Pillgwenlly: Difference between revisions

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#REDIRECT [[Newport, Monmouthshire]]
{{Infobox town
[[Category:Towns and villages in Monmouthshire]]
|county=Monmouthshire
|picture=Waterloo Hotel, Pillgwenlly - geograph.org.uk - 666381.jpg
|picture caption=The Waterloo Hotel
|population= 7,318
|census year=2011<ref>{{cite web|url=https://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=13696939&c=NP20+2PE&d=14&e=62&g=6497138&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=0&s=1428230850083&enc=1|title=Newport ward 2011.Retrieved 5 April 2015}}</ref>
|constituency=Newport West
|post town=Newport
|LG district=Newport
|os grid ref= ST315875
|latitude= 51.58218
|longitude= -2.99001
|postcode=NP20
|dialling code=01633
}}
[[File:West of England Tavern, Newport, Monmouthshire.JPG|250px|thumb|right|The West of England Tavern in the shadow of the [[Newport Transporter Bridge|Transporter Bridge]]]]
'''Pillgwenlly''' is an inner-city suburb of [[Newport, Monmouthshire|Newport]], [[Monmouthshire]] consisting of the city's Docklands. The name is often shortened to simply '''Pill'''. It may come from ''Pwll'', the Welsh-language word for a water inlet, harbour or pool, and 'Gwenlly', a corruption of the name of Saint Gwynllyw, the name meaning Gwynllyw's harbour. Supposedly it derives from the period when Gwynllyw was a pirate and he based his ships in this area.<ref>Robin Gwyndaf, Welsh Folk Tales (National Museum of Wales, 1989), p. 96</ref>
 
Pill is known for its close-knit community spirit and for its ethnic diversity. Pill has most of the residents of foreign descent within the city, due largely to the location of the Old Town Docks, where a large influx of immigrants came to work. The streets of Pill also host the annual Pill Carnival, on the last weekend of August. The Old Town Dock area is currently undergoing a huge mixed-use regeneration to bring the derelict docklands back into use. A lively market takes place on a Saturday morning at the Newport Auctions site.
 
==In popular culture==
Portland Street in Pill was the birthplace, in 1871, of the famous "Tramp Poet" W. H. Davies and the nearby Church House Inn, where he was brought up by his grandparents, has a commemorative blue plaque.
 
The opening line 'Libraries gave us power' of the 1996 song ''A Design for Life'', by [[Blackwood, Monmouthshire|Blackwood]] band ''Manic Street Preachers'', was inspired by the legend above the entrance to the former Carnegie Library.
 
In 2012 the TV drama series ''Being Human'' featured internal and external cafe scenes filmed in Pill near the Transporter Bridge.
 
==Sport==
Pill Harriers RFC is a successful rugby union team whose membership was historically made up from the local dock workers. In its past it supplied many players to both Newport and Wales. Tony Pulis, former Newport County player and Premier League manager, was born in Pill.
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{commons category|Pillgwenlly}}
[[Category:Newport, Monmouthshire]]
[[Category:Newport, Monmouthshire]]

Latest revision as of 15:32, 17 March 2016

Pillgwenlly
Monmouthshire

The Waterloo Hotel
Location
Grid reference: ST315875
Location: 51°34’56"N, 2°59’24"W
Data
Population: 7,318  (2011[1])
Post town: Newport
Postcode: NP20
Dialling code: 01633
Local Government
Council: Newport
Parliamentary
constituency:
Newport West
The West of England Tavern in the shadow of the Transporter Bridge

Pillgwenlly is an inner-city suburb of Newport, Monmouthshire consisting of the city's Docklands. The name is often shortened to simply Pill. It may come from Pwll, the Welsh-language word for a water inlet, harbour or pool, and 'Gwenlly', a corruption of the name of Saint Gwynllyw, the name meaning Gwynllyw's harbour. Supposedly it derives from the period when Gwynllyw was a pirate and he based his ships in this area.[2]

Pill is known for its close-knit community spirit and for its ethnic diversity. Pill has most of the residents of foreign descent within the city, due largely to the location of the Old Town Docks, where a large influx of immigrants came to work. The streets of Pill also host the annual Pill Carnival, on the last weekend of August. The Old Town Dock area is currently undergoing a huge mixed-use regeneration to bring the derelict docklands back into use. A lively market takes place on a Saturday morning at the Newport Auctions site.

In popular culture

Portland Street in Pill was the birthplace, in 1871, of the famous "Tramp Poet" W. H. Davies and the nearby Church House Inn, where he was brought up by his grandparents, has a commemorative blue plaque.

The opening line 'Libraries gave us power' of the 1996 song A Design for Life, by Blackwood band Manic Street Preachers, was inspired by the legend above the entrance to the former Carnegie Library.

In 2012 the TV drama series Being Human featured internal and external cafe scenes filmed in Pill near the Transporter Bridge.

Sport

Pill Harriers RFC is a successful rugby union team whose membership was historically made up from the local dock workers. In its past it supplied many players to both Newport and Wales. Tony Pulis, former Newport County player and Premier League manager, was born in Pill.

References

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Pillgwenlly)