rhys ap Meredydd was executed at York, and his kinsman Maelgwyn Vychan hanged at Hereford in 1295 ; with him ended the house of Rhys ap Tewdwr, which for 1295. End~the o°T^ewd^''* SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 12 two hundred years had waged such bitter and unrelenting war against the foreign colony of Pembrokeshire. That colony was of the utmost importance to England, as a check upon the wild and barbarous Welsh and it was always accessible by sea from Bristol, as the Welsh never seem to have made war on the sea. It was girdled by a ; Edward I. chain castles: of Wiston, Dale, Benton, Llawhaden, Narberth, Laugharne ; Haverfordwest, St. Clears, Picton, Llanstephan, so strong a line of defence that lower Pem- brokeshire, with the exception of Tenby, seems to have escaped during Manorbier — three times taken the end of the war Manorbier and Carew were hands of in 1150, 1186, ; and 1260. Tenby was Castle rebuilt. the latter part of the long war all still but At in the Gerald de Windsor's successors, and Manorbier was then Besides these castles and Pembroke, rebuilt. the strongest of all, there were fortified houses at Upton, and Stackpole, defended by the Malefants, Wirand Vernons, also smaller places, such as Roch and Orielton, riotts, Angle Castle, the latter ' unique in the whole of Wales,' according to Barnwell. 1283. Pembroke created County Palatine. In 1283 Edward I. created Pembroke one of the Counties Durham, and Hexhamshire (the palatinate of Pembroke was abolished by Henry After the peace there was much rebuilding and VIII.). restoring of castles in lower Pembrokeshire, and William de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, surrounded both Tenby and Palatine, with Chester, Lancaster, Pembroke towns with strong walls in Edward I.'s reign. As the land grew more settled, the townsmen grew richer, and demanded protection in their houses—no longer content to fly to the castles on the approach of danger, leaving their goods a prey to the spoiler. It was in 1298 that the HISTORY 13 Charter of Philip de Angulo was granted, of lands ' in Angulo,' and the windmill of his mother Isabella, of which a copy is given elsewhere. Wilham de Valence 1^07. -' ' ^^.^^'^^f Anguio. On died in 1296, his Countess Joan in his death his son, Aymer, became He was earl. •' an absentee from Pembroke, and died on the day that he married his third wife at Compiegne, in 1324. He was 1296. Death — I324- r 1 of Earl Wm. de vaience. buried beside his father in Westminster Abbey, and left Edward II. Possessions were death his at possessions his no children. Among -^ ° of the church and rent of Rhoscrowther, the martin, the rents, of ' Angelo,' i8s. Luna (Limney) 20d. Tenby a weekly market, of rents, Aymer de Valence granted to every Wednesday, but made no it. Aymer de of Castle- vaience. Corston {Gos or Cors, a marsh), 46s. 8d. hills of those attending manor provision for the safety of When Henry II. granted a market to Pembroke, he decreed that from sunrise on Saturday to sunset on Monday all should be safe who came from the Edward 11. ford of Lantesy (Lamphey, original Welsh Lanfydd, church of the south, Norman, Lanfoy), from Stentelbrigge (Stem- from the great Ditch of Pentecoyte (Coits' Mill), and from the Passage (Pembroke Ferry). Aymer's sister, Isabel de Valence, married John de Hastings, and her son bridge), Laurence became Earl of Pembroke. succeeded by his son John, who 1327. He, in turn, was Edward in. fought at Crecy. died in 1377, his son, the Black 1377. having died the year before, and Richard II. succeeded to the throne of England. John de Hastings Richard King Edward III. Prince, died in 1375, his son John in 1390, aged eighteen, and the Earldom and Palatinate of Pembroke Richard, who, in 1397, presented Earl of Worcester administering it it fell to King to his Queen, Isabel, the for her. In 1397, also, 1397- 11. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 14 KingRichard sails King Richard sailed from Haverfordwest with an army to to Ire- land from Haverford- quell rebellion in Ireland, landing again after nine west, in Milford Haven. months During the peaceful commencement began of the fifteenth century, unfortified country houses Probable date of Hall, Angle. to be built in Pembrokeshire. This probably the date is of the building of Hall, Angle. Owain Glyndwr, who, through his mother, Elen, house of Llewelyn ap Grufudd, of the last was Kymric Prince was born at Treffgarn in 1349, or thereabouts Owain was a his father was Grufudd Vychan (Small). favourite with King Richard, and was his esquire before his of Wales, ; overthrow by Henry Bolingbroke the Lancastrian, who 1400. Henry IV. Owaln Glyndwr. became King Henry IV. in 1400. Owain Glyndwr raised the Welsh in rebellion against him, and the same year was by them proclaimed Prince of Wales. In that year also Pembroke was in the hands of a Deputy, one Francis a Court, called Lord of Pembroke and Haverford, who administered it for Henry's son John, Duke of Bedford, Henry having ousted Queen-Countess Isabel and her representative, Francis, attacked Owain, and surrounded him on Plynlimmon, but he burst out and escaped. Henry himself then attacked him, and managed but to seduce one of his followers, William ap Tudor then a minor. ; 1403. Owain again prevailed, and strengthened his little kingdom. He was crowned Prince of Wales at Machynlleth in 1403, and afterwards marched on Carmarthen but Sir Francis a Court made terms with him and he left Little England in peace. Sir Nicholas Carew at that time held Carew Castle, ; and was 1405. Many Sir Francis's battles ambassador to Owain. followed between Henry and Owain. In 1405 Owain invited a French force to his assistance ; HISTORY 15 they landed at Haverfordwest, which town they burnt, and then marched on Tenby, where they met Owain Tenby appears to have capitulated. The English fleet ; then attacked the French the French returned flotilla in home Milford Haven ; but the following year with a loss of only sixty, so the battle could hardly have been French flo- tilla in Mil- ford Haven, a sanguinary one. In 1406 Sir Francis a Court made another league with 1406. Owain, the money paid over being lodged with Stephen Perrot of Jestynton and John of Castlemartin. kept this Owain compact, and troubled Pembrokeshire no more he died an outcast ; in Herefordshire in 1415. widow Henry of V., and mother (then a minor), gave birth to a child. it On iv. Henry v. 1413. In 1436 Katherine de Valois, daughter of Charles VI. of France, Henry of 1436. Henry VI. investigation was discovered that she had had four children since her widowhood by Owen Tudor, a Welsh soldier about the Court he was descended from Edwyfed Vychan, who ; married Gwenllian, daughter of the Lord Rhys, Prince of South Wales, who fought Tudor was imprisoned in against Edward I. Owen Newgate, but contrived to escape Owen Tudor. ; Queen Katherine died in 1437. In 1442, when Henry VI. came of age, he forgave Owen Tudor, allotting him £40 per annum. Henry VI. 's queen was Margaret of Anjou, and 1437- Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester and Pembroke, was holding, as Count Palatine, the the heir presumptive, Earl of Pembroke, Tenby, Kilgerran, and Llanstephan. Queen Margaret was his bitter enemy, and had him arrested castles of and done to death in prison in February 1447. Tudor (the 1447, Henry VI. created his half-brother, Edmund 7^. eldest son of Owen Tudor and Queen Katherine), hcmTvi. In 1454 SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE i6 Richmond and Jasper Tudor, the second son, Earl Pembroke Castle had hitherto been a sort of Pembroke. of defensible barrack, but Earl Jasper made it his home, and in 1456 his sister-in-law, Margaret Beaufort, who had married his elder brother Edmund, Earl of Richmond, paid Earl of 1456. Birth of Henry VII. at Pembroke. him a ; visit there, and on January 21 gave birth afterwards Henry VIL In 1458 Earl Jasper strengthened the walls of Tenby, 1458. making them six feet Owen Tudor, about Edward of York Wars to a son, of the Roses. wide all this time, round ; he knighted his father, and fought stubbornly against (Edward Mortimer, descendant of The Wars of the Roses were now raging England, Henry VII. representing the hope of the House Lancaster. Sir Owen Tudor was beheaded after the battle Richard I.). in of of Mortimer's Cross in Herefordshire, where the Lancastrians were defeated 1461. Edward IV. 1468. in 1461 ; and Edward of York was crowned same year. Jasper's earldom was now forfeited, and little Henry Richmond handed over to the custody of Lord WiUiam Herbert at Raglan Castle. In May 1468, Lord William was created Earl of Pembroke, the first Welshman to hold that honour Edward IV. of England in March of the ; but he was captured by the Lancastrians and beheaded the 1469. following year, 1469. King Edward IV. fled the land, and welcome Queen Margaret back was Jasper, now again Earl of Pembroke but after a defeat at Tewkesbury (young Henry Richmond with him), he fled to Pembroke, the first to ; FUght of Henry Rich- mond to Brittany. and thence by ship from Tenby to Brittany. After the battle of Mortimer's Cross in 1461, Rhys ap Thomas, Thomas ap Grufudd, the leader of the Welsh, retired with his younger son Rhys to Burgundy, where young Rhys was brought up and educated ; when they returned later to Wales, he was ; HISTORY in consequence a soldier 17 and a gentleman, very different who had never stirred from Thomas ap Grufudd was murdered after his return Wales, and Rhys ap Thomas became the head of the from his half-savage brothers, home. to house. Being a man of sound judgment and broad views, he made friends with the Enghsh, and took Carew Castle on mortgage from Sir Edmund Carew, who was going Lord William Herbert had now become Earl of Huntingdon instead of Pembroke, and Edward IV. had abroad. granted the latter to his young son. Prince Edward, so was no one there on the spot to rival Rhys ap Thomas, Lord of Carew. Rhys married Eva, the heiress of Court there Henry. After the death of a boy of thirteen, who Rhys cautiously abroad V. (Earl of Pembroke), only reigned two months, fealty to Richard III., the Margaret Beaufort, Edward Hunchback, in Brittany in 1484. Countess of Richmond, in favour of her son, Rhys swore Later on approached 1483- Edward v. Richard in. 1484. young Henry, then with his uncle, Jasper Tudor. Rhys was very cautious, but at length gave way, being absolved from his oath to Richard by the Bishop of St. David's, and (or Henry ap Edmund ap Owen ap Meredydd ap Tudyr Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond) sailed from Harfieur ' ' with his uncle Jasper in August I, 1485, and landed after fourteen years exile. He was at Dale on there met by Rhys ap Thomas, Lord of Carew, riding on his charger. Grey Fetterlocks.' Rhys either lay on the shore for Henry to ' step over, or crouched under the Mullock Bridge while the cavalcade passed over his head ; historians differ on this They marched to Carew, and lay there that night at Llwyn Davydd in Llandisilio Parish on August 5, entertained by Davydd ap levan to him Henry afterwards point. ; 1485- Henry Rich- mond lands at Dale. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE i8 sent the Hirlas Horn, 1485, now in the possession of Earl Cawdor, reward for his entertainment, or as a christening present to his daughter's son, born nine months after Henry's visit, and reputed to have Tudor blood in his veins. Hen^TRich- either as a ^ S°Daie?'' Batue Henry and Rhys, with their ever-increasing following, marchcd on through Shrewsbury and Stafford to Bosworth Field, beyond Atherstone, where they met, defeated, and slew Richard HI., the Hunchback, and Henry Tudor was of FiSr'^'' 1485. Hen^ii. proclaimed Henry VH. England, 1485. of Rhys ap Thomas is said to have added the great northern wing of Carew Castle, with large square he also gave a mullioned windows in the Tudor style Soon after this ; a°cTrew^" great tournament there on St. George's Day, 1507, in honour Castle of his admission to the ,507. (mounted on at Hants in he havmg of the Garter, Grey Fetterlocks) BeauHeu Abbey rewarded. Order in slain Perkin 1497, Warbeck and been thus Five or six hundred gentlemen were present at Thomas's this tournament (the only one recorded in Wales), and a Tournament' ... , ^ j j at Carew thousand souls all told the festivities lasted five days and ; were on a magnificent 1507. throne was set, as if At the banquets the King's he were present, and not nobles were served was left scale. it turned aside, as if till the higher the King had the table, after which those of less exalted rank might down and enjoy the feast. Henry Vn. died of consumption in 1509, and was succeeded by his second son, Henry VHI. Sir Rhys ap Thomas died at Carew in 1527, and was buried at Carmarap Rhys ') his descendant, Lord Dynevor (Rice, then sit Henry VIII. ^5°9 . 1527. ' ; repaired the Rhys and Stradling. tomb in 1865, finding there the skeletons of second wife Janet, widow of Thomas Rhys was succeeded by Rice, the son of his son of his HISTORY Griffith, 19 who predeceased him. One of his natural daughters, Henry Wirriott of Orielton, High George had a son who died young, married Margaret, Sheriff in 1548 ; their son and an only daughter who married Bodowen (or Sir Hugh Owen of Bodeon), Anglesey. Rice ap Griffith ap Rhys was unjustly beheaded for conspiring to bring James of Scotland to England in 1531, 1531. when only twenty-three years old his son, Griffith ap Rice, was pardoned by Queen Elizabeth, but Carew had already been seized and given to strangers by Henry VHI. In 1780 George Rice married Lady Cicely Talbot, and was ; created Baron Dynevor. Henry VIII. 1-111 blockhouses Haven by building the 1iT^i 1. and Dale, and m 1532 created Anne fortified Milford r-Ai of Angle Boleyn Marchioness of Pembroke. Bishop of St. David's, In 1538 William Barlow, unroofed the Palace at St. David's (some say he sold the lead to get portions for his daughters, who aU married bishops) ; his wife Wellsburn, a runaway Abbess of Norfolk. Llawhaden. Dale and Angle blockhouses buut. L!il" 1538. five was Agatha He also unroofed In 1536 the Act for Suppression of the smaller Monasteries was passed, and Richard, Suffragan Bishop of Dover, came to West Wales to enforce In 1540 Henry VIII. rent Barlow of St. David's, Lamphey and gave it it. Palace from Bishop eldest son of Earl Ferrers, afterwards Earl of Essex. who always managed 1540. to Richard Devereux, Barlow, to suit himself to every change, like the Vicar of Bray in the old song, became Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1548, and afterwards of Chichester, where he 1548- died. After Rice ap Griffith was beheaded in 1531, seized Carew Castle, and granted the governorship Henry of it to c 2 Edward vi. "547-53. — ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 20 Mary 1553-8- Elizabeth. 