Port Talbot
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Port Talbot | |
| Welsh: Aberafan/Porth Talbot | |
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Port Talbot shown within the United Kingdom |
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| Population | 49,654 |
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| OS grid reference | |
| Principal area | Neath Port Talbot |
| Ceremonial county | West Glamorgan |
| Constituent country | Wales |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | PORT TALBOT |
| Postcode district | SA12, SA13 |
| Dialling code | 01639 |
| Police | South Wales |
| Fire | Mid and West Wales |
| Ambulance | Welsh |
| European Parliament | Wales |
| UK Parliament | Aberavon |
| List of places: UK • Wales • Neath Port Talbot | |
Port Talbot (Welsh: Aberafan or Porth Talbot) is an industrial town in South Wales, with a population of 35,633 in 2001.[1] Port Talbot is within the Aberavon electoral ward and is a community in Neath Port Talbot county borough.
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[edit] History
The town grew out of the original small port and market town of Aberafan (English name Aberavon), which belonged to the medieval Lords of Afan. It built its wealth on the abundance of coal in the vicinity and on the abundant water available in the River Afan to power machinery and operate the docks.
The town got its new name from the Talbot family, who were related to the pioneer photographer, William Henry Fox Talbot. They were patrons of Margam Abbey, an ancient Cistercian foundation, and also built Margam Castle (1830-1839, architect: Thomas Hopper), a mock Gothic residence, now partially restored and open to the public along with the surrounding park.
Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot (1803-1890) was a wealthy landowner (and Liberal Member of Parliament for Glamorgan from 1830 until his death) who saw the potential of his property as a site for an extensive ironworks, which opened in early 1831. (This was just part of the industrialisation taking place across south Wales then; copper had been smelted at Neath since 1584, there were tinworks and ironworks at Pontardawe, and Swansea was developing into a world centre of metal-working.) CRM Talbot was also chairman and a major shareholder of the South Wales Railway.
His only son Theodore died in 1876 following a hunting accident. It was therefore his daughter Emily Charlotte Talbot (1840-1918) who inherited her father's fortune and became just as notable in the development of ports and railways. With assistance from engineers Charles Meik and Patrick Meik she set about creating a port and railway system to attract business away from Cardiff and Swansea. The Port Talbot Railway and Docks Company opened a dock at Port Talbot and the Llynfi Railway in 1897, followed by the Ogmore Valley Extension and the South Wales Mineral Junction Railway (almost all these lines were closed as part of the Beeching Axe cuts in the mid 1960s, but some bridges and viaducts remain and many of these railway routes have re-emerged as recreational cycle tracks). By 1900, the dock was exporting over 500,000 tons of coal; it reached a peak of over three million tons in 1923.
During the early twentieth century, the docks and Port Talbot Steelworks attracted considerable investment, and this was followed by the establishment of a chemical plant at Baglan Bay by British Petroleum in the 1960s.
In 1970 a new deep-water harbour was opened by Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh. It was capable of discharging iron ore vessels of 100,000 dwt[1], a tenfold improvement on the old dock. By the early 21st century, due to further modification and dredging, the harbour is capable of harbouring vessels of over 180,000 dwt [2].
The town saw serious decline in the late seventies and early eighties caused by the withdrawal or cutting back of major employers, especially the steel works. The borough council has been absorbed into the larger unitary authority of Neath Port Talbot.
[edit] Sea Rescue
Port Talbot Coastguard celebrates its centenary in 2008 with a proud history of rescues in the last 100 years. The crew will also become the mud rescue team for the Swansea Bay area.
2007 was a typically busy year with a beached whale making world news. They also took part in flood relief efforts in Gloucester and while all are volunteers, they spent Christmas morning responding to pagers after it was thought a whale had come ashore once more which turned out to be a log, much to everyone's relief. Updates can be found at http://www.ptcg.co.uk
[edit] Sport
Sporting teams in Port Talbot include:
- Aberavon Rugby Club (founded in 1876) who play in the Rugby Union Welsh Premier Division
- Aberavon Quins RFC
- Neath Port Talbot Steelers club who play in the Rugby League Conference
- Afan Lido F.C.
