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Home » Health, Welfare and Charity » Death and disaster » Fires

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  • In March 1963, Monmouth suffered one of its worst fires when the Produce Market building in Priory Street was destroyed by a blaze which had started in a paper store on the first floor. Attempts to fight the fire with buckets met with no success and the building was evacuated.

When the fire brigade arrived they found the water pressure too low to be effective and by the time this had been rectified it was too late to save the main part of the building.

Six years after the fire, the Nelson Museum & Local History Centre moved into the rebuilt shell of the building.
The New Market Hall fire, Monmouth, 1963
  • This is an account of a fire at Nantmawr farm, near Llanrwst, in 1824 which was caused when one of the servants, who was carrying a rush candle, accidentally set fire to straw in the out-buildings.  The fire caused considerable damage to the property and stock: 21 cattle died in the blaze and stores of barley and hay were destroyed.  E. Owen, Melai, writes on behalf of the tenant and asks the landowner, Lord Newborough, and his representatives, to take the incident into consideration when the next rent payment is due.  The following is a transcription of the letter:

'Dear Sir,
It is with much concern I inform you of the Afflicting event that happened at Nantmawr last Friday night after the family retired to bed except the two servant women, the youngest of them went to a bing[?] before the cattle with a rush candle in her hand to fetch a little straw to light fire the next morning and as I find by her holding the candle in a careless manner the straw took fire and entered into a great Quantity of straw which was above the cow houses - it is supposed that she tried to put it out - untill the other woman gave the alarm, by that time the fire raged so violently, that out of 22 head of cattle only 5 could be brought out and those very much burnt except one - the horses were in the adjoining stable they saved them with much difficulty but the gears[?] are all destroyed, the Barn comes next in which they had upwards of 20 hobbets of barley some in sacks and the rest unwinnowed only 3 or 4 sacks were saved.  A large stack of hay at the back of the building was entirely consumed, and also two stacks of Barley supposed to be about 30 hobbets which was all the barley they had - They were very fearfull ...'
Letter from E. Owen, Melai, to William Elias, Abbey, Llanrwst, regarding a fire caused by a reed candle, 18 January 1824 [image 1 of 3]
  • The Cambrian factory was the largest woollen mill in the Llanidloes area, employing some 250 workers at its peak.  Built in 1852 on the banks of the River Clywedog, it was reduced to an empty shell by a disastrous fire in November 1889.  The drying racks or tenters seen on the slope behind the building were used to support the long strips of manufactured flannel.
Cambrian Mill, Llanidloes, which was destroyed by fire in November 1889
  • The Cambrian factory was the largest woollen mill in the Llanidloes area, employing some 250 workers at its peak.  Built in 1852 on the banks of the River Clywedog, it was reduced to an empty shell by a disastrous fire in November 1889.
Cambrian Mill, Llanidloes, which was destroyed by fire in November 1889