1558. Sir John Perrott. John Perrott of Haroldston and Jestynton, whose mother, Mary Berkeley, was married to Sir Thomas Perrott, a gentleman of the Bedchamber. Young his natural son, Sir John was brought up almost entirely at Court, and became a man of great power in South Wales, owning Sir and many manors on the south side of Milford Haven, among them Pennar, East and West much property, and Popton, In later life he Halle ' fell Place in Nangle (George Owen). ' into disgrace with Elizabeth, greatly on account of his unruly temper and turbulent nature, so like that of his father, Henry whom VIII., he is said to have His end was a sad one closely resembled in appearance. he died a prisoner in the Tower under sentence of death Elizabeth. in 1592 if but Elizabeth would probably have pardoned him ; he had warrant lived, as she constantly refused to sign the for his execution, repeating that he subject.' He was Governor-Deputy was ' a good and loyal for Ireland 1583-8. Richard Devereux, Earl of Essex, and holder of Lamphey 1576. Robert, Earl of Essex. Palace from the King, died in Ireland in 1576. His son, Earl Robert, aged nine, succeeded, and his wife, Countess Lettice, then married the Earl of Leicester, beth's favourite, and his daughter, afterwards married Sir Sir John. Thomas Dorothy Queen (or Penelope Perrott, son of the Earl Robert's uncle, Eliza?), famous George Devereux, now Lamphey, and Earl Robert appears to have lived there with him until he was twenty-two, his real home being Chartley, where Queen Elizabeth wished to imprison Mary lived at Queen of Scots, but gave up the project on his remonstrance he had by that time become her chief favourite. 1592- John Perrott in the Tower in 1592 vast property was all seized by the Crown, and at Carew At the death Sir John Perrott. his of Sir HISTORY Castle an inventory belongings, which was made of all interesting is furniture of a gentleman's house beds, of which there 21 was the furniture and showing what as • the Feather at that date. seem to have been an extraordinary number, were valued at and there were 30s. apiece, said to valuation of furniture at be fifty-eight of blankets, sheets, and them, besides an enormous quantity of pillows and Not many rugs. of little value those there were, rushes at that date ; seats for the window 5s., towels bedrooms, fourteen tables, and plentiful table-linen many a clock, a chess-board with men, books los., stools for the only one small looking-glass, valued at ; carpets, were chiefly used only fifteen chairs, valued at £2 and forms a great number, and cushions of music, not much but plate, ; instruments and all articles of use of pewter, a few only of copper carewCastie. domestic a large collection of ; arms, including bows and arrows, swords, small cannon, and sixty-five horsemen's staves. There were ninety-five horses of various kinds, averaging a value of 29s. 6d. each, the highest priced one being valued at and 1500 sheep. £() ; 400 head of It is curious that the castle cattle, seems to have contained no feminine belongings, except the one small looking-glass. Sir Thomas Perrott died soon after his father. Sir John, and Carew was bestowed by Elizabeth on her Robert, Earl of Essex. beheaded on Tower He fell favourite, into disgrace later, Hill in 1601, the Countess of and was Nottingham having kept back the ring he sent by her to the Queen to plead for mercy. Essex's death Later, on her deathbed, the Countess confessed this deed to the Queen, the last spark of 1601. life who is said to have shaken out of her in her rage and misery ; — ' Elizabeth never recovered from this grief, she died in 1603. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 22 With Robert, Earl Sir Gilly Meyrick, of Dr. Knight, of Gellyswick, Milford Haven, son Rowland Meyrick, Bishop daughter of and fought and died of Essex, lived Owen of Bangor, Barrett of Gellyswick ; and Katherine, they were lifelong from boyhood, and shared the same tragic fate. In 1588 Lewis Dwnn, Deputy Herald of Wales, made a visitation, and a list of the county people, and again in friends James I. 1613- 1613, in the tenth year of Scotland. James of I. England and VI. James was descended from the House of of Tudor through his great-grandmother, Margaret, a daughter of Henry VII. In 1613 Lewis Dwnn records that John Devereux, son of Patrick Devereux, gent., of Ireland, married Margaret, daughter of John Harries, of the Hall, Angle. Owen Morgan, B.A., was Rector of Angle at that date, and Henry Dawes, whose wife was Lettice Walters of Roch probably during the Castle, was living at Castlemartin Sir lifetime of his father, Griffith Dawes of Bangeston. John Carew, Knight, was at Carew Castle, which became Crown property in Elizabeth's reign, after the death of Sir John Perrott. Harry White (Whites of Tenby) was at Henllan, PwUcrochan and at Orielton Sir Hugh Owen, Knight, of Bodowen, Anglesey, had married Elizabeth, ; ; heiress of the Wyriotts ; later on their daughter married John Laugharne of St. Bride's, and another daughter Harry Bowen of Upton Castle. Roger Lort was at Stackpole. James I. forgave the grandson (and namesake) of Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, and restored some of his property in 1620. ^^- He Pembrokeshire ; he seems to have lived at Lamphey. 1620-1, and him John Meyrick of Fleet, at Monkton, near Pembroke, and Rowland Laugharne of St. Bride's. James I. died in 1625, and was fought in Holland in with HISTORY 23 John Carew was then only the tenant of his ancestral acres at Carew Castle, but he pointed out to King Charles that no luck could come to any succeeded by Charles I. Sir charies i. occupant of Carew other than a descendant of Gerald de grandson, of Rhys Windsor, quoting " the executions of his Tap Thomas, of Sir John Perrott, and of the Earl of Essex, ' John Carew s re- sir storation to King Charles was so impressed by his arguments that he Sir John Carew restored to him the freehold of Carew. was High ^^ Sheriff in 1623. Charles I. in 1642 quarrelled with the Earl of Essex, and deprived him of his office and commands. In the same year occurred the Irish Rebellion, and the terrible massacre of Protestants and Pembrokeshire men, furious ; at the treatment of their beloved Earl (Essex), joined the party of Parhament against the King. In 1642 Lord Essex was 1642. chosen to be Captain-General of the Parliamentary forces. John Meyrick, son of Francis Meyrick In 1642-3 John Poyer, of Fleet, Monkton, near Pembroke. Mayor of Pembroke, put the town in a state of defence for With him went the Parliament churches of St. Sir ; 1643. he also presented a chalice apiece to the Mary and St. Michael in the town, and equipped a small squadron of vessels own cost. The Royalists, under Lord for defence by sea at his Carbery, and attacked occupied Tenby, and then laid siege to Pembroke, where the gallant Poyer and Rowland Laugharne were very sorely pressed. vengeance down ; amongst Lord Carbery threatened other, that John Poyer should be Pticks or Prix Pill (Pretty and that sacked. all of St. Bride's Pill) dire rolled in a barrel of nails, the houses round should be plundered and This so terrified the owners that they fled in all |'|g^^^^°^^g SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 24 kinds of disguises, and sent their wives and children to beg mercy of Lord Carbery at White of wife of Griffith eight sons and Tenby amongst others the aged HenUan, PwUcrochan, mother of ; and grandmother eight daughters, children, all at HenUan. of four In spite of her eloquent appeal, the deputation was badly received. But help came at last, the Parliamentary ships Leopard and Swallow arrived in the Haven, and the Pembroke garrison were able to sally forth and attack in their turn. They took Stackpole and Pembroke Its garrison of sixty, Roger Lort hiding (possibly in Lort's Parliamentarians reta- Holc) ; and also took Trefloyne near Tenby, Pill Fort near liate, Haverfordwest, and Haverfordwest Owen itself, He was of Orielton lay a prisoner. where Sir hurried Hugh off half- dressed in the night, with his wife, to Carmarthen. The Parliamentarians took Roch Castle, and afterwards attacked and retook Carew capitulated to Poyer, Pembroke, now Colonel Poyer. Tenby. Mayor of In 1644 King Charles fighting Charles I. 1644. Siege of Picton. He to Pembrokeshire. Sir army retook Haverfordwest, and besieged Richard Phihpps at Picton, which he eventually took. Sir Richard's son story the sent Colonel Gerard with an the is and two daughters were told that the son window from and his nurse heir ; and one was snatched through by a Royalist obliging the castle to surrender there, soldier, thereby another version has it that Sir Richard himself, being a very small man, was dragged 1644. making terms with the besiegers. Erasmus Philipps was the heir in 1644, but could not have out been an infant while he served as High Sheriff in 1655 probably the true one. in arms, as so the second version is Colonel Gerard also took the land with fiendish ; Roch and Carew, and laid waste cruelties. Then the tide of victory HISTORY turned again : 25 Picton was re-taken after three weeks' from the Royahsts, who were driven off into GlamorThen came a spht in the Parliamentary party, ganshire. siege chariesi. Cromwell leading a faction against Lord Essex, called Independents, Lord Essex and his Presbyterians being too much monarchy, nobihty, and old institutions in favour of to please the more violent Independents. Lord Essex, command Thomas Fairfax peace's sake, resigned his ; also resigned his post of Sergeant-Major- John Meyrick General at the same time Sir ; most strongly disapproved Essex died fifth to Sir for in 1646, leaving both these resignations were of no Pembrokeshire. in heir. Sir Viscount Hereford, succeeded to his Lord Walter Devereux, Lamphey property, which was soon afterwards purchased by the Owens Orielton. Esq., who of was again sold to Charles Mathias, In 1821 it built the modern house. In 1647 the Scotch Presbyterians sold King Charles to the English ParHament for £400,000, and he was imprisoned Holmby House (now spelt Holdenby) in Northamptonshire, afterwards made widely known through Whyte at Melville's 1646. famous novel of that name. Later, the 1647. ^^^^[^^^Jj ParUament """weSth. King was by one Cornet Jayne, and brought captive to Saffron Walden in Essex. The contending parties in England now stolen seem to have changed round, and the Royalists and Presbyterians, both Scotch and Pembrokeshire, to have joined in league together against Cromwell and his Independents. In 1648 Major-General Rowland Laugharne, commanding Pembroke Castle, was ordered by Cromwell to disband his forces, which he refused to do, and was imprisoned. John Poyer, the Lort of fighting Stackpole and Colonel mayor, was threatened by Roger Grifiith White of Henllan, and commonwealth. ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 26 entrenched himself strongly in Pembroke Castle First Civil War. Cromwell. A battle was mean- Pembroke town for and, Rowland Laugharne, occupied fought, who had escaped from prison, taking Colonel Fleming's men in rear with 200 men from Tenby at the critical moment, Fleming was badly defeated, and Laugharne and Poyer now and victualled the town, and prepared fortified of Pwllcrochan Church and Henllan by Poyer. landed at of them that they sailed forth sallied in pursuit. themselves in the church (built Bangeston buried in the south to dislodge wealth. fortified Ralph Beneger is Poyer Pwllcrochan, They, however, he Common- for a siege. Hearing that two companies of foot from Bristol had 1648. Siege Fleming Colonel while, ; aisle), in the fourteenth by century ; whence he found it impossible them go, on condition away and molested him no more. Poyer ; so agreed to let then attacked Henllan, where were the owner, Griffith White, with Colonel Fleming, Roger Lort of Stackpole, and John Lort water : it is of Prickeston. First Civil War. White dropped a number which are said to have been found said that in his flight of gold pieces, among These managed to escape by some of the ruins of Henllan. He had review. and proceeded Poyer then held a great collected 1200 or 1300 to join Powell at men by Carmarthen pendents (now called Parliamentarians) were Colonel Horton was sent with an ; this time, the Inde- now thoroughly army to Llandilo, Battles and uneasy. sieges of where Poyer was encamped, and a battle was fought Fleming also attacking the Royalists in rear, but he fell Poyer and Laugharne, ambush, and into an fled to the church, which Poyer upon which Colonel Fleming shot himself rather than be taken. Horton retired upon Neath, and Poyer was rejoined by Rowland Laugharne. When they reached St. Nicholas a great battle took place somewhere between stormed ; HISTORY 27 that and St. Pagan's, in which Poyer and Laugharne were defeated, and the latter wounded ; the river Ely is said to have run red with the slaughter right down to Penarth. Poyer and Laugharne made good their retreat to Pemand both now prepared for broke, and Powell to Tenby ; a desperate resistance. He was Colonel Horton followed hard after them. first repulsed at Tenby, but in May 1648 it 24, 1648. He formed his camp on capitulated. Pembroke on Oliver Cromwell himself appeared before May On June 4, cromweii. hill Civil to the war. They but the ladders were too short. planted two 13 Cromwell 1648. sieg^e^of^Pem- Second the south of Underdown, he himself being at Welston. stormed the town on June at little guns to Dark Lane from the mills at the bottom of the shell across the The garrison were reduced to sore straits, and there had been no time half of them were mutinous They had two wells, one in either to victual for a siege. the great Wogan cave under the keep in the castle, and water. ; The water which supphed at Monkton con- Weu at the bridge ° Monkton one at Norgans, near Monkton. this was conducted across _ cealed in earthen pipes, fragments of which can seen, built into the masonry of the castle walls. pipes were pointed out to the besiegers and were cut through The ; but the still be betrayed, These by one Edmunds, Wogan well remained. garrison were in great straits for food, having httle but bread and water, the whole country being in a most miserable condition, devastated and ruined by war. After The , , a most extraordinarily gallant and stubborn resistance, both and mutiny within, and when all hope of the promised assistance by sea had to be abandoned, and they realised that it was in vain to search the Haven with of the foe without Garrison pro-" mlsed help not sent. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 28 straining eyes the ships which for Rowland Laugharne were Colonel Poyer and Colonel forced to surrender on deserted by the Royalist held out ; sent, would never come. July Had 11. at last they not been party, they would certainly have but the promised squadron of ships was never and famine and mutiny broke down even their in- domitable resistance, though not their courage. Pem- Fall of broke. Cromwell determined to destroy Pembroke Castle, and Roger Lort was put on a commission for this purpose. The Tower was spilt in twain with gunpowder, but not much more of real demolition was done roof of the vaulted Barbican here, or at Haverfordwest, Carew, or Narberth ; Tenby seems to have suffered most, and Roch and Benton were practically destroyed On Sunday, Rev. Peregrine Phillips to preaches to Cromwell's who armv. his July assembled Picton never even lost ; 16, OHver Cromwell invited to preach troops the Rev. Peregrine harne, Phillips, Monkton from Sir Hugh Owen of Orielton, St. Mary's Pembroke from Sir Roger Lort of Stackpole, and Cosheston from Sir John Meyrick. He lived at Monkton (a gable-end of the old Vicarage still stands), and was forced during the siege to hide his scanty held three livings, stock of flour in the bolster of his bed. PowelljLaug- its roof. Cromwell then departed to fight and conquer the Scots at Preston Moor. and Poyer sent to the Tower. Laugharne, Poyer, and Powell were sent to the Tower, and the following year sentenced to death. Poyer presented a petition to Parliament, justly pleading his the ' common enemy demanded a victim. inscribed 1649. Death of Colonel Poyer. child ' ' ; but The Life given of it was many felt that public security three therefore cast lots, God and ' shot in the two being the third being blank was made to draw, and the blank who was duly services against Piazza, fell ; a to Colonel Poyer, Covent Garden, on ; HISTORY He April 21, 1649. 29 a family behind him left ; the male but Bishop Richard Lewis, of Llandaff, was his descendant on the distaff side, his son and grandson both have Poyer among their names, a name to be indeed proud of. branch is extinct, In 1649 Cromwell was again at Tenby, and sailed thence to Ireland with 3000 horse and foot. John Barlow of Slebech was taken prisoner in Pill Fort, near Milford Haven, by the ParliamenLater, John Barlow accompanied the Marquis tarians. To go back of to 1645, Worcester to the Court of the exiled Charles II. in Paris, young kinswoman, Lucy Walters, daughter of Richard Walters of Treffgarn and Roch, who assumed, on arrival in Paris, the name of Barlow. She and with him went his became the mistress (some say the wife) of Charles II. she was then eighteen. Evelyn describes her as The brown, ' bold, beautiful creature.' in 1649 James parted. on the Crofts,' scaffold, After the death of Charles Lucy had a son, she called The pair then In 1656, the year her father, Richard Walters, was High Sheriff of Pembrokeshire, Lucy came to London, where she was arrested and put in the Tower. She was soon afterwards released, and eventually went entirely to ruin, the Queen-Dowager taking charge of her two children. The Walters family migrated from Roch to Dale Castle, which was afterwards bought by the family of Paynter ; the Morisons of Portclew, their present representatives, still Lucy Walters, taken when an seventeen, with a good complexion and Her aunt, Lettice, daughter of WilHam possess a portrait of attractive girl of coal-black hair. Walters of Roch, married Henry Dawes of Bangeston. 1 The Ill-fated Duke of Monmouth. • I. whom and afterwards a daughter. LucyWaiters 1656. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 30 1660. Charles II. 1662. Roger Lort created Baronet. The Presbyterians of Pembrokeshire had steadily opposed the King in the first Civil War, but had fully atoned for their disloyalty by the gallant struggle they made against Cromwell in 1648. So at the Restoration in 1660, King Charles II. was gracious to Little England. He restored John Barlow to Slebech and created Roger Lort of Stackpole Baronet in 1662, although he had fought so hard on but Roger was said to favour no cause the wrong side but his own,' and to be of any principle or religion to ' ; ' acquire wealth.' The defence siege of Pembroke by Cromwell and by John Poyer seems and events in the history that siege and all that whole land that for than slowly recover suffered and bloody James II. George George little of Stuart of plunder, devasta- so ravaged and exhausted the years it was unable to do more by degrees from also, happily, civil II., many itself all it line), of III. and Mary whom George can be found that is had endured the days of fierce racial struggle war had passed away, and William Probably it I. Anne unhappy and in 1689, of ended the in 1714, in the reigns and of George worth the chronicling history of this small corner of a great empire, which I. played so important a part in the history of II. III. II., in the 1727. 1774- George ill-fated and Mary. Anne. 1714. James brought with from 1702 to 17 14 (with 1702. WUUam of ; it of Greater England. and misery, tion, poverty, 1689. to have been the last event time in which she took her part to any great degree last 1685. gallant importance in the history of Little England, the of great and its had earlier times, and been connected in one way and another with nearly all the great movements. who made a tour Pembrokeshire women In 1774 an anonymous writer, Wales, mentions the dress of the in as HISTORY 31 a heavy cloth gown even in summer, and instead of a cap, ' a large handkerchief, wrapt over their heads, and tied under their chins.' now This dress has entirely disappeared except in the village of Langum, on the Pembroke, a small colony said to be where the women do the pure Norse origin, and walk long distances fishing Here the older ones with the creel on their backs. f 1 of Haven above • • 1 a very picturesque and distinctive dress, still 11-1 the head wear Dress of women and of Pembrokeshire. throat draped in white linen, entirely covering the hair. this is worn a soft flat felt hat, the gown is On generally dark blue woollen, turned up over a short, scarlet petticoat, the shoes very broad and strong, with brass buckles, small fringed shawl pinned round the shoulders. and a tunately the younger and becoming women are fast forsaking this suitable ' ' The aforementioned worn Wales by men and women emporium.' writer also notices the large beaver hats, in the Welsh-speaking parts of alike, cheap style for cast-off ladies' finery, or its imitation from the local anonymous Unfor- the broad brims flapping over their shoulders.' He speaks of the absence of fences in Pembrokeshire, and of horses and cattle being tethered, their ropes often entangling across the public roads to the danger of travellers. In August 1790 John Wesley preached at also at Haverfordwest, In February 1792 St. David's, 179°. French men-of-war and a 1792. Pembroke, and Tenby. three lugger, all flying English colours, were seen from St. David's. French vaslon. They anchored off Carrig Gwasted Point, near Fishguard, and then ran up French colours, afterwards landing 1400 men and two women. This was a French invasion, under the command army. of General Tate, an Irishman in the The invaders looted a great many farms French of eatables. in- SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 32 They but did hardly any other damage. on their plunder ; feasted all night but meanwhile John Campbell, Esq., of Stackpole, and Lord Milford (Sir Richard Phillips of Picton, created Baron Milford of Ireland, to forces to this as one of their badges). ' only 750, but women it is day carry The whole ' force said that the presence of a in their high hats the impression of a very and scarlet cloaks much However that may them. were collecting oppose them, among others the Castlemartin Yeomanry Cavalry (who 1792 1776) larger be, at Fishguard, numbered number of gave the French army marching against noon on February 23, to everybody's astonishment, the French ships sailed away again (Two were afterwards captured ! one other escaped to Brest.) ; the lugger and After a good deal of tall down their Haverfordwest. They were talking on both sides, the French force laid arms and were marched into mostly clad in old English uniforms, dyed a rusty brown, and old cavalry helmets, and must have presented an odd and rather pathetic spectacle. Some think that this invasion was intended to land in Ireland, where the great rebellion broke out the following year ; but among Tate's papers were instructions from General Hoche, from which it appears that three forces were intended to land in England simultaneously, but those bound for Northumberland and York never put in an appearance. It was proved that there were Welshmen among the French, but if the latter cherished any hopes of the country rising and joining them, they were doomed to grievous disappointment, for Pembrokeshire worked itself into a perfect fever of loyalty ! Five hundred of the prisoners were confined in a building at Golden Hill, near Pembroke, where they eked HISTORY 33 out the meagre prison fare by carving toys and other small objects for sale, showing of these escaped much by the help of neat-fingered skill. two Pembroke girls. seized a small yacht lying under to Lord Cawdor, and in her Pembroke Some They Castle, belonging boarded a French sloop, which conveyed them back to France, abandoning the yacht, The two which was wrecked. married the two men eventually one at settled in Wales. for least whom of girls went with them, and they had risked so these couples much ; returned and CHAPTER II RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES I HAVE gathered together some records of places and of famihes in South Pembrokeshire, which could not conveniently be included in the general History, but which ought certainly to be preserved ; it is a great pity that the records have not been better kept, they are sadly few and far between. These I now them give, such of as I could gather from reliable sources, with their dates. Angle De Angulo. Shirburn. Rees. Perrott. Harries. Kinner. Campbell. Mirehouse. Owners. 1170. Henry II. In April 1170 Henry II. sailed his expedition against Ireland, ron consisting of three ships. from ' The Nangle on with Strongbow, the squad- Some accounts date of this embarkation as October 18, 1172. "73- ' give the In Easter week 1173 he landed again at St. David's, and was received there by Bishop David Fitzgerald, the son of Gerald de Windsor and Nesta he walked over the Llechlawer stone ; by the cathedral, in despite of Merlin's prophecy that he should die there. Merlin, the bard of Arthur's court, said to have been born at St. David's. according to George Owen, is is The name Angle, from the Norse Ongull, a — RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES fiord ' ; Anglesey The Island is from the same source, of the Fiord.' generally written Nangle of the Latin and ' Ey ' being Island, In the older records it is was probably a corruption this ; ' 35 In Angulo,' as the name figured in deeds charters. Between 1173 and 1176 Gerald de Barri, son of Nesta's daughter Angharad and William de Barri, born at Manorbier, and best known became Archdeacon of the historian Giraldus as of Brecon, and U73. Henry 11. Cambrensis, also held the livings Llanwnda, Tenby, and Angle. There are Irish grants in 1215 to Walter and Philip de Angulo, the grant to the latter being confirmed in 1232. In 1247 Richard de Angulo held of the earl a knight's Angle fee at ; then there was Stephen, and Philip, who ' wreck John. 1247. in 1278 granted various lands and demesnes in and about Angle, together with 1215. 1278. to Robert de of the sea,' Shirburn, with remainder in default of male issue to his The Golden daughter Joan, wife of Robert de Castro. Grove book (page 336) gives Philip de Angulo as marrying the daughter and heir of Stephen, and their daughter Isabel as marrying Robert Shirburn, the son of John that other charter to found by Dr. Scott following who in 1298 granted William de Rupe or Roch, which was This was the same Philip Shirburn. is in the British a translation From British Museum, and of Know all, my this my Museum Sloane Charter, I, 1298. 14. Philip de Angulo, have given, present Charter confirmed to WiUiam de Rupe have in the tenement of Angle, with appurtenances, together with the dowry of my mother, Isabel, when it shall (Roch) all land which I i : present and future, that and by Edward which the XXXII. granted, 1298, Edward I. