A surprisingly large amount of info and pix received here at Jones Towers is not about Rhyl but about towns and villages nearby.
Above: Bodfari railway station (opened in 1869). This shot dates from 1961, a year before the station closed down and is taken looking westwards towards Denbigh. Station buildings on your right were on the Chester bound platform. Last I heard the station was a private residence.
Below: An old image of the present Tafarn Yr Heliwr/Sportsman's Arms on Denbigh Moors. The pub is in Bylchau near Denbigh or Llansannan according to whose directions you take. "You can't miss it," I suppose.
--
Above: A lofty view of part of Dyserth village on a card postmarked 1937.
Below: In Dyserth Parish Church aka St. Bridget's Church
– the 15th century Jesse Window photographed circa 1930.
--
Above: Found in a batch of Prestatyn pictures, an image captioned Old Pigeon House, Talacre. I'm glad about the caption, otherwise I wouldn't have known what the hell it was.
Below: Fforddlas in Prestatyn. What shall we say
– 1950s? Fforddlas in Prestatyn is one word whereas Ffordd Las in Rhyl is two words often written mistakenly as one.
--
Above: Multiview card of Towyn near Abergele, postmarked 1955. The church bottom right is (Grade II listed) St. Mary's consecrated in 1873.
Below: This is a memorial at St. Michael's Church, 1 Peel Street, Abergele. The inscription reads: "S
acred to the memory of 33 persons who names are inscribed on this monument. They perished in the railway accident near Abergele on the 20th of August 1868 and their remains are deposited within this enclosure."
Click on the image to see bigger version.
The family names are (top to bottom left):- Farnham, Chinnery, Berwick, Aylmer, Franks, Askin, Cripps, Edwards, Farrell, Holmes;
(top to bottom right):- Ingram, Kellett, Lea, Lund, Owen, Outen, Parkinson, Roe, Scovell, Smith, Stearn, Strafford, Symes.
For details of the accident see Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abergele_rail_disaster
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recently I've had meetings with film maker Mike Theaker who is planning a new Rhyl project. Mike co-produced the most popular video on my YouTube channel where it is titled Rhyl 1960s: A Tale Of Two Seasons
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7l8SIqHvsw
Only the videos marked RhylTime are mine!
Colin Jones / email: rhyl.colin.jones@live.co.uk
--