- Porthdinllaen
Infobox UK place
country = Wales
welsh_name =
constituency_welsh_assembly =
official_name = Porthdinllaen
latitude = 52.926525
longitude = -4.132553
unitary_wales =Gwynedd
map_type = location map|Wales Gwynedd|label=|position=left|float=none|long=-4.1|lat=52.9|caption=|width=190
lieutenancy_wales =Gwynedd
constituency_westminster = Caernarfon
post_town =Pwllheli
postcode_district = LL53
postcode_area = LL
dial_code = 01758
os_grid_reference = SH565385
population =Porthdinllaen ("English" Porth Dinllaen), is a small
coast alvillage in theDwyfor locality on theLlŷn Peninsula withinGwynedd ,North Wales , previously inCaernarfonshire .It has been owned by the National Trust since 1994. With views across to
Yr Eifl andSnowdonia , Porthdinllaen, withNefyn andMorfa Nefyn , form a magnificent two miles (3 km) of sweeping bay. There are only about two dozen buildings at Porthdinllaen, with the "Ty Coch"pub the centre of the village.Vehicular access to the village is restricted to residents with a car permit; visitors must walk across the beach from Morfa Nefyn or across the
golf course on top of the headland, past theIron Age hillfort .Port
Porthdinllaen was originally a fishing port, based around a natural harbour over a mile and a quarter across, and with over one hundred acres of safe anchorage. The harbour is sheltered from all but a north-easterly wind, and as the only such haven on the Llyn Peninsula, it has been used for many centuries of trading, and a place to run to for shelter in a
storm . [http://www.rhiw.com/y_mor/hanes_llongau_llyn/porthdinllaen.htm Rhiw.com - Porthdinllaen] ]In May 1806, a parliamentary bill approved new buildings when it seemed that Porthdinllaen would be chosen over
Holyhead ,Anglesey , as the route toNorthern Ireland . Preferred byIsambard Kingdom Brunel as his point of embarkation for hisrailway , the location was further west and less accessible thanThomas Telford 's road developments to Holyhead. Porthdinllaen Harbour Company was formed in 1808 in preparation by the Jones Parry family of the Madryn estate (the companies assets included the village and the harbour), but the bill before Parliament to constitute Porthdinllaen as a harbour for Irish trade was rejected in 1810. [http://www.archivesnetworkwales.info/cgi-bin/anw/fulldesc_nofr?inst_id=37&coll_id=2957&expand= Archieve Network Wales - Porthdinllaen] ]Pig farming was important to the economy of the Llyn Peninsula, and Porthdinllaen was the main point of export toLiverpool . In 1830, the farmers and merchants asked the Madryn estate to build a bigger pier, but they estate refused. The first steamer the “Vale of Clwyd” didn't therefore enter service until 1832. Apart from goods to support the population and the farmers, Porthdinllaen imported large quantities ofsalt to create theNefyn herring .Railway
Various proposals were made to build railways to serve the harbour at Porthdinllaen, although none were eventually constructed:
*1808 - Isambard Kingdom Brunel, as point of embarkation to Ireland
*1830 - Samuel Holland, a slate quarry owner atRhiw , joined Henry Archer, a businessman from Dublin, to promote theFfestiniog Railway , incorporated by Act of Parliament on23 May 1832
*1845 - The Worcester and Porth-Dynllaen Railway informed the Rev. T. Parry Jones Parry of an application to Parliament of a railway track fromWorcester to Porthdinllaen
*1845 - The North Wales Railway Co. planned to construct convert|28|mi|km of track fromBangor to Porthdinllaen
*1860 - The Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway Company wanted to construct a line fromAberystwyth to Porthdinllaen
*1877 - The Cambrian Railways Act revived the powers conferred by the Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway Act 1862 for a railway to Porthdinlleyn HarbourLifeboat station
In the
19th century , North Wales lacked easily passable roads, and so the sea was the easiest way to access many of the communities. Porthdinllaen, on the northern coast of the Llyn peninsula, with its sheltered east facing bay, became important as a harbour of refuge and a busy port, with over 700 ships passing through the port in 1861. After storms in 1863, the local parish priest wrote to theRoyal National Lifeboat Institution to request a lifeboat be positioned in the harbour.The boat shed and slip commissioned in 1864. Manned constantly since, Porthdinllaen lifeboat station is the only lifeboat station where Welsh is the normally spoken language of the crew. The current
coxswain is Mike Davies, who has served as coxswain since 2004. The currentTyne class lifeboat is called "Hetty Rampton," and she has been in service sinceApril 27 1987 . [ [http://www.pylifeboat.org/Boat.htm Porthdinllaen RNLI - The Boat] ]Film location
Due to its highly preserved and yet maintained status, Porthdinllaen regularly acts as a film and television shooting location. In September 2004 it posed as a Scottish fishing village for the
Demi Moore romantic thriller "Half Light ." [ [http://www.halflightlocations.com/index.html Half Light locations] ]References
External links
* [http://www.pylifeboat.org Porthdinllaen Lifeboat]
* [http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=3494416 www.geograph.co.uk : photos of Porthdinllaen and surrounding area]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.