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Fire at ancient Anglesey church nearing end of £2.3m upgrade
Fire at ancient Anglesey church nearing end of £2.3m upgrade

Wales Online

timea day ago

  • General
  • Wales Online

Fire at ancient Anglesey church nearing end of £2.3m upgrade

Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info Concerns for an ancient Anglesey church were raised when smoke was seen billowing high into the sky. St Cybi's in Holyhead is undergoing extensive redevelopment and parishioners feared a fire could jeopardise next month's scheduled reopening. It's understood vandals set light to portaloos being used by workers refurbishing the church, which dates from the 6th century and is built into Holyhead's Roman wall. The fire spread to adjacent timber stacked ready for use inside the building. Smoke was seen rising from the churchyard at around 6.30pm on Thursday, June 5. Although firefighters extinguished the blaze before causing serious damage, it's believed a section of the church's exterior wall was left charred and blackened. This is expected to weather and disappear over time. "It could have been a lot worse," said one observer. St Cybi's and its adjacent 14th century chapel, Eglwys y Bedd, are currently being redeveloped as part of a £2.3m project funded by UK Levelling up money. The church will reopen as a 'more accessible' multi-use community hub with a social enterprise cafe. The chapel, built on the site of St Cybi's original cell, is being extended using Anglesey limestone, quarried in Moelfre. In the plans are some exciting innovations designed to appeal to a younger demographic. Five ancient churches in the Diocese of Bangor are being upgraded as part of the Llefa'r Cerrig - Stones Shout Out initiative. Air source heat pumps are being installed to provide underfloor heating, and solar panels placed on south-facing roofs. Join the North Wales Live Whatsapp community now St Cybi's is one of the five beneficiaries, with a shop and children's play area also planned. But the work hasn't been without controversy. Some parisioners were unhappy on learning that traditional old pews were being replaced by pews that can be moved to facilitate events and meetings. There was also anger over the transfer of St Cybi's organ to another church that can afford its estimated £200,000 repair bill. Critics claimed the heart of St Cybi's was being 'ripped out of it'. Meanwhile, the project timeline slipped when skeletal remains were discovered under the church and in the churchyard. In a pit beneath the chancel near the altar, a 'large collection of unarticulated human remains of unknown date' were found in summer 2023. They were buried beneath the church's 'Victorian layer', laid by architect Gilbert Scott during his reordering of the church in 1876-1879. It's suspected they had been reinterred, probably from multiple graves within the churchyard. All remains removed were due to be reinterred within the churchyard. Excitingly, other archaeological digs revealed what is believed to be part of the original footpath laid by Roman settlers at the site thousands of years ago. It's hoped St Cybi's can reopen in late July. North Wales Fire and Rescue Service and the Holy Island Ministry area were approached for a comment. Get the best island stories from our Anglesey newsletter - sent every Friday Find out what's happening near you

Fire at ancient Anglesey church nearing end of £2.3m upgrade
Fire at ancient Anglesey church nearing end of £2.3m upgrade

North Wales Live

time2 days ago

  • General
  • North Wales Live

Fire at ancient Anglesey church nearing end of £2.3m upgrade

Concerns for an ancient Anglesey church were raised when smoke was seen billowing high into the sky. St Cybi's in Holyhead is undergoing extensive redevelopment and parishioners feared a fire could jeopardise next month's scheduled reopening. It's understood vandals set light to portaloos being used by workers refurbishing the church, which dates from the 6th century and is built into Holyhead's Roman wall. The fire spread to adjacent timber stacked ready for use inside the building. Smoke was seen rising from the churchyard at around 6.30pm on Thursday, June 5. Although firefighters extinguished the blaze before causing serious damage, it's believed a section of the church's exterior wall was left charred and blackened. This is expected to weather and disappear over time. "It could have been a lot worse," said one observer. St Cybi's and its adjacent 14th century chapel, Eglwys y Bedd, are currently being redeveloped as part of a £2.3m project funded by UK Levelling up money. The church will reopen as a 'more accessible' multi-use community hub with a social enterprise cafe. The chapel, built on the site of St Cybi's original cell, is being extended using Anglesey limestone, quarried in Moelfre. In the plans are some exciting innovations designed to appeal to a younger demographic. Five ancient churches in the Diocese of Bangor are being upgraded as part of the Llefa'r Cerrig - Stones Shout Out initiative. Air source heat pumps are being installed to provide underfloor heating, and solar panels placed on south-facing roofs. Join the North Wales Live Whatsapp community now St Cybi's is one of the five beneficiaries, with a shop and children's play area also planned. But the work hasn't been without controversy. Some parisioners were unhappy on learning that traditional old pews were being replaced by pews that can be moved to facilitate events and meetings. There was also anger over the transfer of St Cybi's organ to another church that can afford its estimated £200,000 repair bill. Critics claimed the heart of St Cybi's was being 'ripped out of it'. Meanwhile, the project timeline slipped when skeletal remains were discovered under the church and in the churchyard. In a pit beneath the chancel near the altar, a 'large collection of unarticulated human remains of unknown date' were found in summer 2023. They were buried beneath the church's 'Victorian layer', laid by architect Gilbert Scott during his reordering of the church in 1876-1879. It's suspected they had been reinterred, probably from multiple graves within the churchyard. All remains removed were due to be reinterred within the churchyard. Excitingly, other archaeological digs revealed what is believed to be part of the original footpath laid by Roman settlers at the site thousands of years ago. It's hoped St Cybi's can reopen in late July.

