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Haverfordwest

Haverfordwest (/ˌhævərfərdˈwɛst/ HAV-ər-fərd-WEST, locally /ˈhɑːrfərdwɛst/ HAR-fərd-west; Welsh: Hwlffordd [ˈhʊlfɔrð]) is the county town of Pembrokeshire, Wales, and the most populous urban area in Pembrokeshire with a population of 14,596 in 2011.[3] It is also a community, being the second most populous community in the county, with 12,042 people, after Milford Haven.[4] The suburbs include the former parish of Prendergast,[5] Albert Town and the residential and industrial areas of Withybush (housing, retail parks, hospital, airport and showground).

Haverfordwest
From the top, Haverfordwest Castle seen from Castle Square, County Hall, Milford Road
Haverfordwest
Location within Pembrokeshire
Population12,042 (Community 2011)[1]
OS grid referenceSM955155
Community
  • Haverfordwest[2]
Principal area
Preserved county
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townHAVERFORDWEST
Postcode districtSA61, SA62
Dialling code01437
PoliceDyfed-Powys
FireMid and West Wales
AmbulanceWelsh
UK Parliament
Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament
List of places
UK
Wales
Pembrokeshire
51°48′N 4°58′W / 51.80°N 4.97°W / 51.80; -4.97
The town centre, showing parish churches

Haverfordwest is located in a strategic position, being at the lowest bridging point of the Western Cleddau prior to the opening of the Cleddau Bridge in 1975.

Topography

 
The "New" Bridge
 
The Priory, Haverfordwest
Henry G Gastineau, 1830

Haverfordwest is a market town, the county town of Pembrokeshire and an important road network hub between Milford Haven, Pembroke Dock, Fishguard and St David's as a result of its position at the tidal limit of the Western Cleddau. The majority of the town, comprising the old parishes of St. Mary, St. Martin and St. Thomas, lies on the right (west) bank of the river. On the left bank are the suburbs of Prendergast and Cartlett. At this point, a pair of sandstone ridges extending from east to west and separated by a deep, narrow valley, are cut through by the Western Cleddau. This leaves two high spurs on the west side of the river. On the northern spur, the castle and its surrounding settlement form the core of St Martin's parish. On the southern spur, the High Street ascends steeply from the river and forms the core of St Mary's parish. From the foot of each spur, ancient bridges cross the river to Prendergast: St Martin's Bridge ("the Old Bridge") and St Mary's Bridge ("the New Bridge", built in 1835). St Thomas's parish occupies the south side of the southern spur. From these core areas, the town has spread, mainly along the ridges. In addition to the four ancient parish churches, the remains of an Augustinian priory are visible at the southern edge of the town.

Toponymy

The name of the town means "ford used by heifers" or "ford used by goats" from Old English hæfer. In local dialect, it is pronounced "Harford". "West" was added in the 15th century, to distinguish the town from Hereford.[6] It is marked as Herfordwest on a 1578 parish map of Pembrokeshire.[7] The Welsh name is said by B. G. Charles to be "merely a corruption of the English name".[8]

History

 
Quay Street

Haverfordwest has been English-speaking for centuries. South Pembrokeshire is known as 'Little England Beyond Wales', but because the markets traded with Welsh farmers in the north and east, there has always been a significant Welsh-speaking influence. The suburb of Prendergast seems to have originated as an extramural Welsh dormitory, dating from the times when all agricultural trade had to pass through the borough, and the fearful Normans before the destruction of Anglo-Norman power in 1136 tried to prevent Welshmen bearing arms from entering within the castle walls after nightfall.

Origins

Scores of Iron Age and Roman coinage and artefact discoveries, and excavations by the Dyfed Archaeological Trust under the direction of Heather James at Carmarthen (Moridunum) in the 1980s, point to significant Roman penetration to this westernmost part of Wales. The strategic position of Haverfordwest with its defensive bluff overlooking the lowest fordable point on the western Cleddau and accessible to sea traffic would have required a Roman presence, probably modest in scale, from the 1st century AD to protect supplies to and from the coast, e.g. the Roman legionary headquarters at Caerleon were roofed with slates from the lower slopes of the Preseli Hills. In 1992, aerial photography identified a Roman road running to the west of Carmarthen, past Wiston to Poyston Cross, raising the possibility of Roman fortlets at strategic river crossings at Whitland and Haverfordwest. Edward Llwyd's note to Camden's Britannia (ed. 1695) refers to a valuable find of silver coins at Llanboidy, the latest coin being one of Domitian struck in AD 91. In the 1920s Sir Mortimer Wheeler partially excavated a Roman dwelling or villa at Wolfscastle; work was restarted in 2002 by Professor Merroney. James Phillips, in The History of Pembrokeshire (published 1909), records a find of Roman silver coins in Haverfordwest, the earliest dated coin a Valerian and the latest a Claudius Gothicus. The museum in which the coins were deposited has been "scattered to the winds" and the whereabouts of the coins is unknown.

Phillips claimed that the pre-Norman name of Haverfordwest was Caer Alun, so named by the Emperor Maximus (Macsim Gwledig). His sources are not given but the Cambro-Briton in 1822 also recorded that Maximus, the last Roman Emperor of Britain, a man who for a time divided the Roman Empire with Theodosius I, on withdrawing Roman legions from Britain granted civic status and Celtic names to a number of pacified Romano-British settlements, including Southampton, Chichester, Old Sarum near Salisbury, Carmarthen (Caerfyrddin) and Haverfordwest (Caer Alun). Maximus had married Elen, a Welsh noblewoman, and they had three sons. Phillips claims that the name actually given to the town was Caer Elen, in honour of his wife (the name later changing to Caer Alun).

Medieval period

 
Haverfordwest Castle

The ecclesiastical centre of the area (perhaps the seat of a bishop in the Age of the Saints) was probably one of the several churches of the local St Ismael, most probably St. Ishmael's.[9] This occurred around 1110.[10]

The proposition that Haverfordwest Castle was founded by Tancred, a Flemish Marcher Lord,[11] is questionable. The Marcher Lords were not Flemish but Norman barons originally along the Marches (Anglo-Welsh border).[citation needed] The castle is recorded as having been founded in 1100 by the Norman Gilbert de Clare. The Flemings, said to have arrived in three groups in 1107, 1111 and 1151, are likely to have participated in its later development for their own and the Normans' protection from the Welsh warlords. It is recorded that the Constable of the castle in 1207 was Itohert, son of Richard Tancard, possibly a descendant of the first Tancred.

