Slow Train Coming

Bargoed & Aberbargoed

Bright sunshine welcomed us to Bargoed.  No sooner had we arrived than we set off across the picturesque valley to Aberbargoed.  It must have looked so different here in the last century when the mines were open.  We had a brief stop at the bottom of the valley to welcome new members and talk aobut Alun Hoddinott, the composer who came from Bargoed and has a a hall named after him at the Millenium Centre.

In Aberbargoed we went to the Memorial Garden and heard about Glyndwr Michael, the man who was born here and helped change the course of WWII after he had tragically died homeless in London – ‘The Man Who Never Was’.  The events are depicted in the film/play/book Operation Mincemeat.

Back in Bargoed we had some lunch with many feasting in the New Continental, one of the few remaining genuine Italian Cafes in the valleys.

In the afternoon we admired the spectacular Pit Heads sculpture before going up the hill to Bargoed Park then wended our way back to town via the birthplace of poet John Tripp.   There was time to take in just one more sculpture, the Angel, before catching the train home.

Links to the notes I used on the day: Bargoed Notes and The Man Who Never Was.

Slow Train Coming

Ebbw Vale

A group of 35 of us headed up to Ebbw Vale on a damp September day where we were met at the station by Simon from the Ebbw Vale Works Museum. That was first for us – we’ve never had a personal welcome at a station before!  The group was divided into two with one half first visiting the Ebbw Vale Works Museum and the other the Gwent Archives before swopping over.

The Ebbw Vale Works Museum is well worth a visit. As well as being able to see artefacts from the two hundred years of iron and steel making in the town it was an opportunity chance to hear the personal testimonies from ex-steel workers themselves and have questions answered.

In the Gwent Archives Rhi gave us a tour told us not just all about the records stored but the whole process involved from when new items are received, often in poor condition, to being cleaned up, preserved, catalogued and stored. We also heard from Rhiannon, a conservationist, about some of the more challenging preservation tasks.

A ride on the cableway then took us up into the town centre for a quick look at some of the sculptures before seeking sustenance.  Some even stuck to the original plan of walking back down to Ebbw Vale Parkway station.

Ebbw Vale notes.