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PEMBROKE,_PEMBROKESHIRE

(Redirected from Pembroke, Wales)

'Pembroke' (Welsh: ''Penfro'') is the traditional county town of Pembrokeshire in west Wales. However, the administrative centre and de facto county town is Haverfordwest. The town and the county derive their name from that of the cantref of Penfro: ''Pen'' = "head" or "end", and ''bro'' = "region", "country", "land", and so it means essentially "Land's End"[1].
Pembroke Main Street. October 2006.


Contents
History
Pembroke Castle
Geography
Education
Comprehensive Education
Famous residents
Sport
Transportation
Rail
Twin towns
References
External links

History


Pembroke Main Street shown here in the early part of the 20th Century.

Pembroke Castle

Main articles: Pembroke Castle

Pembroke Castle shown here in 1811.

Pembroke Castle today.

One point of interest in the town is Pembroke Castle, the impressive remains of a mediæval castle which was the birthplace of King Henry VII of England. Pembroke and its surroundings are linked with the early Christian church. Later this was the site of the Knights of St John in the UK. Monkton Priory has very early foundations and was renovated by the Knights in the last century. There was a Knights' Bath House on the foreshore in Neyland which was demolished unlawfully on Boxing Day 2005. The first stone building was a defensive tower, now known as the Medieval Chapel, 69a Main Street, built on a cliff edge between 950AD and 1000AD. There are the remains of a grand hall to the North and recently filled-in arched cellars. The building was used as an early church. The layout is the same as St Govans Chapel and it was used by John Wesley from 1764 to preach Methodism. After Westgate Chapel was built we do not know what it was used for after 1810. In 1866 it became the Brewery for the York Tavern which was Cromwell's headquarters at the siege of Pembroke during the Civil War. On both banks of Pembroke River to the West of the Castle are many remains of early activities. The buildings of Catshole Quarry and the rare vegetation with the irreplaceable foreshore have recently been buried by dumped materials. The North Shore Quarries are relatively complete as are the remains of Medieval and Elizabethan slipways where wooden vessels were built before the industrial Dockyard and Admiralty town was built on the grid pattern of Pembroke Dock.
There is a very early graving dock complete in what was Hancocks Yard, about to be buried by a massive infill of the mud flats to the North. The reclaimed land will be used to build high rise flats.
At Pennar flats the early submarine base used for experiments in submarine warfare has been recently bulldozed to allow speculative development by executive housing.
Three of the houses on the then foreshore, part of the shipyard before the Admiralty Dock Yard was built, are still standing but are heavily altered.
The ferry port of Pembroke Dock is a separate town, which was established in 1814. It lies three miles to the north of Pembroke.

Geography


Pembroke is located on the coast of South-West Wales at the mouth of the Pembroke River.

Education


Comprehensive Education

Pembroke School (in Welsh: ''Ysgol Penfro'') is a mixed 11–18 comprehensive school of 1600 pupils with a sixth form of about 200. The school was formed in 1972 as a result of the amalgamation of the former grammar and secondary modern schools.

Famous residents


Besides King Henry VII, famous natives of Pembroke include the composer Daniel Jones and John Lawrence from the popular music band Gorky's Zygotic Mynci.

Sport


Pembroke's main sporting asset is Pembroke Rugby Club located on upper Lamphey road. The ground is called, Crickmarren. The club is currently situated in Division 4 west. Pembroke's main game of the season is often the local derby between rivals the Pembroke Dock Quins. Pembroke has produced famous players such as Ospreys and Welsh international Jonathan Thomas. Other sporting clubs in the area consist of the football team Monkton Swifts. The town is also home to Pembroke Cricket Club. The club plays its home games at its Treleet ground on the Upper Lamphey Road, opposite the Rugby Club. The club currently has a 1st and a 2nd team playing in divisions 1 and 4 of the Pembrokeshire league. The club colours are green and gold.
Pembroke's most successful players include the likes of - Ray Kane, Eifion Powell, Nigel Phillips, Paul White and Daniel Williams.

Transportation


Rail

Pembroke railway station on Station Road serves the town of Pembroke. From there, there are connecting services to the rest of Wales: Carmarthen, Milford Haven and Haverfordwest.
WalesPembrokeshire.png
Red Dot.svg

Pembroke shown within Pembrokeshire UA

Twin towns


Pembroke's sister cities are:

Pembroke, Malta
Bergen, Hesse, Germany

References


1. Charles, B. G., ''The Placenames of Pembrokeshire'', National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth, 1992, ISBN 0-907158-58-7, p 671

External links



Pembroke at Google Maps

Pembroke & Pembroke Dock Website

Pembroke School

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