Crossing the Menai Strait: Ferries and Bridges to Anglesey
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The village of Newborough has a rich history, which includes the ruins of a medieval princely residence and the shrine of the Welsh equivalent of St Valentine. In the 16th century it enjoyed a brief spell as the county town, a status which later attracted whispers of political influence by a foreign power, and by the 18th century it was involved in a political wrangling with its rival, Beaumaris. The growing of marram grass to prevent the engulfing of the village's lands by drifting sand led to an unusual cottage industry.The village also had a rich maritime heritage due to its proximity to the sea, and the convenient coves on Llanddwyn island.
Iolo Griffiths
Iolo Griffiths was brought up in Anglesey, lives in North Wales and has been working for Trinity Mirror North Wales since 1987, firstly as a librarian and then proofreader, and then a journalist. He is now a Community Content Curator for Trinity Mirror North Wales His main interests are genealogy and local history (mainly North West Wales)
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Crossing the Menai Strait - Iolo Griffiths
Crossing the Menai Strait
Nowadays it is so easy to cross between Anglesey and the Welsh mainland that travellers going to Holyhead to catch the ferry to Ireland, holidaymakers visiting Benllech, Rhosneigr or any of the other great beaches on offer, and Anglesey residents shopping in Bangor, Llandudno or further afield, can easily forget that Anglesey is an island, and that this easy journey was for centuries fraught with difficulties, not to say perils.
The Menai Strait is a channel 15 miles long which separate the island of Anglesey from the mainland, and is little wider than a large river (ranging in width from less than a quarter of a mile to three quarters of a mile), hence the Welsh name Afon Menai (literally River Menai ). Despite the channel being narrow and relatively short, its unusual tidal pattern presented challenges. The famous Admiral Nelson, the hero of Trafalgar, considered the Menai Strait to be one of the most difficult stretches of water to navigate, and is reputed to have remarked that whoever could navigate a sailing ship through the Menai Strait could sail any sea in the world
.
The shallow depth of the channel, with just 10 metres of water and a rocky uneven floor presented challenges to large sailing ships, but the fact that the Strait has two high tides and two low tides each day, and that tidal currents can be swift, reaching eight knots, would present difficulties for vessels of any size.
Although there is no doubt that the Druids would have crossed the Menai Strait from their headquarters in Anglesey to the mainland for centuries, it is probable that the first crossing of the Strait to be actually recorded was by the Roman general Suetonius Paulinus in AD 61 as he and his army of 10,000 men, invaded Anglesey, the island headquarters of the Druids, whose spiritual authority was inspiring British resistance to Roman rule.
The battle, or perhaps we should call it a massacre, is described by the Roman historian Tacitus, a nephew of Suetonius. The Roman forces, as they mustered on the mainland shore were faced by a battle line of men brandishing weapons, women shrieking and carrying torches, and druids invoking curses on the invaders. This rather unearthly scene at first intimidated the Roman soldiers, who stood in awe, until their officers rebuked them for their cowardice.
The Roman officers then ordered the men to cross on a flotilla of flat bottomed boats to their foes in the Brynsiencyn area, at a site near Porthamel. It seems that the Menai Strait was shallower at that time than at present, since the cavalry swam beside their horses.
The Druids offered no resistance as the Romans massacred them and cut down the sacred groves. The fact that Suetonius did not remain long in Anglesey was due to being recalled because of the more pressing threat posed by Boudicca’s revolt in East Anglia.
In one fell swoop the old Celtic religion was destroyed. The fact that the Druids committed nothing to writing, but transmitted their history and tradition orally, means that all their knowledge was lost to posterity on that day, and what we know about them today is through the writings of their foes. How much of the lurid rituals attributed to them is purely Roman propaganda is a matter of debate.
Although the various ferries and the two 19th century bridges will make up the bulk of this book, it is worth mentioning another, much earlier, bridge
, built in 1282, on which a royal army tried to cross, and were annihilated during this attempt.
This was in the wake of the rebellion of the Welsh Prince Llewelyn the Last, and Edward I decided to attack Gwynedd by a pincer movement. The forward base for the attack was Rhuddlan, from whence a detachment under Luke de Tany was sent to Anglesey. The orders were that he was to occupy Anglesey, and then build a bridge of boats, across the Menai Strait, near Bangor (though some suggest that the actual location of this pontoon bridge was at Moel y Don). The plan was to attack Gwynedd from east and west, and de Tany had strict orders not to cross the bridge until the king gave the word.
De Tany occupied the island in August of 1282, and his task was to secure his hold on the southern coast of Anglesey, especially the commote of Menai, and seize the harvest, thus depriving the Welsh of food. The work on the bridge started at the end of August, and by November the bridge was ready to allow a concerted attack, but by then the Archbishop was carrying out a peace mission.
Despite the archbishop’s negotiations, and without any orders from the king, on November 6, 1282, de Tany and his men crossed their bridge, and at high tide, which allowed the Welsh to