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 36 called Sepinilond (Sheep Island) and all my windmiU as of all my men, with suit of Court rents of Angle, as well of a retention therefrom to me or my without any and services of the same, aforesaid land, with the aforesaid rents, the To have and to hold heirs. to the said William and his appurtenances, which is aforesaid, with the and a certain Island occur, from the lord in chief of the fee according to measurement, and as it is assigned to the said William by ancient fixed bounds in meadows, and limits, freely, quietly, in peace, hereditarily, for ever heirs or assigns ; marshes, ways, paths, waters, pastures, turbaries, commons, wreck, in all easements, save only in forinsic (foreign) service in all things the lord due therefrom and customary. my heirs and assigns, bind ourselves to warrant and acquit and defend forever against all men, the aforsaid land and appurtenances, together with the aforesaid rents, to the said William and his heirs and assigns. And that this my gift and grant, and in chief of the fee as is But Edward ^^^^- I, I, the aforesaid Philip, and confirmation of my in the future, I have strengthened of my present Charter, may remain this present ratified and established deed with the impression seal. Witnesses : John de Nenborth, (Narberth) Seneschal (Steward Robert de Shyrburn Sheriff (Angle). Sir Nicholas de Sir Gilbert Sir of Pembroke). Karren (Warren). de Rupe (Roch). Richard de Stakepole. | ^ tt- John de Bary (Manorhier). j Henry son of Henry (Fitzhenry). David de Rupe (Roch). David Wyriot (Orielton). David Malesent (Malefant, Upton). Sir WUham de Creppings. John de Castro, and many others, given at Angle on the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin in the year of Our Lord, 1298. Gilbert de Angulo joined in the Pembrokeshire conquest of Ireland 1307. under Henry (hence the Nangles of them by rebellion, II., and was granted lands West Meath was pardoned to this day) in 1307, in ; Meath he lost and granted lands s ; RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES in 37 Connaught, where his descendants took the name of MacHostilo, now Costello. In 1314 to 1375 John holding a remained we nominally of the Earl fee his son 13^. appears to have Edward (it 11. notwithstanding the charter to in their family WiUiam de Rupe Angulo and find Philip de in 1298), but the domain seems then to have passed to the Shirburns, who held two centuries their dwelling, or castle, as also of the de Angulos, was that of which a small part still stands at the head of Angle creek, behind the church, and is still it for Angle Castle. called A square tower, showing three storeys, with windows and now remains, but at a short an old Norman Columbarium, or distance wonderful state of preservation. This was fireplaces, is all that there stands house, still in a Pigeon- supposed to indicate the dwelling of a Baron in Norman In Owen's times, as none of less rank might keep pigeons. time. Angle Bay ran out shoal, as neere the towne, where tyde ' ; we is it does now, good landing at therefore conclude that the ' tymes all saving of the de Angulos and Shirburns were able to bring their ships right up to their very castle walls. John de Shirburn was Sheriff of Pembrokeshire. He possibly came there with the great Earl William de Valance, Robert, as the home of the Shirburns was in Lancashire. we see in Phihp de Angulo' Charter the next was Walter, who was a Juror at Pembroke after him came his son Nicholas, who in 1327 and 1331 his son, was Sheriff in 1298, as ; ; received in 1340 from Lawrence Hastings, then Earl of Pembroke, a general pardon for offences (probably during the Earl's long minority). in 1350 (his wife's name was Margaret). committed Nicholas died His son John was 1340. Edward in. ' SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 38 a Juror at Pembroke in 1357, ^^^^ did service to Sir William 1362. de Carew ; he died in 1362, leaving a daughter, Alice, ten years old. John Cradock of Newton was Another John held lands in 1350, the also a Juror in in Castlemartin in 1347 1327. ^^ died '< same year as Nicholas de Shirburn, and Roger (Fenton says Robert), his son, then aged seventeen, married Margery de Shirburn, Nicholas's daughter, the day On father's death. the death of her brother John in 1362, leaving only Alice, aged ten, Margery Angle ; Fenton which makes Newton of calls her it appear probable. Roos (Roose, in descendant. Sir Richard Henry VI. inherited is buried at Angle, He was called Lord Llanstadwell parish), his in Cradock, Thomas Perrott, and changed his name to Newton of Sir 1444- may have daughter and co-heiress a ' Roger, or Robert Cradock, (with John). after her married a daughter the heiress of Jestynton, and he died in 1444, and is buried at Bristol; he was Lord Chief Justice of England. The ; family of Cradock, or Caradog, was descended from Prince Jestyn ap Owain ap Hywel Dda, it who built Jestjniton, so returned appropriately to the Cradocks with Sir Thomas Perrott' s daughter. for Robert de Vale, Lord of Dale, had property in Angle, In Angulo to Stephen in an old deed he grants lands ' the son of Alexander de Angulo ; ' and de Shirburn may have succeeded to the property by marrying a daughter of Stephen. In 1447 Nicholas de Carew held lands in Angle of Edward 1447- de Shirburn, ' by Court at Nangle.' St. Anthony military service This and suit Edward founded there, believed to of Edward's the Chapel of be the small chapel behind RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES the church, in still good preservation, known as the 39 Sailors' Chapel. Owen In 1595 George writes in a and lime of the strata of coal in MS. giving the course Pembrokeshire The ' : 1595- Elizabeth. second vayne of lymestone, and cheefest of the two, beginneth at the south of Milfordhaven, west of the Nangle, at a place West called where the one side Pill, you of the Pill perceive the lymestone, and the other a red stone kinde redde of stone . . accompanieth . lymestone almost throweout, as lymestone being hott and stone is and substance in coUer This vayne . . of St. Florens, and Tenby, where between to the sea, and under the sea . . . . . it ... by Carewe and the Windmills and soe ; towne it also goeth taketh water, and passing it sheweth . fire. Bater Church, to to the norther side of the there of of the burned with like a stone Lanion, Lanfey, and to Williamstone estward to veine and therefore the redde passeth estward . which ; were a cognisance it firie, the shall itselfe right Gower in the cliffes of Llanridean in . . east . of Tenby about twenty miles from Tenby, aU under salt water.' George Owen, writing in 1603 of the islands round the coast of Pembrokeshire, says ' : Sheepe Hand, being neere the East side of Mylford at the entrance without the Blocke House, which is but a small tumpe, because as sheepe have onely accesse thereunto it is drye, for at lowe water and therefore scarce deserveth the name Hand, and hath nothinge ' ; I guesse, in yt of an worth the notinge. Further within the mouth of the havon, on the same side, is the Hand more comonlie but verie called Ratt called little, full Hand, but of the inhabitants Thorne Hand ; this of deepe Grasse, a is a prettie Hand muskett shotte from 1603. James i. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 40 mayne the this ; and the last before ys the land of Water Rees Esqre.' Owen mentions Sheep and that it Island elsewhere as ' Shippe,' only accessible on foot after half ebb, and is speaks of the remains of a tower, built on the narrow neck of land approaching the island, which served the country folk and their cattle as a refuge This tower has now from the raids Welsh. of the disappeared, but Fenton says standing in Elizabeth's time, and that it was was the Norman it settlers who used visible, point to Danish origin: probably the tower was added to these. it ; but the earthworks, which are still There are also earthworks traceable above West Pickard Bay, three-quarters of a mile to the east of Sheep Island. Speaking of notices to quit, George Owen says ' : And then was the old tenant at Mydsomer to remove out of the " hall house." ' Henry Owen in a note says ' : The farmer's house, as distinguished from the cottages, so used also in Galloway, the chief house in the manor, was in of England called the Hall House.' shire Manors, George Owen gives in In his ' Castle list of many parts Pembroke- Martyn Hundred,' Nangle, Hall place in Nangle, thus showing that there were two separate manors. his notes Perrott Henry Owen says is manor : In In Lansdowne MS. Sir John said to have held the moiety of a manor, there styled that of the ' of "Nangle alias Halecorte" (does this mean Hall only, not of Nangle of Studdock, in that parish.' ?), and also lands John Perrott also held land at Pennar, Wallaston, Lanbeath, East and West Sir Popton, Redhill, Shutlake, Moreston, the mill at Pem- RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 41 broke Ferry, Benton, also Linney and Frains Lake. another Owen gives Castell Manors of the list In Elizabeth's reign George in : Martyn Edward Herbert Sr. (fl- of Powis. 1594) Nangle Water Rees, Halle Place in Nangle Perott. Stacpoole Stanley. Estington Perott. Henllan Whyte. curia ibidem. It is curious that in so small a place there should two manors, but such was evidently the day the Squire's residence villagers as ' Anno Hall,' is case, and be to this always alluded to by the not the Hall. Henry VIII. the Collectors of the Tallage diverse gentlemen and gentlewomen of the best were Vynyes or Lordaccompt,' who owned lands in these In 19 of ' ' ships those for Nangle were ' ; Thomas : Perrott, armiger. Elizabeth Tankard, vidua. Lewis Dwnn in his Visitation mentions that in 1613 John Devereux, son of Patrick Devereux, gent., of Ireland, married Margaret, Nangle, and that daughter of John Harries, Owen Morgan, of Hall, B.A., was then its Rector. Patrick and Margaret Devereux had a son, John, and a Elizabeth, daughter, (Beneger of ' of ' married Gastell Martyn.' Lewis Bangwm William Dwnn also speaks William Kiner (rather Keener), eldest brother Kiner, off ?) who alderman of Harffort,' marrying Angel.' Their son Wilham Kiner of ' of John Jowan Kembl Hawl off the ' 1613. james i. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 42 married Angel' 'Als, do. Rowe) off Kell Martyn.' Fenton in his Tour in 1811 ing ' Among Meadow.') whom from also speaks of Hall as belong- the still Mayor of Common the twenty-four first name bears the name of ' (The house Nangle in now one Hall, and one a building is no evidence that Councilmen, ; I ; (John co- sisters, one the Castle, called the probably also used at some time as such and there Kenner's John Kynner.' Fenton mentions a tradition that three heiresses, built each a ' Haverfordwest of Howell) was elected, occurs the date, (probably of late years to a family called Kinnar.' till behind the house field Rowd Richard to Nunnery, but he gives no in any other still be traced can find record to confirm the statement. In a field on the west side of the site of a church, the field coffins is Pill Bay can called Church Meadow, and and bones were said formerly to have appeared where the may have cliff crumbled away to the sea. The Danes harassed this church, and caused the building of the present one in its more secluded situation. In the Minister Accounts Excheques' T. Q. 20 Eliz. — 411. Schedule of Grants, Fines, Cartas, &c., relating to lands in the county of Pembroke, we find the following : Lacy de Angulo facta ad povendum Henricum Geffrey et Isabellum uxorem ejes de uno * Littora ballani Aliciae burgagio. (? B. in MS.)' The Angle property, with Bangeston, was bought by John Mirehouse, Esq., from Lord Cawdor on March 22, 1805, and still remains in his family. He died March 29, 1823, and is buried in Angle Church. RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 43 Bangeston, in Angle Bulkeley. Beneger. Dawes. White. Lort. Ferrers. Hook. Campbell. Mirehouse. Owners. The earliest record Benegers the of of Bangeston appears to be in 1172, when a branch of the family took part with Strongbow in the Irish Invasion. There is an Irish saying that Could Banagher.' anything very astounding that have Benegers? performed by the from arisen One Ralph II. feats Beneger of It con- 1342- effigy of Edward iii in his canonical habit, as Rector. Griffith we Henry beats ' any Bangeston rebuilt PwUcrochan Church in 1342. tains two inscriptions recording his name, and an him 1172. hear, Dawes of Bangeston though how it is the next owner of became his does not whom appear, by marriage with a Beneger heiress. He was the son of Henry Dawes, by Lettice, daughter of William Walters of Roch (her brother's daughter, the famous Lucy Walters, went to France and there met Charles II., by whom she became the mother of the ill-fated Duke of possibly Monmouth). Henry Dawes was the son whose widow Joan, daughter of of Griffith Dawes, Richard Fletcher, married Henry White of Henllan, near PwUcrochan (now a ruin), who was Sheriff in 1592. Griffith was the son of Nicholas Dawes, by Katherine Butler of Johnston. His Griffith Dawes of Bangeston was Sheriff in 1665. only daughter and heiress, Ann, married Griffith White, son of Henry White of Henllan, who was Sheriff in 1658. The Whites were a very old Tenby family, and acquired 1592- Elizabeth. 1665. charies 11. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 44 Henllan through Jestina Eynon, daughter and heiress of John Eynon of Henllan, who married John White. One Griffith White of Henllan, three times Sheriff, was buried in Rhoscrowther Church in 1589. Henry, or Harry Dawes, father Bangeston, appears, according to This lived at Castlemartin. fits Dawes of Lewis Dwnn, to have of Griffith in with the theory that Bangeston came into the family by but it during his father's Ufetime, On June 1686. James II. it is put, Thomas of ' Banaston of sentatives of Ahce Bowen land of Carswell The farm, the Tenby wardens the for Charities, Dawes Nangle, Esqre.,' and Francis Dawes ' Tenbie,' gents., as repre- Gloucester, spinster, bought £290 child, 16, of destruction the then occupied by Richard poor and aged of Tenbie.' half to the Rector and Church- Tenby. had an son of Henry who married Elizabeth, 1692, Griffith, Griffith died before his father, leaving who Griffith thus inherited Bangeston Dawes aged seventy, his of Bangeston died monument, with a small marble coat of arms bearing the three was one los., of Bangeston, as before stated, from her grandfather. January of of the of St. Mary's, White of Henllan. William III. and Mary. of Bangeston, or, as of St. Florence, for and only daughter, Ann, 1692. at Bangeston. to this day, belongs half to the Trustees of Griffith an only of (at St. Florence), relief ; Devereux Hammond, James with from Thomas Williams was in the Parishe of Lloyd and Francis Smith Rowe, Dawes Lort, of Eastmoor, Manorbier, gent., marriage lived at Castlemartin his father if 16, 1686, Griffith Pembroke, ' Henry also possible that is Griffith's three ' Daws,' monuments which were rescued from when the south transept of Angle Church RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 45 They were replaced became ruinous, and was pulled down. a few years ago, pieced together as far as broken fragments would is One allow, in the north transept. two of the other a plain grey marble tablet to Mrs. Elizabeth Pritchard, sister of Mrs. AUce Dawes (probably Griffith's wife), died January 17, 1725, aged eighty-six ; the other, a hand- some marble monument surmounted by a coat to Brigadier-General White, of Elizabeth of Bangeston, who White married four Sampson Lort John Lort of Ferrers, the third grand-daughter died of Thomas First, of arms, husband Dawes Griffith October 26, 1722. times. Elizabeth Lort, son of Eastmoor, Manorbier (Sampson Lort, of of Prickeston, and Sir Roger Lort of Stackpole Henry Lort of Stackpole, Sheriff Grandfather Dawes is said to have disapproved 1619). the match, and to have hurried across the fields from were brothers in Thomas who ; sons of Bangeston to Angle Church to stop the wedding Thomas (a sailor) but ; and the wily Elizabeth had got a chap- lain with a special licence at the boat-house at the foot of Bangeston Hill, and so outwitted the irate old gentle- man, crossing the Haven afterwards in a boat. Ehzabeth's second husband was Richard, Viscount Bulkeley came Brigadier-General Thomas erected the marble monument which she describes him as her ' Ferrers, already ; then whom she mentioned, on to mourned and dearly truely John Hook, who was Sheriff in 1755, and who survived her. She left no children by any of her husbands, and John Hook therefore bequeathed Bangeston to his godson and namesake, John Hook Campbell, Lyon King at Arms he was a grandson beloved husband.' Lastly, she married ; of Sir Alexander, who married Miss Lort of Stackpole, 1755- George 11. ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 46 brother of Sir Pryse Campbell, and uncle of John, 1795- George III. Baron Cawdor he died ; first His son Matthew married in 1795. Eustacia, daughter of Francis Basset, of Heanton Court, Matthew (who married Anne, William Adams of Holyland, and died without Devon, and had a daughter issue), of son, also and three daughters, co-heiresses ; of whom Eustacia married her cousin Sir George Campbell, G.C.B., brother of John, First Baron Cawdor ; he died in 1821, leaving no issue. Matthew Campbell appears to have got into money difficulties which obliged him to sell Bangeston the valuable lead roof was stripped off, and everything removed that could be turned into money, and the bare walls soon assumed ; This must have happened the look of ruin and decay. after 1789, as (who wrote 1811. George III. Richard Gough, his ' Britannia ' in Addendum an to Camden mentions Bangeston in 1607), and Fenton in 1811 laments its ruined its remembered hospitaUty, therefore the as then occupied, and state recalls dismantling must have occurred some time between these two if Fenton dates. this is correct, the ruin we now also mentions its ' Norman founder he must have founded an older house than see, whose long, unfortified facade, large oblong windows, and general sumptuous style point to later and less troubled times, when trees, enemy The walled enclosure in front of the house, now overgrown with and a carpet Bowling Green. of daffodils in spring, is There is and traces of beeches, leading of glories of the old house. artificial pond an old water-mill away still called the a large kitchen garden with magnificently high walls, an adjoining, the fear of the much eyes. was not constantly before men's immediately ' ; to the westward, in the wood also an avenue still recalls the RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 47 Matthew Campbell was a great friend of Fenton's, and entertained him at his house in Pembroke on his Tour in 1811. Bangeston, with Hall, Angle, and the bulk of the Angle by John Mirehouse, Esq., from Lord Cawdor, and remains in his property, was bought in 1805 as already stated, Bangeston being a family to the present day. ruin. Hall became the dwelling-house, but at the time of purhase the family resided (as Lord Cawdor's tenants) at Brownslade, and did not take up their residence at Hall until 1864. Jestynton, in Rhoscrowther Jestyn ap Owain. Perrott. Meares. Mirehouse. Philipps. Owners. Jestyn ap Owain ap Hywel Dda (King of South Wales, who died in 948) Uved at Jestynton, which he called by his own name, and probably buUt he is called Prince Jestyn, 948^ Edgar, ; and was King Hywel Dda's favourite grandson. Hywel Dda acquired South Wales, wife Elen, King or Dyfed, through his daughter of Llywarch ap Hwfaidd, King of Hwfaidd died in 892, Llywarch in 905. When the Normans first overran Pembrokeshire under Dyfed. Arnulph de Montgomery, in 1090, Narberth fell to the 1090. wmiam 11. Rufus. who built a castle there, we now see it was razed to share of Sir Stephen Perrott, Knt., but not the one whose ruins ; by Grufudd ap Rhys in 1183. About this time Sir Stephen, by his marriage with Eleanor, daughter and sole heiress of Merchion ap Rhys ap Rhydderch ap Jestyn the ground 1183. Henry 11. ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 48 of Jestynton, acquired a great increase to his property, appears to have gone to reside at Jestynton. name is given in some chronicles as Elen, in probably in those days Andrew, remain of built the his ; it some was the same name. castle and His wife's as Eleanor His son, Sir Narberth, whose ruins of still daughter Catherine married Caradog or Cradock Newton the family later took the name of Newton. The Perrotts continued to reside at Jestynton ; for by several centuries, until their union with Haroldstone Peter Perrott's marriage with Alice, heiress of Sir Richard Harold ; they then resided at Haroldstone, near Haverford- famous west, for three centuries, until the time of the John Perrott, son of power great George South Wales, owning in Owen Henry VHI., who became a man speaks of him as of much Previously to first property. inheritance, in trust for the King. this. Sir Thomas pheasants introduced of Halle place in Nangle,' ' and he held Haroldstone and Jestynton by and Carew Castle Sir Perrott of Haroldstone Pembrokeshire into increased to a certain extent, but afterwards ' they ; chose other landlords in other places,' as the old chronicle quaintly puts it. Sir Thomas took ment given 1507- Henry vii. at a leading part in the great Tourna- George's Day, 1507, and at the landing of at the Battle of of the Thomas ap Rhys on St. known to have been present Carew Castle by is Henry VII. Bosworth Bedchamber to Sir at Dale, Field. His wife was Mary, (after his death she married Thomas Jones of Abermarlais) and Sir John reputed to be very was her son by Henry VIII. Sir , ; father, both in also Later he was Gentleman Henry VIII. daughter of James Berkeley and probably appearance and temperament. Perrott like his Sir John RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 49 was born at Haroldstone, but was brought up almost entirely at the Court, being a great favourite with Henry. He was Deputy under three sovereigns Elizabeth. He : ; but he attainted, and man both at Court and in fell into disgrace in Ehzabeth's time, all his property confiscated was he died a ; lived Tower in 1592. It is probable that had he he would have been pardoned, as Elizabeth had many times refused to sign the warrant for his execution, when urged was a to do so, that he ' good and loyal subject.' He added the great north wing to Carew Castle (some attribute this to Sir Rhys ap Thomas in 1503), and in the inventory of his goods at his attainder is mentioned a quantity in ye newe buildinge glazier at ' of glass (this ' to glaze ye was locked up Tewkesbury having the chamber, a in a key), also ' windowes deale or firr by estimacion provided for ye dyninge chamber of the newe buildinge at Carewe,' also tymber red framed There was a most exhaustive for some particions there.' list made of aU his possessions at Carew at the time of his attainder, which is given in Mr. Edward Laws' History of Little England beyond Wales at length, and which is most interesting, showing what the furniture and appointments hordes, ' ' ' how little change there has been since in some things, how much in others. Sir John Perrott's sister Jane married WiUiam Philipps of Picton, who was grandson of Sir Thomas Philipps of of Henry viii. South prisoner in the saying always, 1583. held the Castle of Carew in trust for the Crown, and was a great Wales from 1583 to 1588, and lived Henry VIII., Edward VI., and for Ireland a great house were in those days the Kilsant family ; married several times. this family ; and the Perrotts inter- 1592. EUzabeth. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 50 In the public records is a document consisting of two leaves of paper, dated Haverfordwest, September I59I- Elizabeth. Perrott, Knt., purchased of Sir Among married his mother). Manor Nangle (Hall Manor of 7, 1591 a part of the possessions of Sir John (33 Eliz.), setting forth Thomas Jones, Knt. (who these are named half the Manor in Nangle), half the of Castlemartin, that of PwUcrochan, Rhoscrowther, Cocksey, ' a parcel of land late the property of Nicholas Dawes,' Lynney also and Williamston, both purchased in Castlemartin, from Nicholas Dawes. John Sir Dorothy, Perrott's son, Sir Thomas, married Lady Robert Devereux, the sister of Earl of ill-fated perty to Queen Elizabeth restored Sir John's forfeited proSir Thomas, and was about to make him a Baronet 1601, when he died, Elizabeth. Penelope Essex. WiUiam 1635. Charles (a son, 29, 1601. He left Roland, died young), an only daughter, who married first Lewis, and second Sir Robert Naunton, Secretary of State to I. on June James I. an infant, in 1624 ; ; he died his only in 1635, his only son, daughter married James, first count Bayning, second Philip Herbert, afterwards Earl of Pembroke. Visfifth With Penelope Perrott terminated the direct line of the Perrotts of Pembrokeshire. Grove, a ruin between Stackpole and Pembroke, formerly belonged to Lloyd Lloyd of of Morril in Thomas North Pembrokeshire. married Frances, daughter of Hugh was Sheriff in John Sir 1595 Perrott, John ; his Philipps, eleventh Baronet, Philipps Hugh's Jestynton, brother of Sir Richard Philipps. father we Morril, of who was mother was Anne, daughter of who brought Jestynton as her dowry. sister of Later, when William Grifiith Dawes of find the family of Meares at Jestynton, Meares married Grace, the Sir RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES Bangeston year (the William was Sheriff in 1673, George, his in 1643. son, succeeded him at Jestynton, Dawes Griffith of and was Bangeston great grandson, John, was Sheriff in John Owen of who married in 1822, 51 Sheriff in 1692 died). 1800, and 1643- charies i. George's his son Hugh Charlotte, daughter of Sir 1800. George in. of Orielton. One square tower and a few walls are all that remain Jestynton, now called Eastington, and converted into a farm. It is well situated at the east must have been a fine place in its end day; be traced, and the one remaining tower and strong. under the Some think turf, of that there Angle Bay, and its is moat can immensely still solid Roman pavement is but no excavations have so far been made. Eastington was purchased from John Meares of Plas Llanstephan, Carmarthen, by John Mirehouse, Common Sergeant of the City of London, and owner of Angle and Bangeston, on March 25, 1842, and remains in his family at the present day. Stackpole Stacpoole. Vernon. Stanley. Lort. Campbell. Owners. Sir Richard Stacpoole, knighted by William the Con- queror, married Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard Tuber- vUle of Glamorgan, and lived at Stackpole, now Stackpole Court, but not so in the older records. called He was succeeded by his brother Robert, whose son, Sir William, married a daughter of Hywel ap commanded Ithel, troops under King Stephen Lord ; of Roos, and he was defeated 1091. wuiiam n. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 52 by King David Stephen. 1 169. Henry II. Standards William's son, Sir Richard, married a daughter in 1138. 1138. of Scotland in the Battle of the Henry Vernon of Haddon, and his son was Sir EUdor, who went to the Crusades with King Richard I. in 1169, and whose tomb and effigy are in Cheriton Church. He of daughter married Elsbeth, of Sessylt ap Llewellyn ap Mereddig, and their daughter, Elsbeth, became heiress of Stackpole. Elsbeth married ' Sir Rhys, an old Knight of Rhys ap Grufudd (Welsh names introduced by the old Knight of War' !), then a daughter, Sioned (or Joanet), who married William War ' then followed Grufudd, then ; ' Vernon III. succeeded. Sir Harhston She died Vernon. 1368. Edward of He Henry IV. there is life, (?) of He was no trace he died and her son. Sir married Benedicta, of Pemburge sister Castle, Richard Vernon, and and heiress of of living at Stackpole in Vernons resident there Richard Tong, in 1400, but later. Wilham Vernon, Constable of England 1467 then another Sir William, who married Then followed for in 1368, Fulk Pemburge Staffordshire. 1400. in Staffordshire, son of Sir Sir ; daughter of Lord Ferrers, and was Lord of Haddon (Haddon Hall in Derbyshire). Then Sir Henry, Governor and Treasurer to Prince Arthur, son of Henry Margaret, Richard he fought at Bosworth Field in 1485. After him came Sir Richard, who died 1518; then Sir George, called the King of the Peak,' from his extravagant hospitahty. VII. 1485. II. 1518. Henry VIII. 1565. ; ' of died 1565, and left two daughters, co-heiresses whom Dorothy eloped with Sir John Manners, son of the He ; Elizabeth. Duke of Haddon as her portion, and Thomas Stanley, son of the Earl of Rutland, and took Margaret married Sir Derby, and took Stackpole and Tong. She appointed as of her steward at Stackpole George Lort, son of John Lort RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 53 Knowlden, Staffordshire, who was born about 1530. He, in Lady Stanley's hfetime, changed from steward to owner, probably by purchase. George Lort's son Roger, born about 1555, married Abertha, daughter of his father's second wife, who was the widow Hugh Bwrrw. of died 1613. There Roger was Worne out with body As out Make and a quaint verse on his tomb in the is Memorial Chapel at Cheriton Church My Sheriff in 1607, rather, ja^ : whence of prison to my soul did flye, Heaven's ioyes. these sure, reder, all things els are toyes. : of Prickeston and Sampson, 1646, (now a farm on the Stackpole Eastmoor, Manorbier. 1619. James Henry died Parliamentary wars on Cromwell's side bitter in he was a 1646. charfeT i. Rowland Laugharne and John defenders of Pembroke Castle in the opponent Poyer, the gallant ; I. estate), and Roger succeeded, who took a very leading part in the most of i. lingering sicliness here I lye, Henry Lort succeeded in 1613, and was Sheriff in 1619. He had three sons Roger, who succeeded to Stackpole, Henry, 1613. of They on one occasion caught Roger, with White and others, at Henllan, near PwUcrochan, and besieged them there but they contrived to escape. Roger great siege. ; was and was created Baronet by Charles II. he died in 1664, and his son John succeeded, Sheriff in 1652, in 1662 ; whose wife was Lady Susanna HoUes, daughter of Clare. sister of the Earl charies Their only son, Gilbert, died in 1698, and his Elizabeth became heiress of Stackpole ; she was then a widow, having married Sir Alexander Campbell of Calder, or Cawdor, in Nairnshire, in in 1697. 