The Flemish presence, reputed to result from floods in the Low Countries, was more likely to have consisted initially of Flemish mercenaries originally in the invading army of William the Conqueror, who in reward for their part in William's victory were granted lands in parts of Northern Britain, and in Wales in the Gower, and Geraldus Cambrensis recorded their presence in the Hundred of Roose in Pembrokeshire.

A Fleming, Wizo, who died in 1130 founded at Wiston a motte and bailey fortification, the forerunner of the stone castle, for protection against the Welsh warlords: the Flemings were reportedly unpopular wherever they settled. The precarious position of Normans and Flemings was demonstrated in 1136 when the Normans, having already lost 500 men in battle at Loughor, re-recruited from Lordships from all over South Wales and led by Robert fitz Martin at Crug Mawr near Cardigan attacked Owain Gwynedd and his army. Routed, they fled over the Teifi Bridge which collapsed; the retreating Normans drowning under the weight of their armour. Their leader Richard de Clare had previously been intercepted and killed by Iorwerth ab Owen. Wiston and the castle were overrun in 1147 by Hywel Sais, son of Lord Rhys. Ranulf Higden, in his Polychronicus, records the Flemings as extinct in Pembrokeshire by 1327 but Flemish mercenaries reappear in 1400 when at the behest of Henry IV they joined an army of 1,500 English settlers who marched north from Pembrokeshire to attack the army of Owain Glyndŵr at Mynydd Hyddgen. The attack was repulsed with heavy casualties and legend has it that English prisoners were spared but surviving Flemish mercenaries were massacred or sold into slavery.

 
St Mary's Church, viewed from Tower Hill
 
St David & St Patrick Roman Catholic Church, Dew Street

St Mary's Church originated at the end of the 12th century and the current (Grade I listed) building was constructed between the 13th and 15th centuries[12] and prominently visible at the top of the High Street.

Haverfordwest rapidly grew, initially around the castle and St Martin's Church (the settlement being called Castletown), then spreading into the High Street area. It immediately became the capital of the hundred of Roose (part of Little England beyond Wales), and because of its pivotal position, the commercial centre of western Dyfed, which it has remained to this day. In common with other British towns, its growth was rapid during the period up to 1300, and its extent[13] by then was much the same as it was in the early 19th century. A large town by the standards of the time, its population was probably around 4,000–5,000. It received its first marcher charter from William Marshall, 1st Earl of Pembroke sometime between 1213 and 1219, and obtained the lucrative trading privileges of an English borough. It traded both by land and sea and had a busy tidal quay on the river below the "New" Bridge. At least ten guilds operated, and there was significant woollen cloth manufacture. In 1545, the town was designated a county corporate by Henry VIII, with the aim of supporting a campaign against piracy in local waters. It was one of only two such counties corporate in Wales (the other being Carmarthen), and remained officially "The Town and County of Haverfordwest" until the abolition of the borough in 1974.[14]

In common with other large towns in Europe, Haverfordwest was hit hard by the Black Death in 1348, suffering both depopulation (perhaps by more than 50%) and diminution of trade. Large parts of the town were abandoned, and it did not start to recover until the Tudor period. At the end of the 17th century,[15] the town was still significantly smaller than in 1300. In 1405, the town was burned by the French allies of Owain Glyndwr, although in its early history Haverfordwest suffered less than most towns in Wales from such depredations.

Post-medieval

During the English Civil War, the burgesses of the borough supported Parliament, while the ruling gentry were Royalist. As a result, there was considerable conflict, and the town changed hands five times.[16] There followed a period of stagnation in which the comparative status of the town declined.

20th century

Some 1,200 men of Pembrokeshire lost their lives in World War I, and Haverfordwest was the location chosen for the County of Pembroke War Memorial, unveiled in 1921. Its current location is Picton Place, close by County Hall, and it is Grade II listed.[17] Haverfordwest was bombed for the first time during World War II on 24 September 1940. The City Road and New Road areas were hit, although there had been little preparation and no warning siren sounded. There were no casualties.[18]

Haverfordwest today has the air of a typical small country market town, but the centre still conveys the feel of the important mediaeval borough. The once run-down riverside area has been renovated and Bridge Street has been pedestrianised and improved.

Haverford Township, Haverford and Havertown in Pennsylvania, United States, are all named after Haverfordwest.

21st century

In October 2022, the remains of 307 people, including children, were unearthed by archaeologists working on the remnants of a medieval priory found beneath the old Ocky White building, a former department store which closed in 2013. It is believed that the graveyard could have been used until the early 18th century.[19]

Governance

Local government

 
Old Wool Market, Quay Street: Town council offices.

There are two tiers of local government covering Haverfordwest, at community (town) and county level: Haverfordwest Town Council and Pembrokeshire County Council. The town council is based at the Old Wool Market on Quay Street.[20] Pembrokeshire County Council is also based in Haverfordwest, at County Hall on Freemens Way.[21]

For local government purposes the community of Haverfordwest comprises five wards: Castle, Prendergast, Portfield, Priory and Garth. The community has its own town council and mayor.[22]

Pembrokeshire County Council conducted an extensive review of community boundaries in 2007[23] which made a number of submissions to the boundary commission for Wales. These submissions included a number of recommendations for the extension of the Haverfordwest community boundary where there had been perceived community overspill due to housing developments. These suggestions were mostly implemented,[24] with one significant exception[25] leading to an increase in the number of electors in the Haverfordwest community. One area of contention concerned the status of the village of Merlin's Bridge which continues to have its own community council despite its close proximity to Haverfordwest and a degree of community overspill.[26] As such the conurbation of Haverfordwest and Merlin's Bridge is the most populous urban area in Pembrokeshire though Haverfordwest's community boundaries mean it is only the second most populous community in the county after Milford Haven.[4]

Haverfordwest is twinned with Oberkirch, Germany.

Senedd and Westminster representation

Haverfordwest is part of the Preseli Pembrokeshire Senedd constituency and UK Parliamentary constituency. The local Senedd Member is Paul Davies of the Conservative Party[27] and the local Member of Parliament is Stephen Crabb,[28] also a Conservative.

