Toddlers and grandparents and all in-between enjoyed themselves immensely at Resolven Bowlers Open Day on Easter Bank Holiday Monday
There was blazing sunshine. There was coaching from international bowler Andrew Hopkins and Hugh Lewis who coaches international squads. What more could you ask for when starting off in a game that captivated Sir Francis Drake so much, that he finished his game before tackling the Spanish Armada?
Ieuan Ace heped with coaching as well as manning the free barbecue
If you are not hooked yet, the bowling green, team members and coaches are there to welcome you anytime this summer..
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My brother was sent this old image from our cousins in Leominster who are on our granddad’s side. How they had the photo we have no idea and I ‘m wondering if anyone can let us know if it’s a Resolven band.
I knew our dad played the ukulele in his early years, he is on the bottom left, 2nd on the left is Bill Evans (Cadoxton) There was a music teacher Mrs. Noble who gave me and my twin Pat piano lessons, Is she the young woman in the picture? The man next to her could be her husband who played the violin.
Can RDN readers come up with answers to solve the mystery?
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Hi, I’m Karen Teal and I have been an Art and Textiles teacher for 33 years. I am passionate about all forms of art and textiles and about working with learners young and old to develop skills, concepts, understanding, creativity and confidence.
Karen in workshop
I come from North Wales originally but I’ve lived and taught art and textiles in China for 4 years and Switzerland for two years before returning home to Wales and a move to Resolven in August 2018. to join my partner Simon Pierce..
I hold workshops for small or large groups and I’m holding workshops locally in Glynneath, Bridgend, galleries in Swansea and Neath as well as one open to all in Resolven.
Along with practical workshops I give talks to groups on my trips to Asia and the textiles that abound in those areas. I also continue to volunteer at a school in Uganda and can give an interesting insight into the life of the people there, volunteering and supporting staff and students in a small village school in Nabugabo.
At only 22 years of age, Daniel (from our village of Resolven) continues to gain a reputation with his successful career in the swimming world.
His list of swimming achievements is already an impressive record to be proud of.
He gained the title of European Junior Champion.
He has held several British Titles over the past few years.
He won gold medal in the Men’s 1500 Free Style British Championship in April 2018.
He was a Medalist in the Commonwealth Games held in the Gold Coast Aquatic Centre in Australia in 2018.
The British Swimming Championships of 2019 is being held in The Tollcross International Swimming Centre, Glasgow and only the best in the swimming calendar will have the necessary qualifying times to compete.
Daniel’s schedule at Glasgow is as follows:-
Tuesday 16th April 2019
Session 1 Men’s 400 Freestyle (Heats)
Session 2 Men’s 400 Freestyle Final
Thursday 18th April 2019
Session 6 Men’s 1500 Final (Daniel is due to swim at 6.30pm)
Sunday 21st April
Session 11 (a.m) Men’s 200m. Freestyle (Heats)
Session 12 (p.m) Men’s 200m. Freestyle Final
~ ~ ~
To see The British Swimming Championship LIVE STREAM
The Remarkable tale of the Coombe Tennants of Cadoxton
Before commencing on the report it is only fair to note that the meeting began in sombre mood following the death of Society President and founder Phylip Jones. In the absence of Chairman Gwyn Thomas, the Society’s Secretary Trefor Jones, after a minute’s silence, gave a short address regarding Phylip’s contribution to the study of history in the village.
This month’s speaker was Mr Bernard Lewis of Cimla, a local historian who has written several books on an eclectic variety of topics including Neath Rugby Club and the workhouses of Swansea. His topic, the Coombe Tennants of Cadoxton Lodge revealed a remarkable tale of mysticism and valour, summed up in the title of the talk “From Cadoxton to Carnage”. In particular, Mr Lewis focussed on the fortunes of the sons of Charles and Winifred Tennant, Christopher and Henry.
Mr Lewis began by explaining how the Tennant family came to the Neath area, when in 1817 George Tennant a Lawyer, bought what was then a redundant canal and extended it to Swansea at Port Tennant where a fortune was made in exporting the industrial goods of the area. The Tennant Canal remains in the possession of the Tennant family and still supplies water to a local tissue works. In 1895, Charles Tennant (notice the name Coombe did not appear until the year1929) married Winifred Margaret Pearce Serocold a well-connected local woman, JP and friend of David Lloyd George the future prime minister.
In 1897 their first son, Christopher was born and at aged nine he was sent to a preparatory school near Winchester. It appears that Christopher was a very sensitive child and he was badly bullied and very homesick. His academic prowess was mixed and he missed out narrowly on a place at Cambridge. His parents bought him a commission in the Welsh Guards (he was a tall man) however, before he could take up that post he had to attend Sandhurst in 1916. In 1917, he went to the Tadworth Army Camp where he drilled troops and acted as the paymaster. Following a visit home, he was sent to the Western Front. His mother, a noted spiritualist, was convinced that she was able to contact the deceased and that the human spirit survived death. She convinced her son that whatever happened in the War they would remain in in contact. In fact Winifred spent over thirty years of her life in disguise as her alter ego under a pseudonym, Mrs Willett.
He was posted to Belgium, and fought in the most deplorable conditions. He was not devoid of initiative and once on the orders of his superior had to inspect the forward positions twice in one night thus crossing “no man’s land” and returning twice! His luck however was about to run out since in September 1917 he was killed by a stray shell, ironically while crossing the duck boards on his way to some leave in Paris, at only nineteen years of age. Back at Cadoxton Lodge (now the housing estate Stanley Place) his distraught mother tried to contact her son via spiritual “automatic writing”. Memorials were placed to him in several places including Ypres and at a restored church near the spot of his demise in Flanders.