- Port Talbot Town F.C. compete in the League of Wales, and also the First Division Welsh Champions
- Goytre United F.C.
[edit] Education
There are five comprehensive schools situated within the Port Talbot area:
- Glan Afan
- Dyffryn Comprehensive Lower (Taibach) and Upper (Margam)
- St Joseph's R.C.
- Cymmer Afan
- Sandfields
A campus of Neath Port Talbot College is located in the Margam area. The Margam campus was previously called Afan College.
[edit] Media
In 2005 the area was granted its first dedicated radio station when Afan FM, a local group - [3] - were awarded a 5 year licence to serve Port Talbot and its neighbouring town of Neath. Afan FM currently transmits to the area on 107.9FM and online via its website at www.afanfm.co.uk. The station is based at its new broadcasting centre on Aberavon Seafront. The station will also become available to the neighbouring town of Neath on 97.4FM from Summer 2008.
The area is also served by The Wave (96.4Mhz), Swansea Bay Radio (102.1Mhz), Real Radio (106Mhz) and Xfm South Wales (107.3Mhz) as well as the BBC. Radio Phoenix also operates a Hospital Radio service for the patients & staff of Neath Port Talbot Hospital in Baglan Moors.
The town is served by several newspapers. The Port Talbot Guardian is a weekly paper published by Media Wales, part of the Trinity Mirror group. The Swansea-based daily South Wales Evening Post and the weekly Courier and Tribune are also distributed in the town and are published by South West Wales Publications, part of the Northcliffe Media group.
Neath Port Talbot Council publish a quarterly newsletter entitled "Pride" - which is delivered to every home in the Neath Port Talbot area.
[edit] Geography
The town is built along the eastern rim of Swansea Bay with Swansea being located on the opposite side. The beach along the edge of the bay is known as Aberavon Sands which are situated between the River Afan and the River Neath. The north eastern edge of the town is marked by the River Neath.A very significant landmark in the town is the Port Talbot Steelworks.
[edit] Transport
Port Talbot is served by the South Wales Main Line at Port Talbot Parkway railway station where there are local as well as direct Inter-City trains to Swansea, Cardiff, London and Manchester. Port Talbot bus station, located adjacent to the Aberafan Centre in the centre of the town is the main bus transport hub in the town. It is a National Express stop. Local bus services are provided by First Cymru. The bus station's layout is very distinctive for the fact that buses always have to perform a 270° clockwise turn to exit the station.
The town is served by Cardiff International Airport, which can be accessed by rail by changing at Bridgend railway station and by road from J33 (Cardiff West) of the M4 motorway. The airport provides scheduled, charter, domestic and international flights.
The M4 motorway cuts through the town from south east to north west, crossing a central area on a concrete viaduct. Junctions 38 to 41 serve Port Talbot with junctions 40 and 41 being in the commercial heart of the town. This busy urban stretch of the M4, with tight bends, 2-lane carriageways, short narrow slip roads and concrete walls on both sides, was the first length of motorway in Wales when it opened to traffic in 1966.[2] The road has a speed limit of 50 mph enforced with a speed camera in the Eastbound direction. The stretch through Port Talbot town centre is a particular traffic congestion blackspot and there have been calls to close the slip roads at junctions 40 and 41 to improve traffic flow.[3] However some commuters oppose this plan since it would add more time to their journey. A new dual carriageway relief road is planned for completion in 2012. The new carriageway will serve as a distributor road to the south west of Port Talbot, beginning at M4 Junction 38 ending near Junction 41.
The Port Talbot docks complex consist of an inner set of floating docks and an outer tidal basin. Construction of the tidal basin began in 1964 and the whole basin covers about 500 acres.[4] The tidal basin is capable of handling ships of up to 180,000 dwt and is used mostly for the import of iron ore and coal for use by nearby Port Talbot Steelworks. The inner floating docks were constructed in 1898[5] and were closed in 1959. They were re-opened in 1998 for commercial shipping but in March 2007 for the import of some steel products [6] and are capable of handling ships of up to 8,000 dwt.[7] There have been proposals for the development of an intermodal freight terminal at the port.