Administrative history

Haverfordwest was an ancient borough, receiving its first charter from Henry II in 1169. The borough was given the right to appoint its own sheriff in 1479, and in 1545 was declared to be a county corporate. The borough was reformed to become a municipal borough under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835.[14][29] The borough covered all of the parish of St Mary, parts of the parishes of St Martin, St Thomas, Prendergast, and Uzmaston, and an extra-parochial area (deemed to be a parish from 1866) called Furzy Park and Portfield.[30][31] Under the Local Government Act 1894, parishes which straddled borough boundaries were split into separate parishes for the parts inside and outside the borough. The part of Uzmaston within the borough therefore became a parish called Cartlett, the part of Prendergast outside the borough became a parish called North Prendergast, and the parts of St Martin and St Thomas parishes outside the borough became parishes called St Martin Hamlet and St Thomas Hamlet respectively. The parishes outside the borough were all included in the Haverfordwest Rural District. The six parishes within the borough after 1894 were therefore Cartlett, Furzy Park and Portfield, Prendergast, St Mary, St Martin, and St Thomas. These were urban parishes and so did not have their own parish councils, with the lowest level representative body being the Haverfordwest Borough Council.[32]

Haverfordwest's status as a county corporate from 1545 made it independent from Pembrokeshire. When elected county councils were established in 1889 the town was brought back into Pembrokeshire for local government purposes, being under the control of Pembrokeshire County Council and losing its separate police force at the same time.[33][34] For other purposes the town retained its independence from the county, having its own Lord Lieutenant until 1931, and keeping its own Quarter Sessions until 1951.[35][36] The status of county corporate was finally abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972. One remaining legacy from Haverfordwest's former status as a county corporate is that it retains the right to appoint its own sheriff.[37]

 
Picton House: Council offices 1954–2020

Haverfordwest had a medieval guildhall which stood at the top (west end) of High Street in front of St Mary's Church. The guildhall served as the meeting place for both the borough corporation and the Pembrokeshire Quarter Sessions until the 1830s.[38] In 1837 the county authorities built themselves Shire Hall at the bottom (east end) of High Street.[39] The guildhall was demolished and the borough corporation met instead in a room above the north porch of St Mary's Church until that room was demolished in 1861. In 1871 the borough acquired newly built premises at 1 St Mary's Lane to serve as the council's offices and meeting place.[40][41][42] In 1954 the borough council moved to Picton House at 2 Picton Place, an 1830s house on the bank of the Western Cleddau, and remained based there until the council's abolition in 1974.[43][44][45]

Haverfordwest Municipal Borough was abolished in 1974, becoming part of the district of Preseli (renamed Preseli Pembrokeshire in 1987) within the county of Dyfed. A community covering the former borough was established at the same time, with its council taking the name Haverfordwest Town Council.[46][47] Preseli Pembrokeshire was abolished in 1996 and the area became part of a re-established Pembrokeshire.[48] Haverfordwest Town Council continued to use the former borough council's premises at Picton House as its headquarters until 2020, when it moved to the Old Wool Market, a converted late eighteenth century wool market and warehouse building on the quayside.[49][50]

Demography

The 2011 census recorded a population of 12,042 living within the community boundary.[4] The urban area extends beyond the community boundary in various places, notably at Merlin's Bridge to the south of the town, which forms a separate community but is deemed by the Office for National Statistics to form part of the Haverfordwest built-up area.[51] The population of the Haverfordwest built-up area was 14,596 in 2011.[3]

Economy

 
Footbridge on the River Cleddau gives access to shops on both sides

In accordance with its status as a sub-regional hub-town, Haverfordwest continues to serve as Pembrokeshire's principal commercial and retail centre.[52] The development of the riverside shopping centre in Withybush on the outskirts of the town includes Marks & Spencer in 2010[53] and Debenham's in 2013.[54]

A new town library opened in 2018 in the former Riverside Market building.

Concerns about the relative decline of the historic town centre compared to the growth of the retail centre at Withybush led to Welsh historian John Davies expressing his concern that Haverfordwest is becoming "a medieval town surrounded by tin sheds".[citation needed]

Education

Schools and colleges in Haverfordwest:

  • Haverfordwest Grammar School, 1488–1978, became a public school in the 1920s, making it one of only two public schools in Wales at that time.
  • Haverfordwest High VC School, an English-medium secondary school, was formed in 2018 by the merger of Sir Thomas Picton School and Tasker Milward School.[55]
  • Pembrokeshire College, an affiliated college of the University of Glamorgan, is situated in the Merlin's Bridge suburb of the town. The college serves as the principal centre of further and higher education in Pembrokeshire.
  • Ysgol Caer Elen, a Welsh-medium school for pupils aged 3 to 16, opened in 2018, replacing Ysgol Gymraeg Glan Cleddau. The new school cost £28 million to build and has the capacity for 315 primary and 600 secondary pupils. The nursery has the capacity for 45 children.[56]
  • Redhill Preparatory School is an independent school established in 2001 which includes a Montessori learning component for younger pupils.[57]
  • Waldo Williams Primary School opened in 2019, combining the former Mt Airey and Haverfordwest Church in Wales VC schools. It is named after the poet Waldo Williams (1904–1971).[58]
  • Mary Immaculate Primary School, a Catholic primary school.

Sport and leisure

 
Haverdfordwest Leisure Centre

Haverfordwest County play association football in the Cymru Premier (the top tier of Welsh football) at Bridge Meadow Stadium, while Merlins Bridge play in the local Pembrokeshire League. Haverfordwest RFC, which formed in 1885, play rugby union at their Pembroke Road ground, and Haverfordwest Cricket Club play at Dale Road.

In 2009, Haverfordwest's sports and leisure provision benefited from significant investment, with the opening of a new £8 million leisure centre situated at St. Thomas Green.[59][60]

The kayaking club venture to sea as well as using the rivers.[61]

Haverfordwest High VC School benefits from a wide range of sporting facilities, including a purpose-built sports centre with a hockey pitch, artificial turf and a full-sized athletics track.

Health

Withybush General Hospital is one of the main hospitals of West Wales and part of the Hywel Dda University Health Board, formerly Pembrokeshire & Derwen NHS Trust. The hospital has most services, but paediatric and maternity services have been moved to Glangwili General Hospital, Carmarthen.[62]

Transport

Haverfordwest is served by Haverfordwest Airport.

Haverfordwest railway station is on the West Wales Line. It is served by Transport for Wales services to Manchester Piccadilly and Milford Haven.

Haverfordwest bus station is located beside Riverside Quay Shopping Centre. It has six bus stops with two additional bays for coach drop off/pickup.[63] It is served by Edwards Coaches, First Cymru, National Express and Richards Brothers.

Forming one of the major "road hubs" of West Wales, the town is at the junction of the A40, A4076 and A487 roads and several rural B roads, including the B4329 running northwards to Eglwyswrw across the Preseli Mountains. The A40 connects Haverfordwest with Carmarthen to the east and Fishguard to the north; the A4076 connects Haverfordwest with Milford Haven and Pembroke Dock to the south; the A487 connects Haverfordwest with St Davids to the northwest.