Mr Lewis now turned to the life of the far more charismatic Henry Coombe Tennant, the story also takes a more bizarre twist compared to that of his sibling. Firstly, Charles was not the natural father of Henry, who was born in April 1913. Winfred hosted the luminaries of the day at Cadoxton including H M Stanley, Lloyd George and Gerald Balfour (brother of former Prime Minister A J Balfour). Gerald was indeed henry’s natural father and had been “instructed”, by the spirits to perform the deed in order to spawn a “New Messiah”. It appears that Charles who was very hard of hearing was present in the house at the time! The secret was not discovered by Henry until 1941.
Henry proved a very precocious child and even described himself as “the wise one”. Following Eton, where he taught himself Chinese, at Cambridge he studied under Ludwig Wittgenstein and John Maynard Keynes. He also went on a tour of China in the 1930s, a very dangerous place, in the company of renowned polymath journalist and diplomat/spy Gareth Jones. Jones was himself a very interesting character who had exposed the great famine in Russia much to the wrath of Stalin, and also met Hitler. He was later killed by bandits in China.
After graduating with a double first from Cambridge, Henry could have chosen any career he wished, including that of a professional pianist. However, perhaps in deference to his late brother followed him into the Welsh Guards and served at Gibraltar. In May 1940, the Welsh Guards, in a crumbling Europe were posted to the Netherlands in order to hold the road between the Hague and the Hook before the blitzkrieg of Hitler. In doing so, they rescued the Royal Dutch gold. Later, the Guards were sent as the rear-guard at Boulogne to fight to the end to stop the Germans reaching the main British force at Dunkirk. On the 25th of May, Henry was captured by the Germans and sent to an Officers POW camp at Warburg. He then played a notable part in a break out from the prison when, 50 prisoners scaled the wire following the fusing of the camp’s lights and escaped into the darkness in teams of three in August 1942. Remarkably, Henry was only one of three who managed to make their way back to Gibraltar and home via an underground network of resistance fighters. Remarkably, the driver who met Henry Coombe Tennant to drive him was none other than a certain Princess Elizabeth, where he was entertained at Sandringham.
This was not the end of Henry’s military service, since he volunteered for the SOE (fore runner of today’s SAS) commando and became a member of an elite within an elite – the Jedburgh team. In 1944, in extreme weather he parachuted into the Ardennes in order to link with the resistance. This proved to be less successful, though there were several skirmishes with the Germans. He later re-joined the Welsh Guards and was involved in an attempted attack at Colditz. Following the war, he was posted to Palestine, helped in the formation of NATO and went to the Hague. He later joined MI6 where he worked with the traitor Kim Philby and ended his work with a deployment to Baghdad.
Remarkably, after such a full action packed life, Henry underwent a religious conversion and reverted to researching the spiritualism of his now dead mother. He finished his life as a monk, dying in 1989 – what a life!!
Mr Trefor Jones, thanked Mr Lewis for a very memorable talk which had indeed been a mystery to him until the meeting.
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Our wonderful RDN photographer Mike Davies and his twin brother Pat are 75 years old this week.
Happy Birthday to both of you!
Here is Mike’s account of that day, 75 years ago, (as told to him later of course! ) But it was certainly a day to remember.
We were born in the front room of our house in the village of Abergarwed on April 5th, 1944. Our mum Maud asked the midwife a week before we were born, “am I having twins, as my father was a twin?” “Certainly not”, replied the midwife,” there is just the one heart beat”. So on the day itself, after I was born, no one was expecting another and our grandfather Joe was putting on his overalls to go to work, when the midwife said “you can take those off , there’s another one coming”. Ten minutes later my brother Pat appeared -a shock for Joe, the midwife, our mother and most of all for my dad Vernon, who was in Karachi serving in the RAF!
A single pram had been purchased in Cardiff a few weeks before we arrived. The single would have been far too small for twins, so a large twin pram was ordered, but before the pram shop went ahead, they wanted to see the twins’ birth certificates to verify that there were indeed twins before the pram was ordered. There was a steel shortage due to the war.
The pram was sent by rail and our grandmother and mother walked to Resolven station waiting for the new pram, which arrived at Resolven station by 9pm. They pushed the pram home to Abergarwed, but the following morning there was a lot of talk in the village. “What do you think that young girl from Abergarwed has just given birth to twins and was walking them in the evening air-they will catch their death” Needless to say, there was no twins in the pram as our grandad looked after us safe and sound!
We started attending Resolven school in 1947
Later on,we both played in the Glamorgan Youth Orchestra, . Then, for many years, we played in our father Vernon’s dance band and it was there we met our wives Both of us worked in the retail sector.
Pat and I ring each other every evening, I will go to the phone and Pat is on and the same with Pat. I think we have done remarkably well to survive to this special date. Let’s pray we can both go on for many years to come
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Friday March 29th had been scheduled for nearly three years as a momentous date in British constitutional history. However, Resolven Community Council had a far more important task to perform in unveiling a plaque at the community centre in memory of the unstinting service of Councillor Redvers Davies. Councillor Davies completed fifty four years as an active councillor, making him the oldest serving councillor in England and Wales before his death in 2018. Unlike Brexit, the long awaited ceremony took place on time, did not need a revocation of a council minute and certainly did not require a lengthy extension. Indeed it was a pleasure for the Community Council to welcome a large contingent of Redvers’s family to the unveiling under the supervision of Council Chairman Mr Aylwin Jones. This was followed by a reception with the delicious Welsh cakes supplied by Mrs Fran Jones
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