[edit] Economy
Heavy industry is a visible feature of Port Talbot's economy. The coastal strip of the town features Port Talbot Steelworks, a large BOC industrial gases plant and a gas-fired power station. Three further power plants are being planned or commissioned, they are at Margam adjacent the BOC plant, near the Aberavon Beach sea front and a recently announced £60m project within Corus to utilise by product gasses.
On 20 November 2007, the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR) granted consent for the world's largest biomass power station to be built at Port Talbot.[8] This is expected to begin operation in 2010, and to provide enough electricity (from wood from environmentally-managed forests, mostly in North America) to supply half the homes in Wales with electricity.
Potential future development currently centres around the peripheral distributor road to the south, Baglan Energy park to the west, Margam Country Park to the east and the Afan valley to the north. The 1970s town centre is ripe for a future face lift. The area around the town's railway station is dominated by billboards and a derelict cinema.
[edit] Blue Flag Beach
The beach area of the town has recently been improved and the council have announced it has been awarded the Blue Flag beach status for water quality and beach facilities. [9]
[edit] Notable Port Talbot people
(in alphabetical order)
- Keith Barnes, Australian rugby league great was born in Port Talbot before emigrating aged 13.
- Robert Blythe, Welsh actor, was brought up in Tan y groes St. Currently (2008) plays Fagin Hepplewhite in the BBC comedy High Hopes.
- Di Botcher, Welsh comedy actress
- Rob Brydon, Actor and comedian was brought up in Baglan, Port Talbot.
- Richard Burton, was born in Pontrhydyfen, Port Talbot as Richard Jenkins and had his early education in Port Talbot where he met his mentor, Philip H. Burton.
- Peg Entwistle, successful Broadway theatre actress whose 1932 suicide from atop the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles forever tagged her as "The Hollywood Sign Girl" was born at 5 Broad Street, Port Talbot on 5 February 1908.[10]
- Christopher Evans, businessman, originally from Port Talbot, Wales,
- James Hook, rugby player, current Ospreys and Wales fly-half
- Anthony Hopkins, actor, was born and raised in Margam, Port Talbot.
- Geoffrey Howe, was born in Port Talbot in 1925 and spent his early years there. When he was made a life peer in 1992 he chose the title Baron Howe of Aberavon.
- Michael Locke, aka 'Pancho' of TV series Dirty Sanchez, was born and raised in Baglan, Port Talbot.
- Dic Penderyn, was born as Richard Lewis in Aberavon in 1803, in the centre of what is now Port Talbot but before the town was named as such in 1840. He is buried at St. Mary's Church [4] in the centre of the town. He was convicted of assault on an army soldier and executed.
- Paul Potts, an opera singer and the winner of Britain's Got Talent in 2007, lives in Port Talbot.
- Michael Sheen, Welsh actor was born in Newport but he was brought up in Port Talbot.
- George Thomas, 1st Viscount Tonypandy was born in Tydraw Street, Port Talbot.
- Andrew Vicari, Painter was born in Port Talbot.
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/census2001/ks_ua_ew_part1.pdf
- ^ The Motorway Archive. M4 in Wales - Coryton to Baglan
- ^ ‘End road chaos by closing M4 slip road’ - icWales
- ^ Port Talbot Coastguard Search and Rescue Emergency Team History
- ^ Complete.pdf
- ^ Port Talbot Docks Handles First Steel Cargo For Nearly Four Decades
- ^ Associated British Ports
- ^ BBC NEWS | Wales | South West Wales | £400m wood chip plant approved
- ^ Press Releases - 22 May 2008
- ^ Page Title
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- BBC South West Wales: Port Talbot slide show tour
- Afan FM
- Port of Port Talbot
- Aerial photograph of Port Talbot town and docks
- www.geograph.co.uk : photos of Port Talbot and surrounding area
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