Notable people

See Category:People from Haverfordwest

Sport

Freedom of the Town

People and military units that have honoured with the Freedom of the Town of Haverfordwest include:

Individuals

Military Units

See also

Bibliography

  • Humphrey Holdfast, Haverfordwest And Its Story, Llewellyn Brigstocke, Publisher, 7 Market Street, Haverfordwest, 1882 (published by subscription).
  • Dillwyn Miles (ed) A History of Haverfordwest, Gomer, 1999, ISBN 1-85902-738-5

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  72. ^ "Picton, Sir Thomas" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 581–582.
  73. ^ Laughton, John Knox (1898). "Stokes, John Lort" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 54. pp. 400–401.
  74. ^ Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by George Garro-Jones (Trefgarne)
  75. ^ Seccombe, Thomas (1899). "Walter, Lucy" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. pp. 259–260.
  76. ^ a b "Town finds lost Nelson scroll - in its safe". Wales Online. 31 March 2013. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  77. ^ a b "House where Nelson given Haverfordwest honour for sale". BBC News. 22 June 2010. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  78. ^ a b "Soldiers given freedom of Haverfordwest". Western Telegraph. 4 March 2009.

External links

  • "Haverfordwest" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 80–81.
  • Haverfordwest Town Museum
  • Haverfordwest Civic Society
  • Further historical information and links on GENUKI