1662. 1688, who had died 11. 1698. wmil^ in. ^° "^' SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 54 The eldest son of Sir Alexander Campbell and Elizabeth at young the second, John, succeeded his Stackpole, and his grandfather at Cawdor in He married Mary, daughter and co-heiress of Lewis Lort, Gilbert, died mother 1716. 1716. George I. ; Prysc of Gogcrddan ; he was Lord of the Admiralty and He added afterwards of the Treasury. mansion at Stackpole, and made the Pryse, son, predeceased Edmund Bacon grandfather in 1777. He 1777- George III. his Howard, daughter Baron Cawdor 1827. George IV. i860. Victoria, his and improved the married their son ; Sarah, John succeeded Lady Catherine Carlisle, and was made married of the Earl of He of Castlemartin in 1796. John Frederick, was made Earl son, His eldest library. having him, daughter of Sir to died in 1821, in 1827, and married Lady Elizabeth Thynne, daughter of the Marquess of Bath to Queen by his son, the third John Frederick Vaughan, his son, married Sarah Mary, daughter of General the Hon. Henry Compton Cavendish (she was Maid of Honour ; he died in i860. Victoria) ; he died and was succeeded in 1898, and present Earl. Orielton Wirriott. Owen. Saurin. Owners. Stephen Wirriott of Orielton 1124. Henry I. some is of the chronicles of battles of mentioned in which the history those times almost entirely consisted ; and Elizabeth. house it ' there ; of 1295 the in Wirriotts of Orielton are spoken of as having a 1580. 1124 in ' strong as all houses were fortified at that time, was probably extra strong. In 1580 one Thomas Wirriott RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES was the bitter fact, Sir John's enemy fall of Sir was greatly due to Wirriott was imprisoned in and when he quarrel, John Perrott of Carew 55 ; in his untiring enmity. Marshalsea during the the lost ;^iooo in a lawsuit with Sir John, he was thrown into Haverfordwest Gaol in default of payment. In Lewis Dwnn's Visitation mention is made, among gentlemen residing in Pembrokeshire between 1588 and 1613, of Sir lesey, Hugh Owen, Knt. of Bodeon, near who had married Elizabeth, heiress of Orielton and in Aberffraw, Ang- James in 1640, 1644 his son Arthur was one of a Committee 1644. the defence and safety of Charles nominated by Parliament for I. of the Wirriotts he was M.P. for Pembroke Boroughs ; 1613. I. Pembrokeshire and the adjoining counties. Rhys ap Thomas (who died at Carew Castle 1527), Margaret, married Henry Wirriott of Orielton, Sheriff in 1548 their son, George, had One of the natural daughters of Sir ; a son who died young, and an only daughter, the Elizabeth aforementioned, who married Sir Hugh Owen of Bodeon. There was again a link with Anglesey in later times, when Sir Hugh Owen, second Baronet, married in 1664, Anne, daughter and heiress of Henry The first connection is Owen of Bodeon. 1664. Charles II. recorded in Boulston Church, on a monument to Lewis Wogan, Esq., of Bordston, who died 1692. in 1692. Among his four great-grand-fathers and mothers wmi^m in is mentioned Sir Hugh Owen of Bodeon, Anglesey, and Ehzabeth Wirriott of Orielton, Pembrokeshire, whose daughter must therefore have been Lewis's mother, probably Owen whose death, with that of her husband, Morris Wogan, Esq., is recorded on another one Frances monument in the of Orielton, same church. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 56 Owen was Whig Member for the In 1803, when Sir Hugh Owen, sixth In 1713 Sir Arthur 1713. Pembroke Boroughs. Baronet, came of age, 5000 persons Anne. 1803. George III. the festivities. He are said to have attended died six years after, leaving Orielton and Bodeon away from his cousin Arthur, the succeeding Baronet, to another cousin, John Lord. name 1861. Victoria. of died in Lord took the Owen, and was created Baronet in 1813. He 1861, and was succeeded by his eldest son. Sir Hugh Owen, who sold Orielton to M. A. Saurin, Esq., of Kilwendeg, near Boncath ; he had married Margaretta Jones, niece and heiress to the owner of that place. Bush Charlton-Meyrick. Meyrick. Owners. In Hasguard Church, near Milford Haven, of Katharine, daughter of who married 1598. EUzabeth. Owen is the tomb Barrett of Gellyswick, Rowland Meyrick, Bishop of Bangor, and died 1598, leaving four sons and two daughters, of whom the eldest. Sir Gilly Meyrick, Knt. (probably named after the ancestor who named Gellyswick), was a sufferer for his Dr. faithful adherence to the unfortunate Earl of Essex, Eliza- beth's discarded favourite firm friends through life, on Tower Hill in 1601. 1601. ; they were boys together and sharing the fate of the scaffold It was from Sir Gilly that the Meyricks of Fleet, near Pembroke, were descended, who took so active a part in Cromwell's siege of that place in 1648 1648. Charles I. ; and also the Meyricks of Bush, the presciit seat of the family. The near Pembroke, original stock of the RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES Meyrick family of is 57 Bodorgan, Anglesey, now the property George Meyrick, Bart. of Sir Thomas Meyrick of great-granddaughter of Bush, Sheriff in 1828, married Jane, Brown Wilhs, only daughter, Jane Sophia, married St. Charlton, Esq., of Apley Castle, Salop. son of name Apley George iv. John Chinerton Thomas, second John and Sophia, inherited Bush, and took the St. of Their the antiquary. 1828. Meyrick also ; on his elder brother's death he inherited he was created Baronet in 1880. ; Lawrenny Barlow. Lort-Phillips. Lort. Owners. Henry Lort of Prickeston, brother of Sir Roger Lort his grandson, John, Stackpole, was Sheriff in 1653 in 1653. This last 1^23. Law- 1775- ; 1723, and his great-grandson, John, in 1775. John married Dorothy, daughter renny, and from the marriage of of of John Barlow of their daughter Elizabeth commonwealth. with Dr. George Phillips of Haverfordwest come the present family of Lort-Phillips at Lawrenny. of Elizabeth, who was Anne Lort, married The younger John Meares sister of Eastington, Sheriff in 1800. The present mansion at Lawrenny is built by the uncle of the present owner. entirely modern, BOULSTON Adam le Bull. Wogan. Ackland. -' Boulston, or Bullston, from now a ruin by the shores Adam of Milford " le Bull, Owners. the Norman, Haven, just where the George George i. iii. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 58 two branches ' Cleddau meet of the river Camden's (called, in Britannia,' Aberdaugleddau, from Gledheu, ancient British Water of the Two Swords '), was formerly a seat of the Wogans, a branch of the family established at Wiston. Great woods in those days spread around it, and tradition makes them the haunt of many wild beasts, and for a sword, the ' one called in the old chronicles a chiefly of ' which basilisk,' by sight, and was in its turn slain if first seen. One of the Wogans had himself enclosed in a barrel, and carried into the woods through a peep-hole in the barrel he saw and slew the monster (spoken of by one old writer as a slew ; On some 'cockatrice'). is still of the old Wogan crests the barrel seen. Colonel Ackland built the great friend of Fenton's over two hundred and modern house ; he was a the old house has been in ruins ; fifty years. Manorbier Castle Fenton tells family of the us that Manorbier Castle remained in the De whom, William, married Gerald de Windsor and Nesta two Barris (one of Angharad, daughter of ; of William's sons took part in the Invasion of Ireland Strongbow 1400. Henry IV. by in 1169) till the time of bier, Penally, Elizabeth. IV., who granted patent to John de Windsor the Manors of Manor- letters and Begelly but they did not long remain ; with him, and changed into 1560. Henry under many hands during the wars of the Roses. Queen Elizabeth granted Manorbier ap Owen Trellwyn (Trefloyne) of Bowen, married a daughter of ; to his descendant, Sir Thomas Thomas Erasmus Philipps of RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES Picton, House and dying without Many of Picton. went through her to the issue, it of the freeholders' leases in bier were for a certain rent and ' 59 seven red thus to us of the old Lancastrian days ; roses,' Manor- speaking but the castle ceased to be inhabited before the bitter struggle of the Parlia- mentary wars, thus coming down preservation as an old some others. The name Manor Norman member Pyr old Welsh same. name He the ridicules name (Man perfect supposed by Fenton one of the oldest Welsh of the East ; the Caldy Island, Inys Pyr, points to the for struggle between a of is Dywrain, or Pyr of more baronial residence than have of Bere, or Pyr, to be derived from a clans (Gwynardd), to us in as man and or Bear ?), legend of the deadly the false a bear, to which some trace and which certainly sounds improbable. Castlemartin The name Castlemartin Mordyn, as Carmarthen when the the is Romans were is of which Solway was built, and ' There may have named from to Mordyn means Castle of the Sea Man,' who had charge of the defence of the coast Castell at that place. At the time were established on the south and west fortified places of the official Caer Mordyn. leaving Britain, about a.d. 400, Roman Wall from Tyne coasts. a modification of Castell the is also a Castle Martin near Fishguard, the same origin, or Norman Martin de near Fishguard in 1094 creek of Milford ; may have been so who landed Haven, a smaU Turribus, but Martin's Haven near Pwllcrochan, was certainly 400. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 6o the official where dockyard were built and kept in their ships The remains be seen a in of the ' Castell ' moderate can roads meeting at five the Pound, the one leading in the direction of Linney is called still Bluck's then, as now, under Pwll, Warman's ; Hill, Linney close by, to repel invasion, built of a from the Castell to led Head. Lady and Castle were both formerly earth-forts by the Sea-Men. The Norman Invasion occurred in 1066. 1066. William Marechal, 1219, left to the 1219. Henry it Head mouth Bull Street (Bull, Pwll, the river or stream) still was apparently an it ; Of the size. repair. of Castlemartin north of the Pound field, earth-fort of sea-men round the coast, for all the III. 1244. Earl of Pembroke, monks of In 1244 John de Castro Martini, and another about 1270. in been made), and others in 1405. own is of the John de Castro signed the Charter Angulo as a witness The Earls hands, with its of died in Pembroke, among other that of King's Mill at Castlemartin. Sir who 1298 of the (of tithes, mentioned same name of Philip de which mention has already name are spoken of Pembroke held the ' in Castell 1324 and in their ' associated earth-forts at BuUiber and Flimston, together with King's Mill and the earth-fort adjacent to having a Knight Resident the death of Earl 1324- Edward it, II. Aymer de Valence Castlemartin was worth £102 ship only £175 i6s. ^\d. rich in os. 2d., charge of them. in At 1324 the Manor of and the whole Lord- Castlemartin was an exceedingly and valuable corn-growing district. Members of the family of de Castro Martini took part in the Irish Invasion under Henry II. and Strongbow, and some remained and settled there, founding families of an Irishman, Sir Nicholas ; in later times the de Castlemartin, daughter married : RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES Richard Sir an Wellesley, ancestor the of 6i Dukes of Wellington. As before mentioned, Flimston was also a knightly William le Fleming, residence under the Earls of Pembroke ; whom from probably derived it and Walter de Castro its name, held it in 1246, in 1324. BOSHERSTON MeRE This is a very curious blow-hole on the not far from cliffs near Stack- Goven's Chapel, the quaint little hermitage nestling halfway down the great limestone cliffs, pole, St. have been the final refuge of Sir of Arthur's Knights Round end life and said of to his blow-hole and of the Gawain, one who Table, became Saint Gawain, thus at the or Goven. connected underground with the sea-caves, is at certain states of wind and the caves and imprisoning the tide the sea, dashing into air, forces it up through the narrow passage and out through the blow-hole with a and This shrill sound, like a prolonged scream or whistle, the terrific edges of the hole being polished like marble by the friction of small stones The mere is and earth, carried up by the rush said to ' play ' when the sound is of wind. heard, but this happens now more seldom than formerly, though persons now living have heard may have ' frequently, possibly some fall of rock obstructed, or partially obstructed, the passage. Camden, though it in his ' Britannia ' (page 640), thus alludes to it, in rather a sceptical spirit Near Stackpole Bosher, otherwise Bosherston, upon the sea-side, is a pool or pit called Bosherston-Mear ; the depth whereof several that have sounded have not yet SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 62 This pit bubbles and foams, and makes such discovered. a noise before stormy weather that miles off. The banks are of heard above ten it is no great circumference at the but broader downwards, and from the bottom there top, a great breach towards the But there distant. which much more is is about a furlong talked of this place trouble you with at present, because I take than I shall some relations of known from sea, is it for fabulous ... its noise is distinctly that of the sea, which also on these coasts often roars very loud.' The opening of the blow-hole is round, man the size through which a and about of could with difficulty squeeze The author has never heard the mere actually play,' but has stood by when it gave an occasional deep, hoUow groan the uprush of wind through the hole was tremendous, and one seemed to hear it coming from a long himself. ' ; way all it actually rushed out, then for an interval stiU, then the groan again, and then the wind. before off would be MiLFORD Haven This Fiord ' name is derived from the ancient Norse 'Mille (the Haven of the Thousand Fiords), and it is aptly