Abergavenny
Abergavenny maps (2 available)
Abergavenny books (3 available)
- 43 photos on Abergavenny appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Abergavenny
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Abergavenny and Gwent
Abergavenny memories
Town Hall
I think this a picture of Abergavenny Town Hall, but am not sure. When we were staying in Abergavenny we lived outside, in Albany Road, on the way to the Rholben and the Deri, which we often climbed and as we didn't go into the town awfully much, only when my mother needed something, I have only vague memories of it. My great-grandfather Williams was Mayor of Abergavenny in 1905, and he wrote an autograph in my grandmother's album, which I still have. My mother's mother's family originally came from Abergavenny, which is why my grandparents went to live there after my mother married in 1934.
Contributed by Diana Dioszeghy
Churchgoing in the 40's
My grandparents lived in Abergavenny since 1934 in a beautiful dressed stone house called Maisemore in Albany Road, and every summer after the war my family and I went to stay with them for a month, that is, until my grandfather died in March 1950, when this happy time came to an end. During the war my mother, brother and I were evacuated there, as our home was in Sunderland, which was a target for bombs, and if my grandparents hadn't taken us in, they would have had to put up evacuees from Cardiff. We used to go to this church in Llanwenarth on Sundays, and I can remember having to be taken out during the service one Sunday in ...read more here
Contributed by Diana Dioszeghy
Favourite outing
My family and I often walked to the River Usk, going down Pentre Road and crossing the Brecon Road. We used to have picnics on the side nearest St. Mary's church in Llanwenarth, and look in the water for tiny fish and insects. I particularly liked the flowers I found in the meadows nearby and picked large bunches to take back to my grandparents' house. On the banks grew quantities of a flower I now know to be called "Jumping Jack, "Touch-me-not" or "policeman's helmet", but which I called a "netflower". At one point there was a chain ferry, with a sort of flat punt-like boat, and it was fun crossing the river in it.
Contributed by Diana Dioszeghy
Frogmore Cafe
My parents Monica and Jack Garrett ran the Frogmore Cafe from 1954 until 1978 when it became a dry cleaners when they then sold it to Sketchleys in 1980. I was their only son Richard.
Contributed by richard george garrett
Abergavenny "Mountains"
The Deri, Rholben, Llanwenarth Breast, Big Skirrid, Little Skirrid etc. would be regarded as hills when compared to the mountains in Germany and Switzerland, but for us children they were real mountains, and we loved climbing them. This view of the Deri was practically the same as the one we had from our grandmother's garden in Albany Road, and in the foreground the cricket ground can be seen.
Contributed by Diana Dioszeghy
Ascent of the Blorenge 1949
This picture reminds me of a photo my father took from the top of the Blorenge when we climbed it in August 1949. To start, we had to take the railway (closed in the 50's) to Gilwern or Govilon (I can't remember which!) and then begin our climb from there. When they reached the top, my father and brother built a cairn from the stones lying around - I wonder whether it's still there? I have a photo of my brother standing next to it. Unfortunately I didn't climb to the top on that occasion as I wasn't feeling well, so I stayed with my mother, who wasn't so keen on mountain climbing, in a field on the way up. ...read more here
Contributed by Diana Dioszeghy
Cattle market
As far as I can remember, my brother and I were taken to this market only once, in August 1949, and we were most interested in the cattle. I have lovely photo of us stroking a calf there.
Contributed by Diana Dioszeghy
Extracts From Abergavenny & Gwent books
A panoramic view of the
area, with Abergavenny in
the somewhat hazy
distance. Note the railway
sweeping round towards
the church in the centre
of the picture.
An extract from from"Monmouthshire Photographic Memories".
Here, from the Brecknock & Abergavenny
Canal of 1812, Abergavenny can be seen in
the distance. Between the new cemetery in
the centre and the allotments and houses
to the right, the Merthyr, Tredegar and
Abergavenny railway line, opened in 1862,
begins its climb of 1000ft to Brynmawr,
a mere eight miles away.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".
To the Romans the river
was Isca, ‘a river
renowned for its fish’.
Certainly it is much
loved by fishermen.
The river has also been a
popular play area for
local children, as this late
Victorian scene shows.
Beyond the town, in the
background, is the Little
Skirrid mountain, the top
of which is not quite as
wooded as it is today.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".
Two bridges crossed the Usk at Llanfoist:
the medieval stone-arched road bridge is
dwarfed by the railway bridge, which was
demolished shortly after the Abergavenny
to Merthyr line closed in the early 1960s.
Behind them are the spired buildings of the
new town cemetery, which was to be
opened in 1894. The shadowed slopes of
the Blorenge dominate the skyline. On the
right, on the town side of the bridge, are the
chimneys of the town’s gasworks. In 1894
the Gas Committee of the Improvement
Commissioners debated the introduction
of electricity to supplement the gas supply,
but it was 1932 before public electricity
was to be added to the town’s amenities.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".
Just beyond this bridge
on the Monmouth road
we can seen the iron
railway bridge, which has
since been removed.
This view is very
different when rain falls
heavily upstream,
transforming this
peaceful view into a
raging torrent.
An extract from from"Monmouthshire Photographic Memories".