haverfordwest, fərd, west, locally, ɑːr, fərd, west, welsh, hwlffordd, ˈhʊlfɔrð, county, town, pembrokeshire, wales, most, populous, urban, area, pembrokeshire, with, population, 2011, also, community, being, second, most, populous, community, county, with, pe. Haverfordwest ˌ h ae v er f er d ˈ w ɛ s t HAV er ferd WEST locally ˈ h ɑːr f er d w ɛ s t HAR ferd west Welsh Hwlffordd ˈhʊlfɔrd is the county town of Pembrokeshire Wales and the most populous urban area in Pembrokeshire with a population of 14 596 in 2011 3 It is also a community being the second most populous community in the county with 12 042 people after Milford Haven 4 The suburbs include the former parish of Prendergast 5 Albert Town and the residential and industrial areas of Withybush housing retail parks hospital airport and showground HaverfordwestWelsh HwlfforddFrom the top Haverfordwest Castle seen from Castle Square County Hall Milford RoadHaverfordwestLocation within PembrokeshirePopulation12 042 Community 2011 1 OS grid referenceSM955155CommunityHaverfordwest 2 Principal areaPembrokeshirePreserved countyDyfedCountryWalesSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townHAVERFORDWESTPostcode districtSA61 SA62Dialling code01437PoliceDyfed PowysFireMid and West WalesAmbulanceWelshUK ParliamentPreseli PembrokeshireSenedd Cymru Welsh ParliamentPreseli PembrokeshireList of places UK Wales Pembrokeshire 51 48 N 4 58 W 51 80 N 4 97 W 51 80 4 97 Interactive fullscreen map nearby articles The town centre showing parish churches Haverfordwest is located in a strategic position being at the lowest bridging point of the Western Cleddau prior to the opening of the Cleddau Bridge in 1975 Contents 1 Topography 2 Toponymy 3 History 3 1 Origins 3 2 Medieval period 3 3 Post medieval 3 4 20th century 3 5 21st century 4 Governance 4 1 Local government 4 2 Senedd and Westminster representation 4 3 Administrative history 5 Demography 6 Economy 7 Education 8 Sport and leisure 9 Health 10 Transport 11 Notable people 11 1 Sport 12 Freedom of the Town 12 1 Individuals 12 2 Military Units 13 See also 14 Bibliography 15 References 16 External linksTopography Edit The New Bridge The Priory HaverfordwestHenry G Gastineau 1830Haverfordwest is a market town the county town of Pembrokeshire and an important road network hub between Milford Haven Pembroke Dock Fishguard and St David s as a result of its position at the tidal limit of the Western Cleddau The majority of the town comprising the old parishes of St Mary St Martin and St Thomas lies on the right west bank of the river On the left bank are the suburbs of Prendergast and Cartlett At this point a pair of sandstone ridges extending from east to west and separated by a deep narrow valley are cut through by the Western Cleddau This leaves two high spurs on the west side of the river On the northern spur the castle and its surrounding settlement form the core of St Martin s parish On the southern spur the High Street ascends steeply from the river and forms the core of St Mary s parish From the foot of each spur ancient bridges cross the river to Prendergast St Martin s Bridge the Old Bridge and St Mary s Bridge the New Bridge built in 1835 St Thomas s parish occupies the south side of the southern spur From these core areas the town has spread mainly along the ridges In addition to the four ancient parish churches the remains of an Augustinian priory are visible at the southern edge of the town Toponymy EditThe name of the town means ford used by heifers or ford used by goats from Old English haefer In local dialect it is pronounced Harford West was added in the 15th century to distinguish the town from Hereford 6 It is marked as Herfordwest on a 1578 parish map of Pembrokeshire 7 The Welsh name is said by B G Charles to be merely a corruption of the English name 8 History Edit Quay StreetHaverfordwest has been English speaking for centuries South Pembrokeshire is known as Little England Beyond Wales but because the markets traded with Welsh farmers in the north and east there has always been a significant Welsh speaking influence The suburb of Prendergast seems to have originated as an extramural Welsh dormitory dating from the times when all agricultural trade had to pass through the borough and the fearful Normans before the destruction of Anglo Norman power in 1136 tried to prevent Welshmen bearing arms from entering within the castle walls after nightfall Origins Edit Scores of Iron Age and Roman coinage and artefact discoveries and excavations by the Dyfed Archaeological Trust under the direction of Heather James at Carmarthen Moridunum in the 1980s point to significant Roman penetration to this westernmost part of Wales The strategic position of Haverfordwest with its defensive bluff overlooking the lowest fordable point on the western Cleddau and accessible to sea traffic would have required a Roman presence probably modest in scale from the 1st century AD to protect supplies to and from the coast e g the Roman legionary headquarters at Caerleon were roofed with slates from the lower slopes of the Preseli Hills In 1992 aerial photography identified a Roman road running to the west of Carmarthen past Wiston to Poyston Cross raising the possibility of Roman fortlets at strategic river crossings at Whitland and Haverfordwest Edward Llwyd s note to Camden s Britannia ed 1695 refers to a valuable find of silver coins at Llanboidy the latest coin being one of Domitian struck in AD 91 In the 1920s Sir Mortimer Wheeler partially excavated a Roman dwelling or villa at Wolfscastle work was restarted in 2002 by Professor Merroney James Phillips in The History of Pembrokeshire published 1909 records a find of Roman silver coins in Haverfordwest the earliest dated coin a Valerian and the latest a Claudius Gothicus The museum in which the coins were deposited has been scattered to the winds and the whereabouts of the coins is unknown Phillips claimed that the pre Norman name of Haverfordwest was Caer Alun so named by the Emperor Maximus Macsim Gwledig His sources are not given but the Cambro Briton in 1822 also recorded that Maximus the last Roman Emperor of Britain a man who for a time divided the Roman Empire with Theodosius I on withdrawing Roman legions from Britain granted civic status and Celtic names to a number of pacified Romano British settlements including Southampton Chichester Old Sarum near Salisbury Carmarthen Caerfyrddin and Haverfordwest Caer Alun Maximus had married Elen a Welsh noblewoman and they had three sons Phillips claims that the name actually given to the town was Caer Elen in honour of his wife the name later changing to Caer Alun Medieval period Edit Haverfordwest CastleThe ecclesiastical centre of the area perhaps the seat of a bishop in the Age of the Saints was probably one of the several churches of the local St Ismael most probably St Ishmael s 9 This occurred around 1110 10 The proposition that Haverfordwest Castle was founded by Tancred a Flemish Marcher Lord 11 is questionable The Marcher Lords were not Flemish but Norman barons originally along the Marches Anglo Welsh border citation needed The castle is recorded as having been founded in 1100 by the Norman Gilbert de Clare The Flemings said to have arrived in three groups in 1107 1111 and 1151 are likely to have participated in its later development for their own and the Normans protection from the Welsh warlords It is recorded that the Constable of the castle in 1207 was Itohert son of Richard Tancard possibly a descendant of the first Tancred The Flemish presence reputed to result from floods in the Low Countries was more likely to have consisted initially of Flemish mercenaries originally in the invading army of William the Conqueror who in reward for their part in William s victory were granted lands in parts of Northern Britain and in Wales in the Gower and Geraldus Cambrensis recorded their presence in the Hundred of Roose in Pembrokeshire A Fleming Wizo who died in 1130 founded at Wiston a motte and bailey fortification the forerunner of the stone castle for protection against the Welsh warlords the Flemings were reportedly unpopular wherever they settled The precarious position of Normans and Flemings was demonstrated in 1136 when the Normans having already lost 500 men in battle at Loughor re recruited from Lordships from all over South Wales and led by Robert fitz Martin at Crug Mawr near Cardigan attacked Owain Gwynedd and his army Routed they fled over the Teifi Bridge which collapsed the retreating Normans drowning under the weight of their armour Their leader Richard de Clare had previously been intercepted and killed by Iorwerth ab Owen Wiston and the castle were overrun in 1147 by Hywel Sais son of Lord Rhys Ranulf Higden in his Polychronicus records the Flemings as extinct in Pembrokeshire by 1327 but Flemish mercenaries reappear in 1400 when at the behest of Henry IV they joined an army of 1 500 English settlers who marched north from Pembrokeshire to attack the army of Owain Glyndŵr at Mynydd Hyddgen The attack was