so named, for the bays and creeks and indentations and the main channel winds like branching high up into two channels, where it spread out on every a river, formerly bore the the Two Swords a sword ; the : side, name of Aberdaugleddau, the Haven of Gledheu being the old British word little river for whose two branches feed the Haven being called the Cleddau, from the same source. George Owen, writing in 1595, says in a ' Pamphlett RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES conteininge the description of Mylford three places chiefflie (alsoe called fit Haven to be fortified that ' ' : is I 63 conceave Ratt Hand Thorne Hand) the Stack and Dale Poynt.' The Nangle,' not Nangle. As Hand/ he makes an error. Thorn Island, more to the commonly called Thorney (Ey, island), is distinct from He everywhere speaks of ' ' Rat Hand rode of a mere rock, nearer the Haven's is Of Thorney, mouth. said which Island, calling it Rat Island, he says, ' The lyeth verie neere leveU but not fuUie of the faire St. Mary well, soe that I crossinge from the stack to the Nangle bay I lost over in a boate the sight of Rat came neere the land whereby I guessed that if a forte were builded upon Rat Hand it could not annoy ships riding in St. Mary Well roade, but Hand a good space before I to that the Maryners that carried us over being Nangle men, and expert in the harborowe, answered that noe great shyppinge could ryde soe neare the shore there by reasons of the shallowes but that they must ryde within viewe of Rat Hand.' The Stack is a rock or rydge of Stone, further up within the Haven and standeth between ladie Chappell (St. Mary lodge) and Southhooke pointe, but somewhat more West and lower downe than Southhooke Further ' : poynte.' Further ' : It is thought that St. Mary WeU rode is within Culveringe Shotte of the Stacke.' Further ' : Few side of the Stacke tell us that they sufficient ships are scene to passe on the . . may . North but the Masters of the Harborowe well passe ... for there is water and noe danger.' Further : ' Shippe Hand is semperinsula, yt is an Hand 1595- EUzabeth. SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 64 at full sea but not at lowe water the mayne there . . . between yt and another peece of grounde and a greate is and the mayne land verie hard to come to where there standeth the remnant of a towre built upon the entrance thereof as it seemeth, serving for ditch or trench betwixt yt a forte or defence of the same, and from the same peece of may grounde you goe into Shippe Hand dry foote at half ebbe but not without a ladder for the hard ascending of the same, but at every full sea the same is compassed about by the sea ; the neighbours here reporte that the same was a place of retrete for the Countrey people in olde time to save them and their cattell from the often assaulted them. Shippe Hand . . . aloft ... On North overlookinge all commonly the that then side on the toppe of the seated the Easter Blockhouse, blockhouse, the Welshman or this ... Cliffe called entrance of is Nangle havon's Mouth, being a rounde turrett never yet finished made in K. Hen. ye 8th his tyme for to impeach the entrance into that havon, but in most men's judgment to noe good purpose for that it marke Pille West stoode soe highe above the sea full Roade is a little roade on the west parte of Nangle towne and standeth neere Ratte Hand, between yt and the South blockhouse, yt is a little Creeke . . . or Pille full of Rockes turnynge into the land, but neere the same there is a place for Shippes to ride upon necessitie, but few shyppinge useth to staye there, for that it is in the Mary WeU roade is the chiefest roade in Mylford and safest upon most Windes large and good Ancker hould and about XVI. fathoms water alwaies it recheth from Rat Hand to the entrance of the Nangle Baye which is XII. furlonges and more. havon's mouth in effecte ... St. . . . RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 65 The Stack standing neere against the middle thereof so yt a forte upon the Stacke were able to comande that rode. The Oyster Stones is a danger at the entrance of the Mowth of Nangle Baye and it is three stones lyeing in the waye somewhat nearer to the Nangle pointe than to the other side, they first appeare at three quarters ebbe and are lockt at a quarter flood, the maesters of that havon are driven ; come to by in speciall markes for feare of this danger, ; . but that there cometh noe great shippinge nor any by reason strangers to that Creeke, but onely smale boates of the harborowe, there . . of . is no great accompt made Popton pointe is called wester of a little village neere the Popton upon or sconce trench of Mowth the Easter pointe of the Nangle havon soe called same of this danger. earth . . this pointe there . The havon is an ould Nangle of noe harborowe but a drye baye at every ebbe, soe that there is not rode or riding for any ships but verie good is landing all along the Creeke from half flud to before half find towne, where it is is all full sea but owse and slime saving neere the good landing at tymes all of the tyde there are noe such smale Creekes to be seen within the as Mr. ' Saxon in his Crosward havon, yt is shippinge. . is Mappe hath noted downe. to . . . . a rode for smale barkes and not for greate . . Martin's havon Pennar Mowth Pembrook towne, in all Milford, . a pointe on the wester side of Martyn's cometh up to Pwllcrochan Church, place. . ; baye it is is a it is little Creeke that but a smalle landing the Creeke that cometh this is the greatest and up largest Creeke passeth up into the land three myles and more, at the upper end it compasseth the towne and parteth into two branches and castell of Pembrook serving the SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 66 said towne for a A XL barke of mote or strong ditch on every side thereof. may or L"' tunne enter this Creeke at lowe water and ryde at Ancker at Crowe poole, but noe further without helpe of the tyde. ' The Crowe is . . . a hollowe or shelfe a pretty Mowth entrance of Pennar . . and on the Crowe groweth one and . is within the an oyster bed, of the best oysters of all and a sweet Milford, being a bigg it way oyster, the poore people thereabouts are greatly relieved by the oysters there, for upon lowe water the bed oysters there without The Carne is drye, and the people gather the any dredge or other helpe of boate. . . . Pembrook side above Patrichurch a flight shoote in the ChanneU within the full sea marke. It is a danger, and the greatest ' in Milford; it a rocke or ridge of stones on is locked at half flood, but is The Carne Pointe entering eastward and Goode landinge Goode on the open. . . . the pointe beneathe the ferry house, and is between yt and the ferry (Hobbs Point ' ells is ?) there is a Creeke lowe land and good landing there. Slibberig ^ Cave. east side of the bight beneth Con Jooke.^ and west Badd, South hooke pointe. Hubberston called Indifferente the east side of Gelly's weeke. The Earle of Pembrook, when he was President of Wales, sought to have this Harborough fortified, soe did Sir Jn. Perrott they had licence, and should have had meenes to ' ; doe yt from Queen and the downfall ' ' Slibberig ' = ' of : but that the death of the other did disappoint Jooke' ='yoke,' both Flemish. Cunjeck beach, now filled up. slippery hundred yards west Eliz. ' ; ' of the one it.' The cave was two RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES Such George is by the quaint old chronicler Milford Haven as it was in his day, and the account given Owen of aU the centuries that have passed have changed slightly ; the names are quaint spelling, and the arrangement of it its The confounding is how curious is the St. Maryners entirely his view of defences was adopted in later times. of the of the names of Nangle ' Rat and Thorn Islands throughout it misled him on Mary's Well and Chapel are close to the present Chapel of the masonry Bay Fort the well ; of the chapel, a few years ago. but very it the same, allowing for his still very curious, and he persists in ' 67 The new now still exists, perhaps ; this point. of the site and traces built upon, could be seen fort of East Blockhouse stands immediately behind the old unfinished one of Henry VIII. 's time, whose walls them is still remain standing, the mortar of extraordinary hardness. approach to Sheep Island and earthworks of the is no longer any landing actual high water. whom the site of ' is as it ' ould trench or was, save that neere the towne ' except at In several other paragraphs besides the one quoted he differs from of on the ' ancient refuge can stiU be seen. sconce of earth,' and Nangle bay is towre in gone, but rough stone walls Popton Fort now occupies the there The ' ' Mr. Saxon and his Mappe,' he does not appear to hold a high opinion ! The Carne (or Carrs) Rocks have now been joined to the Dockyard by a jetty built out upon them, and are no longer a danger to shipping. The old Chapel of St. Anne, on the western point of the Haven's mouth (which Owen curiously does not mention, nor does he allude to Dale), was demolished in Queen Anne's time houses. to make room These were rebuilt for the first light- in 1800. F 2 ' SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 68 In a letter dated August ii, 1485, from Richard HI. Henry Vernon, a squire of his body, he says Our rebelles and traitoures departed out of the water of Sayn (Seine) the first day of this present moneth making their to ' : cours westwardes ben landed at Nangle besides Mylford Haven on Soneday last passed as we be credibly enfourmed.' Following on these chronicles of the Haven in bygone days, it may not be amiss to give a short account of the more recent history town of the of Milford Haven. MiLFORD Haven (Town) Sir Duke of the third 1758. George William Hamilton, Ambassador at Naples, grandson II. of Hamilton, married in 1758 Catherine, daughter of John Barlow of Slebech (she died 1782). Through her he acquired property at Milford Haven, for which his nephew, the Hon. Charles Greville, son of the had taken up a very lovely girl, Emma Hart, whom Sir WiUiam much admired, calling her the fair tea-maker when Earl of Warwick, acted as agent. Charles Greville ' they met at Greville' s ' house. GreviUe started great schemes at Milford, planned docks, and built a large pier; he was soon overwhelmed with debt, and then made a shameful bargain with Sir William, the result of which Emma was that was enticed to Naples, on the pretext of masters for her beautiful voice, and there WiUiam's hands. i^gi. Georgelii. After five years they fell into Sir returned England, and were there married on September 6, to 1791. Milford was transferred to Greville, with a settlement of £800 per annum on the bride. ' An error on Richard's part, the landing was at Dale. RECORDS OF PLACES AND OF FAMILIES 69 1800 the Government rented the Milford Ship- In isoo- Yard for fourteen years, and Greville, Sir WUham and Lady Hamilton, and Lord Nelson all met at a banquet given at the Lord Nelson Hotel at Milford by GreviUe; apparently without any awkwardness being felt by any- building one ! Charles Greville died in i8og, leaving the Milford 1809. In 1814 the Government 1814. property to his brother Robert. lease ran out, and was not renewed, the money demanded being too extortionate. From Milford declined, and untold sums were sunk and the effort to revive them, both son, also Robert. his only son having in Hyde Park. The that time the fortunes of latter by Robert finally The Government pronounced Patter), for its protection. Lord Nelson is portrait of her his been thrown from his horse and killed in 1814 began to buUd known as Pater- by country people as Pater, the Haven Forts were afterwards built Emma Lady Hamilton's career with spoken (still and quitted the place, the present dockyard on the site then church Greville lost in of a matter of history by Romney ; there is at Stackpole Court. a beautiful CHAPTER III OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS In a tract of country peopled by such a mixture of races as is South Pembrokeshire, the place-names cannot of very great interest than anything else, and as names ; stick fail to be more tenaciously they often furnish very valuable aids to history, in tracing the former dwelling-places of the various families. The earliest foreign settlers here and they have seem to have been mark in the many the Gaels ; names we find beginning with Kil, as Kilpaison, Kilgetty, Kilwendeg, Kilrue. left their Kil signified a hermit's afterwards cell, a church or burying-place, sometimes a retreat or hidden Names beginning with common of aU in Ireland. spot. Next came the Kil are among the most Kelts, possessing the land to a much men grew more numerous them we owe such names as greater degree than the Gaels, as and civilisation BuUiber, Bentlass, Lyserry, Pentre, drew on Lydstep, Portclew, Treffgarn, final ' to Crickmarren, Lanion, Trebowen. ton ' Penally, Rhoscrowther, name. Pennar, Sawdern, Then came the Norse- has prevailed so universally through- out the length and breadth of England over of Crunwere, Crickmail, Lamphey, Pwllcrochan, Trefloyne, men, whose ; all other forms To them South Pembrokeshire owes very many. : OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS such as Angle (Ongull, a fiord), 71 Grassholm (Holm, a wood), Hubberston (Hubba), Herbrandston, Harding's Hill (Hardingr), Jeffreston, Langum, Studdock (Studda), Thorney (Ey, Pop ton (Pebba), Skomar, Skokholm, Williamston, Cheveralton, Wogaston (Wogan), Orielton, Mellaston, Roch. A good many Keltic names were altered by the Norse- island). men to suit themselves, cutting off Treff (signifying place, or place of ; the this is Tre or Keltic very prevalent where the Keltic race was strong) and substituting their own equivalent of ton.' Thus we have the in Cornwall, ' hybrid Keltic-Norse, such as Trefmawr, now Moreston. Tref-gors, now Corston. Trefjestyn or Trejestyn, Jestynton. Trefnewydd, now Newton. The Danes seem chiefly to have harassed the coast, landing only for short periods, and penetrating but little Tenby (Dane-bi) was their chief settlement, or, as the Welsh had it, Dynbich-y-Pysgod (the abode of Danish fishers). From them we also have Frains Lake (frayne, glittering; laekr, a brook), and Skyrme (Skroemi, a giant), a common family name about Pembroke still. The Flemings left but httle trace in the way of names, though Flimston was probably