Images of Wales Back to Webpage Archive
The feature below was first shown on my website on 25 March 1998

Images of Wales
Museum of Welsh Life
St. Fagan's, near Cardiff, Glamorgan (since renamed National History Museum)
Photography by John Ball - 19 March 1998 (with Agfa ePhoto307 digital camera)
This open-air museum has attempted to recreate examples of Welsh life through
the ages. Many old buildings have been removed from their original locations
and reassembled on the museum site.
Above: An old Welsh farmhouse, built of stone and bearing a thatched roof.
The farmhouse contains examples of furniture and other artefacts from the
early 19th century.

Above: The 19th century doll (left) is dressed in contemporary Welsh costume. The notice (right) is displayed on the wall of a turnpike road tollhouse originally situated in Aberystwyth, Cardiganshire. The board setting out the "Rate of toll to be taken at this gate" includes the following examples:
Every horse or other beast (except an ass) drawing a carriage - £0-0s-6d (sixpence)
Every horse or other beast drawing a waggon - £0-0s-4d (fourpence)
Every ass drawing a waggon - £0-0s-2d (tuppence)
Sheep, calves and hogs could pass through for a charge of £0-0s-5d per score.
Those exempt from payment of a toll include funeral hearses and members of the Royal family!
Above and below: The interior of the tiny 18th century Penrhiw Unitarian Chapel.
The chapel was originally sited at Dre-Fach Felindre, near Newcastle Emlyn,
Cardiganshire. The lower picture shows the pulpit.
Above and below: Examples of huts in the reconstruction of a 4000 year old
iron-age village. The picture above shows a hut with walls made of wattle and
daub (interlaced wattle twigs plastered with mud), while the hut on the left of
the picture below has stone walls.
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Images of Wales Back to Webpage Archive
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