repulsed with heavy casualties and legend has it that English prisoners were spared but surviving Flemish mercenaries were massacred or sold into slavery St Mary s Church viewed from Tower Hill St David amp St Patrick Roman Catholic Church Dew StreetSt Mary s Church originated at the end of the 12th century and the current Grade I listed building was constructed between the 13th and 15th centuries 12 and prominently visible at the top of the High Street Haverfordwest rapidly grew initially around the castle and St Martin s Church the settlement being called Castletown then spreading into the High Street area It immediately became the capital of the hundred of Roose part of Little England beyond Wales and because of its pivotal position the commercial centre of western Dyfed which it has remained to this day In common with other British towns its growth was rapid during the period up to 1300 and its extent 13 by then was much the same as it was in the early 19th century A large town by the standards of the time its population was probably around 4 000 5 000 It received its first marcher charter from William Marshall 1st Earl of Pembroke sometime between 1213 and 1219 and obtained the lucrative trading privileges of an English borough It traded both by land and sea and had a busy tidal quay on the river below the New Bridge At least ten guilds operated and there was significant woollen cloth manufacture In 1545 the town was designated a county corporate by Henry VIII with the aim of supporting a campaign against piracy in local waters It was one of only two such counties corporate in Wales the other being Carmarthen and remained officially The Town and County of Haverfordwest until the abolition of the borough in 1974 14 In common with other large towns in Europe Haverfordwest was hit hard by the Black Death in 1348 suffering both depopulation perhaps by more than 50 and diminution of trade Large parts of the town were abandoned and it did not start to recover until the Tudor period At the end of the 17th century 15 the town was still significantly smaller than in 1300 In 1405 the town was burned by the French allies of Owain Glyndwr although in its early history Haverfordwest suffered less than most towns in Wales from such depredations Post medieval Edit During the English Civil War the burgesses of the borough supported Parliament while the ruling gentry were Royalist As a result there was considerable conflict and the town changed hands five times 16 There followed a period of stagnation in which the comparative status of the town declined 20th century Edit Some 1 200 men of Pembrokeshire lost their lives in World War I and Haverfordwest was the location chosen for the County of Pembroke War Memorial unveiled in 1921 Its current location is Picton Place close by County Hall and it is Grade II listed 17 Haverfordwest was bombed for the first time during World War II on 24 September 1940 The City Road and New Road areas were hit although there had been little preparation and no warning siren sounded There were no casualties 18 Haverfordwest today has the air of a typical small country market town but the centre still conveys the feel of the important mediaeval borough The once run down riverside area has been renovated and Bridge Street has been pedestrianised and improved Haverford Township Haverford and Havertown in Pennsylvania United States are all named after Haverfordwest 21st century Edit In October 2022 the remains of 307 people including children were unearthed by archaeologists working on the remnants of a medieval priory found beneath the old Ocky White building a former department store which closed in 2013 It is believed that the graveyard could have been used until the early 18th century 19 Governance EditLocal government Edit Old Wool Market Quay Street Town council offices There are two tiers of local government covering Haverfordwest at community town and county level Haverfordwest Town Council and Pembrokeshire County Council The town council is based at the Old Wool Market on Quay Street 20 Pembrokeshire County Council is also based in Haverfordwest at County Hall on Freemens Way 21 For local government purposes the community of Haverfordwest comprises five wards Castle Prendergast Portfield Priory and Garth The community has its own town council and mayor 22 Pembrokeshire County Council conducted an extensive review of community boundaries in 2007 23 which made a number of submissions to the boundary commission for Wales These submissions included a number of recommendations for the extension of the Haverfordwest community boundary where there had been perceived community overspill due to housing developments These suggestions were mostly implemented 24 with one significant exception 25 leading to an increase in the number of electors in the Haverfordwest community One area of contention concerned the status of the village of Merlin s Bridge which continues to have its own community council despite its close proximity to Haverfordwest and a degree of community overspill 26 As such the conurbation of Haverfordwest and Merlin s Bridge is the most populous urban area in Pembrokeshire though Haverfordwest s community boundaries mean it is only the second most populous community in the county after Milford Haven 4 Haverfordwest is twinned with Oberkirch Germany Senedd and Westminster representation Edit Haverfordwest is part of the Preseli Pembrokeshire Senedd constituency and UK Parliamentary constituency The local Senedd Member is Paul Davies of the Conservative Party 27 and the local Member of Parliament is Stephen Crabb 28 also a Conservative Administrative history Edit Haverfordwest was an ancient borough receiving its first charter from Henry II in 1169 The borough was given the right to appoint its own sheriff in 1479 and in 1545 was declared to be a county corporate The borough was reformed to become a municipal borough under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 14 29 The borough covered all of the parish of St Mary parts of the parishes of St Martin St Thomas Prendergast and Uzmaston and an extra parochial area deemed to be a parish from 1866 called Furzy Park and Portfield 30 31 Under the Local Government Act 1894 parishes which straddled borough boundaries were split into separate parishes for the parts inside and outside the borough The part of Uzmaston within the borough therefore became a parish called Cartlett the part of Prendergast outside the borough became a parish called North Prendergast and the parts of St Martin and St Thomas parishes outside the borough became parishes called St Martin Hamlet and St Thomas Hamlet respectively The parishes outside the borough were all included in the Haverfordwest Rural District The six parishes within the borough after 1894 were therefore Cartlett Furzy Park and Portfield Prendergast St Mary St Martin and St Thomas These were urban parishes and so did not have their own parish councils with the lowest level representative body being the Haverfordwest Borough Council 32 Haverfordwest s status as a county corporate from 1545 made it independent from Pembrokeshire When elected county councils were established in 1889 the town was brought back into Pembrokeshire for local government purposes being under the control of Pembrokeshire County Council and losing its separate police force at the same time 33 34 For other purposes the town retained its independence from the county having its own Lord Lieutenant until 1931 and keeping its own Quarter Sessions until 1951 35 36 The status of county corporate was finally abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972 One remaining legacy from Haverfordwest s former status as a county corporate is that it retains the right to appoint its own sheriff 37 Picton House Council offices 1954 2020Haverfordwest had a medieval guildhall which stood at the top west end of High Street in front of St Mary s Church The guildhall served as the meeting place for both the borough corporation and the Pembrokeshire Quarter Sessions until the 1830s 38 In 1837 the county authorities built themselves Shire Hall at the bottom east end of High Street 39 The guildhall was demolished and the borough corporation met instead in a room above the north porch of St Mary s Church until that room was demolished in 1861 In 1871 the borough acquired newly built premises at 1 St Mary s Lane to serve as the council s offices and meeting place 40 41 42 In 1954 the borough council moved to Picton House at 2 Picton Place an 1830s house on the bank of the Western Cleddau and remained based there until the council s abolition in 1974 43 44 45 Haverfordwest Municipal Borough was abolished in 1974 becoming part of the district of Preseli renamed Preseli Pembrokeshire in 1987 within the county of Dyfed A community covering the former borough was established at the same time with its council taking the name Haverfordwest Town Council 46 47 Preseli Pembrokeshire was abolished in 1996 and the area became part of a re established