named from William le Fleming, who held it under the Earls of Pembroke in inland. and we have 1246 ; race is still as those also Flemington. But the type of their strong in the land of their enforced adoption, who took testify, certain part in the South African War types in South Pembrokeshire and the Boers being identical. can among ! . SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 72 Names which were once pure Welsh, and have now been beyond altered almost Walwyn's recognition, are : Castle, formerly Castell Gualchmai. —Castell Gwys (white). Hean Castle — Hengastell, the old or Amroth — Eare Were, or Earwear. Llanmilo — Castell Llwyd, belonging to Milo de Cogan. Wiston earliest castle. Of the families who have passed away from the places once associated with their names are : Barlows of Slebech. Adams of Paterchurch. Wyrriotts of Orielton. Dawes of Whites of Henllan. Wogans Cunys Bangeston. of Boulston. Welston of (Walter, also Coyneys of Staffordshire) Laugharnes of St. Bride's. Malefants of Upton. Even as late as early in the nineteenth century oxen were used for ploughing in Pembrokeshire ; frequently in conjunction with horses, two oxen abreast with two horses The smuggling abreast in front. of the chief harvests of all classes of ; French brandy was one every creek from Tenby was a landing-place, Manorbier Castle a perfect nest caches and when a cargo was in, teams were requisi- to Dale of ' ' ; tioned right and even the Squire's horses might be found weary and exhausted in their stalls in the morning but if a myst-erious keg stood in the hall, no questions were asked left, ; Among many superstitions, it was (and still is) ; OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS considered unlucky for the New hold on first visitor across the thres- Year's morning to be a also brings ill-luck to a fisherman him on ' catch his way to the boat Wren-hunting on ! St. 73 woman met if ' ; a woman coming against there will be but a poor ; Day was an Stephen's old custom shared by Pembrokeshire with Ireland, and thereprobably of Gaelic origin fore Isle of Man, but now has and girls ; South Pembrokeshire, at any in On New entirely died out. went round from house Year's Water all who rate, it Year's morning boys to house with the and an evergreen ' they sprinkled prevailed also in the it sprinkler, ' New with which received them, singing : Here we bring new water from the well so clear, For to worship God with, this happy New Year Sing levy dew,' sing levy dew, the water and the wine, With seven bright gold wires and bugles that do shine Sing reign of fair maid, with gold upon her toe. Open you the west door, and turn the old year go. Sing reign of fair maid, with gold upon her chin, Open you the east door, and let the New Year in. ; I am indebted to Mr. Edward Laws, in his most inter- esting book, for this ' History of Little England beyond Wales,' quaint and charming verse, for the custom of sprinkling the New Year's water has fallen into disuse in the country districts west of Pembroke, though children round singing hymns and quaint given by Mr. Laws, I New Year are very dirty, shoes are very thin. We wish you a Happy New Year, And ' ' Levy please to turn us dew,' said to be ' Lief ar go one of which, also myself heard on last The roads My carols, still in. Dduw,' a cry to God. : ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 74 One Flemish occupation of the survivals of the the is long-handled, heart-shaped shovel (found also in Belgium, and in Ireland), done, and the ' with which a great deal of farm work is Culm is culm for the ' ball ' ' fires is mixed. a mixture of small coal and mud,i burnt in the cottages it is made up built it into balls with the hands, and the ; fire carefully- up night and morning, and never allowed to go out makes a red, glowing fire of good heat, but little flame. The carrying of burdens on the head, a survival of very old times, ago, but still is manner, and it is universal than less common fairly only ; it was ten years women carry in this wonderful what a weight even slight is young girls can bear with ease, once it is placed on the brimming pails of water or milk, or head by a comrade huge, ungainly bundles of drift wood. The custom gives : a splendid, upright carriage and even, swinging walk, and it is a thousand pities that it should ever decline. gathering of laver from the rocks industries the Angle villagers, of is one of the The chief and one meets very picturesque groups returning from the shore, in patched and tattered garments (sea water being ruinous), with great bundles of drift wood poised on their heads. They coUect the laver from the rocks beyond Freshwater Bay, about and have there three miles from Angle, little number of huts of wreck-wood, thatched with sedge, in which to store is built a (which go by the it collected weekly and sent name of Little Angle) it off by train to Swansea, ; where the Rhondda Valley miners consider delicacy, something eaten like as a what is ' In vegetable. Or known as rather, sea-slime. it a great appearance it is Gold Beaters' Skin, ; OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS sticking flat wet with Camden, and close to the rocks makes the salt water, in his the picking of ; it, all fingers very sore at Britannia,' thus describes ' it (p. 75 first. 641) : ... A sort of Food, made in several parts of this county of a seawhich by the description I hear of it, I take to be the oysterthey gather in the spring-time a sort of Alga green or sea-Uverwort or sea-weed, wherewith they make a sort of food called Llavan or Llawvan Having gathered the weed, they wash it in English, black butter. then clean from sand and shme, and sweat it between two tile-stones shred it small, and knead it well, as they do dough for bread, and make it up into great balls or rolls, which some eat raw, and others fryed with plant, . . . ; oatmeal and butter. An old custom, universal a few years ago, but gradually falling into disuse, on the doorstep. is now the chalking of patterns This being nearly always of grey slate or limestone, the chalk shows round the edge of the up on it ; the patterns run stone only, and are often quite must elaborate, the one thing necessary being that they absolutely join, leaving no end or space, and also join the doorposts on either side, otherwise in ' ! enter ' The Devil will creep This belief in evil spirits waiting their chance to and do mischief dates back to Druidical days ; and the chalked doorsteps of Pembrokeshire are probably one of its last survivals. The language of South Pembrokeshire words, and most terse and expressive gathered from all the races who have is ; fuU of quaint terms are its settled there through the centuries, but though certain words are traced to the Welsh, there absolutely no affinity between the is brokeshire dialect and the Welsh language in aU else, South Pembrokeshire cally English : ' is fiercely Pem- in that, ; as and emphati- a lot of jabbering foreigners ' they have ' SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 76 been known to describe the crew of a Welsh vessel in Angle Bay The expressions ! here give are those only which I myself have heard used and they ought day, alas have reduced even these will of the and chronicled before that when the march of progress to be collected not so far distant, ! many, many more, there are ; quiet, out-of-the-way corners world to one dead level of uniformity and tempted to add) dullness. unfortunately impossible It is quaint forms of speech these am (I and intonation which give so much to reproduce the voice character to I the voice ; usually rises at the end of the sentence in a half-querulous, questioning cadence emphasised, as apparently, there or rather she, nounced like ah ' Aal, all. Aal to fly, To go abroad, to ' word the meaning. is generally For them, to, ' is he or pro- sexes, In the same said very shortly. way : to pieces.' all to pieces. fall two which applies to both aa,' ' or no neuter gender, everything is with stress on Ei must take last home to drive if ' and the ; ' The baking-tub has gone abroad.' abroad to find what's wrong.' it all Anny-guU, the kittywake. Axed, asked. Bean-cracker, a landraU. Bittie, a small child. She's got three ' little bitties.' Bush, to thrust with horns, as a cow. Caffle, tangle. 'Tis aal caffled up.' ' Cannt, can't. Capers, angry remonstrance. was capers Carr, to carry ; ' Ei towld en what done, and there ei ' ! the final ' y ' is invariably lost. Often also used instead of take or bring, ' ' Ei shannt carr yer parcel I carr'd her a cup ! of tea.' Chappall, Chapel. Clift, cliff. clift ' ' ! John The word Sir Ages, clift for me.' Sir ! ' John cleft ' is ! Not take beef also Old buU ! pronounced ' clift.' ' fall over Rock of ' ) ' OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS Coming coming towards. against, (pronounced Coaming to rain, mit 'en ei This does not imply contact. comin' against me.' Coming when Ei was half ways ' ^^ to nne) going to rain. Cornel, comer. Cot, a pen, the duck's cot, the pig's cot. Couple, several not necessarily two, generally more. ; Cowl, a basket. Cowld, cold. Culm, the fuel used in the cottages, a mixture of small coal Cursed, cross, wicked, spiteful. Dab, to smear. Done, did. ' Aa dabbed ' Ei done it Aa's reel cursdd, aa ' aasilf proper.' (I and mud, or slime. is.' with the paint.' did it well.) Dotty, foolish, imbecile. Dull, stupid (Welsh Dul). (German Dysel, thistle Distel). E, in the latter half of a word generally is probably Gaelic. Elligug, guillemot; pronounced as I, masilf,' ' aasilf this is ' Elligook.' Evil, a three-pronged garden fork. Failed, exhausted, done; pronounced 'filed.' ' Aa's most Also expresses non-success. nearly exhausted.) ' Ei ' From there, away, with stress on from.' Come you from there away We lit a fire, so aa had to come from there ' ' (He filed.' is filed to find 'en.' (Come ' ! ' ' !) ! Gain, to improve ; pronounced ' gine.' ' (He Aa's ginin' stoutly.' is getting better.) Gone, become. ' 'Tis gone very shabby.' ' Aa's gone aal to fly.' ' Aa's gone that weak, aa can scarcely stand.' Grip, a ditch. Gwain, going; pronounced 'gwine.' Haggard, a rickyard (hay-guard). Heck, to hop. Heft, to lift. ' Ei can heck about a Too wighty ' Highly, cheerful, pleasant. Hinderable, ' bit to-day.' (weighty), ' 'Tis a we cannt Very hinderable weather on the hay (pronounced high '). Come, Honey, come, 'tis you 'tis (You are ' Honey, an endearment. the chosen one ' !) ! ' ' Howd, also Also ' ! ' Catch a howlt there How, used as why. How you come to do way you come to do it ? Hoult, hold. heft en.' highty place.' hold, or stop. when someone is ' Howd djang. ' on ! it ? ' Sometimes, Howd on Aa cannt howd ' ! it (Stop long.' ' ! Which stop ! ; SOUTH PEMBROKESHIRE 78 I, pronounced Ei ' or ' Eh.' ' Jolly, stout. Keeped, kept. Aa ' me about keeped on at Key, to lock ; pronounced ky.' ' aa's only locked (locked ' it.' Ky the dure (door ' is latched) ' . pronounced as poor ') Aa was ' only locked in, not kyed.' Lake, a brook or stream. Lapster, lobster. Lear, thin, starved, empty. Leave, let. an Leet, ' ' Leave en goo artificial ! watercourse. Lock, to latch. Lonker, a fetter to hobble animals. Danish laenke. Maid, pronounced mide a girl is always so addressed, and a man or boy as man or mun. Gor, mide, how not you come sooner Run, mun, run shut the gyte (gate). Main, very. Aa's main sorry.' (He is very iU.) Meet with, to find. Ei cannt meet with en.' (I have lost it.) Milky, to go milky is to milk. Miskin, manure heap. Norse myki. Moil, a pig's grubbing. Go you call the sow, she 's moilin' in the field.' Molly, lamb, a lamb brought up by hand. My, pronounced mei or may.' Go you from there You 're filUn' all mei eyes.' ' ' ; ' ! ' ; ! ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' Nesh, deUcate. No A bit shape (stress on Not you, do from. Off, On ' to, no ' (spoilt, soft.) useless, unpractical. '), ' That's no shape ' ! Not you touch en off yoong Johnny.' ' not. ' ' nesh ! ' ! Ei had en expresses urging, angry insistence. ' Aa was on to me aU the time about it.' Onlocky, unlucky } also oneasy, onhandy. Orra one, or norra one, not one. Aa piled at me.' Pile, to throw stones. ' Pill, a creek. Welsh pwll. Please you, for please. Plim, to swell, as Please you ' rice. ' sit down.' Aa phmmed up grand.' Popples, round stones. Proper, well, rightly. ' Ei done Quat, squat, or squatted. ' it proper.' Aa was quat in a bush.' ' When aa saw me aa quat down.' Rash, impetuous. Real, pronounced ' ' The young horse is a bit rash.' reel.' / ' : OF NAMES, CUSTOMS, AND PROVINCIALISMS Rightly, exactly. pronounced Rule, ' Ei cannt say ' ree-ule.' rightly.' (I do not know.) Gor, mun, not you be sa scrimpy with Scrimpy, niggardly, stingy. Send, to accompany part way. Take care, not you shed en Shed, to spill, from bucket or basket. ' it ' ' Skirp, a small shower. Skit, to splash. a young Slip, Slop, a gap ' Not big ' Ei was skitted rain, 79 ! ' I only skirps, just skirping a bit.' all over.' girl. bank. in a Soggy, stupefied, inert. Somethin' shockin', very bad. Sorry, sick, weak. ' ' Aa was ' coughin' somethin' shockin'.' 'How's your mother?' a sorry httle thing.' 'Tis She's very sorry.' Steer, steep. Stum, to stifle used also to express covering the • with fresh fire fuel. Tacky, sticky. That, used for so Think upon, ' ; Aa 's gone for think of. that weak, aa can scarcely stand.' When ' ei come upon to think it, ei was fnghtened.' Tide, the sea. To me, ' my. for Aa put ' en in the tide.' (He threw it into the sea.) Aa's cousin to me.' Towld, told. Toy, indicating small size. ' A toy of a thing 1 Trash, hedge-trimmings. Tripples, the frame placed Tump, a haycock. Turn it go, to let out, us in on a cart to loose. ' for loading hay. Ei tumt en goo ' j also ' Please you turn (invite us in). ' Vear, a weasel. Weighty, heavy pronounced wighty.' Wox, wax. In the psalmSj 'My heart ... is even like melting wox.' Yoong, young always accompanies boy or girl. What yoong by was ' ; ' ; that You is ? ' ' 'Twas John Rees's yoong mide.' generally added after here,' ' Please you take any command : ' Go you back,' ' Come you it.' In Angle village, whose one street runs nearly due east and west, that form of direction is invariably used 'Where's John?' 'Aa's gone East.' 'Tell en to caU in when aa cooms West.' PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD.. 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