Pembrokeshire 48 Haverfordwest Town Council continued to use the former borough council s premises at Picton House as its headquarters until 2020 when it moved to the Old Wool Market a converted late eighteenth century wool market and warehouse building on the quayside 49 50 Demography EditThe 2011 census recorded a population of 12 042 living within the community boundary 4 The urban area extends beyond the community boundary in various places notably at Merlin s Bridge to the south of the town which forms a separate community but is deemed by the Office for National Statistics to form part of the Haverfordwest built up area 51 The population of the Haverfordwest built up area was 14 596 in 2011 3 Economy Edit Footbridge on the River Cleddau gives access to shops on both sidesIn accordance with its status as a sub regional hub town Haverfordwest continues to serve as Pembrokeshire s principal commercial and retail centre 52 The development of the riverside shopping centre in Withybush on the outskirts of the town includes Marks amp Spencer in 2010 53 and Debenham s in 2013 54 A new town library opened in 2018 in the former Riverside Market building Concerns about the relative decline of the historic town centre compared to the growth of the retail centre at Withybush led to Welsh historian John Davies expressing his concern that Haverfordwest is becoming a medieval town surrounded by tin sheds citation needed Education EditSchools and colleges in Haverfordwest Haverfordwest Grammar School 1488 1978 became a public school in the 1920s making it one of only two public schools in Wales at that time Haverfordwest High VC School an English medium secondary school was formed in 2018 by the merger of Sir Thomas Picton School and Tasker Milward School 55 Pembrokeshire College an affiliated college of the University of Glamorgan is situated in the Merlin s Bridge suburb of the town The college serves as the principal centre of further and higher education in Pembrokeshire Ysgol Caer Elen a Welsh medium school for pupils aged 3 to 16 opened in 2018 replacing Ysgol Gymraeg Glan Cleddau The new school cost 28 million to build and has the capacity for 315 primary and 600 secondary pupils The nursery has the capacity for 45 children 56 Redhill Preparatory School is an independent school established in 2001 which includes a Montessori learning component for younger pupils 57 Waldo Williams Primary School opened in 2019 combining the former Mt Airey and Haverfordwest Church in Wales VC schools It is named after the poet Waldo Williams 1904 1971 58 Mary Immaculate Primary School a Catholic primary school Sport and leisure Edit Haverdfordwest Leisure CentreHaverfordwest County play association football in the Cymru Premier the top tier of Welsh football at Bridge Meadow Stadium while Merlins Bridge play in the local Pembrokeshire League Haverfordwest RFC which formed in 1885 play rugby union at their Pembroke Road ground and Haverfordwest Cricket Club play at Dale Road In 2009 Haverfordwest s sports and leisure provision benefited from significant investment with the opening of a new 8 million leisure centre situated at St Thomas Green 59 60 The kayaking club venture to sea as well as using the rivers 61 Haverfordwest High VC School benefits from a wide range of sporting facilities including a purpose built sports centre with a hockey pitch artificial turf and a full sized athletics track Health EditWithybush General Hospital is one of the main hospitals of West Wales and part of the Hywel Dda University Health Board formerly Pembrokeshire amp Derwen NHS Trust The hospital has most services but paediatric and maternity services have been moved to Glangwili General Hospital Carmarthen 62 Transport EditHaverfordwest is served by Haverfordwest Airport Haverfordwest railway station is on the West Wales Line It is served by Transport for Wales services to Manchester Piccadilly and Milford Haven Haverfordwest bus station is located beside Riverside Quay Shopping Centre It has six bus stops with two additional bays for coach drop off pickup 63 It is served by Edwards Coaches First Cymru National Express and Richards Brothers Forming one of the major road hubs of West Wales the town is at the junction of the A40 A4076 and A487 roads and several rural B roads including the B4329 running northwards to Eglwyswrw across the Preseli Mountains The A40 connects Haverfordwest with Carmarthen to the east and Fishguard to the north the A4076 connects Haverfordwest with Milford Haven and Pembroke Dock to the south the A487 connects Haverfordwest with St Davids to the northwest Notable people EditSee Category People from HaverfordwestAugustus Anson VC 1835 1877 member of the Anson family and recipient of the Victoria Cross born at Slebech Hall Christian Bale born 1974 actor who played the protagonist in Empire of the Sun and Batman in Christopher Nolan s The Dark Knight Trilogy was born in Haverfordwest Stephen Crabb born 1973 politician MP for Preseli Pembrokeshire since 2005 brought up in Haverfordwest 64 Captain Francis Cromie CB DSO 1882 1918 Royal Navy commander and the first member of the British military to lose his life in Russia after the revolution attended Haverfordwest Grammar School A a street in the town and house at the Grammar School were named after him Geraint Wyn Davies born 1957 a Welsh born Canadian actor spent his early life in the town where his father was the Congregational Church minister Connie Fisher born 1983 actress and singer the winner of the BBC talent show How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria lived in Haverfordwest from the age of six June and Jennifer Gibbons born 1963 the selective mute twins whose story gained international interest after Marjorie Wallace documented their story lived in Haverfordwest for much of their childhood George Herbert Harries 1860 1934 an American businessman newspaper editor and U S Army major general born in the town 65 Terry Higgins 1945 1982 among the first people known to die of an AIDS related illness in the UK lived in Haverfordwest as a child The Terrence Higgins Trust is named after him 66 Rhys Ifans born 1967 actor starred in the 1997 black comedy Twin Town and played Hugh Grant s delusional flatmate in Notting Hill was born in Haverfordwest Elis James born 1980 stand up comedian and actor was born in Haverfordwest and raised in Carmarthen Sir William James 1st Baronet 1721 1783 born at Bolton Hill Mill near Haverfordwest 18th C naval officer 67 Gwen John 1876 1939 artist was born in Haverfordwest her younger brother Augustus John 1878 1961 also an artist was born in nearby Tenby and lived in Haverfordwest Zoe Lyons born 1971 comedian born in Haverfordwest Chelsea Manning born 1989 American activist and whistleblower lived in Haverfordwest as a child 68 James Miller 1968 2003 a Welsh cameraman producer and director killed by Israel Defense Forces gunfire born in the town 69 William Owen 1791 1879 local architect Mayor of Haverfordwest on four occasions and High Sheriff of Pembrokeshire Sir John Perrot 1528 1592 said to be an illegitimate son of Henry VIII was born in Haverfordwest 70 Fiona Phillips born 1961 TV presenter lived in Haverfordwest from the age of 18 Greg Pickersgill born 1951 an influential science fiction fan was born in Haverfordwest and still lives there The hardcore punk rock band Picture Frame Seduction was formed in the Sir Thomas Picton School in 1978 71 Sir Thomas Picton GCB 1758 1815 a British army general was born in Haverfordwest and killed at the Battle of Waterloo 72 Juliette Pochin born 1971 a Welsh classically trained mezzo soprano singer born in Haverfordwest Gruff Rhys born 1970 singer of indie rock band Super Furry Animals was born here John Lort Stokes 1811 1885 an officer in the Royal Navy who travelled on HMS Beagle born at nearby Scotchwell 73 Graham McPherson born 1961 aka Suggs lead singer of Madness attended Haverfordwest Grammar School for Boys in the early 1970s George Trefgarne 1st Baron Trefgarne 1894 1960 politician barrister businessman and editor of the Daily Dispatch born in the town 74 Lucy Walter ca 1630 1658 a mistress of Charles II was born at Roch Castle near Haverfordwest 75 Waldo Williams 1904 1971 Welsh language poet and pacifist was born in Haverfordwest Sport Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Henry Baird DSO 1878 1950 cricketer and Army officer recipient of the Distinguished Service Order for actions in the Second Boer War Simon Davies born 1979 a footballer who played for Fulham and with 58 caps for Wales was born in Haverfordwest Dominic Day born 1985 a Welsh rugby union player with 28 international caps Mark Delaney born 1976 a retired footballer who played for Cardiff City Aston Villa and 36 times for Wales was born in Haverfordwest Simon Halliday born 1960 an England rugby union international with 23 caps was born in Haverfordwest Angharad James born 1994 a footballer with 102 caps for Wales Ben Llewellin born 1994 a Welsh sports shooter silver medallist at the 2018 Commonwealth Games Peter Morgan born 1959 a councillor mayor and rugby player Llanelli Wales and British Lions born locally and went to school in Haverfordwest Freedom of the Town EditPeople and military units that have honoured with the Freedom of the Town of Haverfordwest include Individuals Edit Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson 1802 76 77 Admiral Sir Thomas Foley 1802 76 77 Military Units Edit HMS Goldcrest 1964 78 14 Signal Regiment 4 March 2009 78 See also EditHaverfordwest power stationBibliography EditHumphrey Holdfast Haverfordwest And Its Story Llewellyn Brigstocke Publisher 7 Market Street Haverfordwest 1882 published by subscription Dillwyn Miles ed A History of Haverfordwest Gomer 1999 ISBN 1 85902 738 5References Edit Haverfordwest parish population 2011 Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Warlow Kieran Haverfordwest Town Council Home Haverfordwest Town Council a b Haverfordwest Built up area NOMIS Office for National Statistics Retrieved 7 August 2022 a b c Haverfordwest Parish Community NOMIS Office for National Statistics Retrieved 7 August 2022 GENUKI Prendergast Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Mills A D 2003 Dictionary of British Place Names Oxford University Press p 232 ISBN 978 0199609086 Penbrok comitat British Library Charles B G The Placenames of Pembrokeshire National Library of Wales Aberystwyth 1992 ISBN 0 907158 58 7 Vol II p 643 Williams A H 1941 An Introduction to the History of Wales Volume I Prehistoric Times to 1063 Cardiff University of Wales Press p 120 Miles p 12 Muller Mark 2011 900 year celebrations for Haverfordwest Pembrokeshire The Journal of the Pembrokeshire Historical Society 20 53 60 Cadw St Mary s Church Grade I 12226 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 25 July 2019 Miles p 28 a b Haverfordwest Borough Records Joint Information Systems Committee JISC Retrieved 8 August 2022 Miles p 23 Miles p 177 Cadw The War Memorial Grade II 87049 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 20 February 2021 Richards Bill Pembrokeshire Under Fire The Story Of The Air Raids OF 1940 1 Paterchurch Publications 1995 ISBN 1 870745 05 1 Scourfield Aled 11 October 2022 Skeletons Remains of 240 people under Haverfordwest store BBC News Retrieved 11 October 2022 Haverfordwest Town Council Retrieved 7 August 2022 Pembrokeshire County Council 30 November 2016 Retrieved 7 August 2022 Haverfordwest Haverfordwest Tourism and Travel Town Council Community Sport and Leisure Holiday in Haverfordwest Pembrokeshire South West Wales Haverfordwesttown co uk Archived from the original on 28 October 2013 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Community Council Boundary Review Pembrokeshire County Council Pembrokeshire gov uk Archived from the original on 12 January 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Comisiwn Ffiniau a Democratiaeth Leol Cymru Local Democracy and Boundary Commission for Wales PDF Archived from the original PDF on 15 June 2011 Uzmaston community will not be merged with Haverfordwest From Western Telegraph Westerntelegraph co uk 17 September 2010 Archived from the original on 12 January 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Archived copy Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link National Assembly for Wales Paul Davies Assemblywales org Archived from the original on 12 February 2012 Retrieved 10 September 2013 The Conservative Party People Members of Parliament Stephen Crabb MP Conservatives com Archived from the original on 3 October 2013 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Swales Barker Patricia 2013 Haverfordwest through time Stroud Amberley Publishing p 3 ISBN 978 1 4456 1614 8 First report of the commissioners appointed to inquire into the municipal corporations in England and Wales C Knight 1835 p 233 Retrieved 8 August 2022 Haverfordwest Urban Sanitary District A Vision of Britain through Time GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Retrieved 8 August 2022 Haverfordwest Municipal Borough A Vision of Britain through Time GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Retrieved 8 August 2022 Daly Steve Haverfordwest Borough Police Officers British Policy History Retrieved 8 August 2022 A corporation scare South Wales Daily News Cardiff 16 April 1889 p 2 Retrieved 8 August 2022 Haverfordwest Quarter Session Records Joint Information Systems Committee JISC Retrieved 8 August 2022 Justices of the Peace Act 1949 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1949 c 101 retrieved 8 August 2022 The Sheriff Haverfordwest Town Council Retrieved 8 August 2022 Guildhall Old Shire Hall Haverfordwest Coflein Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales Retrieved 8 August 2022 Cadw The Shire Hall Grade II 12110 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 8 August 2022 Cadw Former Town Council Offices Grade II 87066 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 8 August 2022 Haverfordwest Town Council Pembrokeshire Herald Haverfordwest 10 November 1871 p 2 Retrieved 8 August 2022 The old council chamber Dark Street 21 May 2008 Retrieved 8 August 2022 Cadw Picton House Grade II 12201 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 8 August 2022 Papers re sale of Picton Town House Number 2 Picton Place Haverfordwest Plan Pembrokeshire County Council Retrieved 8 August 2022 Telephone directories 1953 Town Clerk 9 Victoria Place Borough accountant Council Chamber 1954 Town Clerk 2 Picton Place Borough accountant Council Chamber Local Government Act 1972 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1972 c 70 retrieved 31 July 2022 The Districts in Wales Names Order 1973 legislation gov uk The National Archives SI 1973 1 retrieved 31 July 2022 Local Government Wales Act 1994 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1994 c 19 retrieved 7 August 2022 Jamshidian Harry 16 September 2021 Should Haverfordwest Town Council move to new building Western Telegraph Retrieved 8 August 2022 Haverfordwest Town Council moved into the Old Wool Market on Quay Street at the beginning of December 2020 Cadw The Old Wool Market Grade II 87036 National Historic Assets of Wales Retrieved 8 August 2022 Merlins Bridge Community Council Archived 2015 04 17 at the Wayback Machine Pembrokeshire Town amp Community Councils Nathaniel Lichfield amp Partners Ltd 4 September 2009 Pembrokeshire The Haven Spatial Plan Area Complementarity Study Executive Summary Welsh Assembly Government in association with Pembrokeshire County Council Pembrokeshire Coastal National Park Authority p 6 Retrieved 30 June 2023 Excited crowds gather for M amp S opening From Western Telegraph Westerntelegraph co uk 11 November 2010 Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Debenhams opening in Haverfordwest sparks road chaos fears Western Telegraph 26 September 2013 Archived from the original on 12 January 2015 Retrieved 5 December 2014 Wightwick Abbie 28 January 2019 Nearly 200 schools have shut in Wales since 2013 Wales Online Retrieved 1 February 2019 New 28m Welsh medium school in Haverfordwest opens BBC News 6 September 2018 Retrieved 6 September 2018 Redhill invests 1m for the future Western Telegraph 23 July 2014 Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 David Lynch 13 November 2018 New Haverfordwest school to be named after Waldo Williams Western Telegraph Retrieved 15 February 2019 Haverfordwest Leisure opens its doors Leisureopportunities co uk 27 February 2009 Archived from the original on 3 March 2009 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Improvements to Haverfordwest Leisure Centre as it welcomes back customers Western Telegraph Retrieved 12 December 2022 Search Results Haverfordwest Archived from the original on 27 February 2015 Retrieved 27 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doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21986 Subscription or UK public library membership required Parry Nick 5 August 2008 Punk band mark 30th anniversary BBC News Retrieved 13 January 2020 Picton Sir Thomas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed 1911 pp 581 582 Laughton John Knox 1898 Stokes John Lort Dictionary of National Biography Vol 54 pp 400 401 Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by George Garro Jones Trefgarne Seccombe Thomas 1899 Walter Lucy Dictionary of National Biography Vol 59 pp 259 260 a b Town finds lost Nelson scroll in its safe Wales Online 31 March 2013 Retrieved 28 March 2020 a b House where Nelson given Haverfordwest honour for sale BBC News 22 June 2010 Retrieved 28 March 2020 a b Soldiers given freedom of Haverfordwest Western Telegraph 4 March 2009 External links Edit Haverfordwest Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed 1911 pp 80 81 Haverfordwest Town Museum Haverfordwest Civic Society Further historical information and links on GENUKI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haverfordwest amp oldid 1170384027, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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