Britain is losing another working-class route to modest affluence
Britain is losing another working-class route to modest affluence

Yahoo

time27-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Britain is losing another working-class route to modest affluence

Walking to The Telegraph each morning, I am reminded that even the finest creations have their own natural lifespan and eventually reach obsolescence. The red London phone box is a globally recognised instant symbol of our capital city. Yet who needs public phones today? The six exemplars I pass have all had their phones taken away, but the boxes can't be removed as they are listed. The kiosks have instead been resolutely drilled shut. This leads to the daily spectacle of tourists furiously but forlornly tugging at their doors hoping to pose for holiday snaps – but all to no avail. Saving our heritage is to be applauded, but whether we need to preserve quite so many of Gilbert Scott's now redundant cubes is another matter. Might the black cab be facing a similar trajectory? In 2013-14, there were 22,810 licensed cabs on London's streets – an all time high. By 2023-24 this had fallen to around 14,500, a fall of one third in 10 years. The number of licences issued to new drivers stood at 1,010 in 2016 – it was 110 last year. On current trends, the Centre for London think tank has estimated the last cab will be off our capital's roads by 2045. The rate of decline could actually speed up as Transport for London figures show 62pc of cabbies are aged 53 or over. Future tourists might be reduced to posing in a fibreglass mock up of a black cab taking them nowhere, perhaps conveniently positioned in the by then superfluous ranks outside London's railway stations. Or they may instead decide they can only get their much desired quintessential London photo by travelling to Baku in Azerbaijan. In the run up to hosting Eurovision in 2012, the Azeri government decided their capital's streets could do with some black cab glamour and ordered 1,000. Before hosting the Cop-29 climate conference last year, they acquired a further 300 zero-emission capable hybrid models. Most conveniently, the oil town on the Caspian Sea also has a small neighbourhood modelled on London's garden squares (and another on Parisian arrondissements). So post-2045, Baku may be the very best place to snap a now lost London street scene. An argument can be made that the decline in the cab trade is the inevitable product of human progress. Who needs a cabbie who has spent years cramming to acquire The Knowledge when a driver who only arrived in London a few months ago can instantly find the same, or even a better, route via sat nav? Black cabs thrived on restrictive practices – they can be overpriced and infuriating. In my experience, the one trade that out-moans cabbies is that of the university academic – any casual conversation will likely soon turn into a hard luck story in both cases. Back when Ken Livingstone was mayor in the 2000s, the traditional cabbies' complaint was that licences were being handed out like confetti and there were too many now on the road. Now it is that Sadiq Khan is strangling the trade. Sadiq has indeed been a nightmare for black cab drivers. Low traffic neighbourhoods and complicated one way systems, the insistence on new vehicles all being expensive and electric, forcing old diesel models to be taken off the road after 12 years – these have all made the cabbies' lot an unhappy one. But just as with the old print unions, technology means the decline is almost certainly inevitable. Nevertheless, the cabbies' decline is a tragedy which has nothing to do with the much vaunted argument that London has the best cabs in the world. The trade has traditionally been that rare thing – a route for working-class men with few academic qualifications to make a decent living. Cabbies can still reportedly make £100,000 or more if they put in a six-day week. One does not want to cast aspersions on the honesty of the trade, but in years gone by when most rides were still paid for in cash, it would have compared handsomely to the take home pay of all but the most successful professionals. While no longer the case, it is true that in the past London's cabs were overwhelmingly driven by white men. But even then, the trade was more diverse than sometimes imagined. It is estimated that in the 1960s, about one third of all cabbies were Jewish. The children of penniless immigrants from the shtetls of Eastern Europe found a way to relative prosperity by driving cabs. It took them out of the East End and to suburbia. Their children in turn went to university and joined the professions. The quintessential white, male, working-class profession is in fact also an immigrant success story. It is easy to say the cab trade is an anachronism, but such anachronisms make us richer as a society. It will not be a happy day when another non-academic route to modest affluence is cut off. There are far too few of them already. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Sadiq Khan is killing off black cabs. It's a tragedy for the working class
Sadiq Khan is killing off black cabs. It's a tragedy for the working class

Telegraph

time27-04-2025

  • Telegraph

Sadiq Khan is killing off black cabs. It's a tragedy for the working class

Walking to The Telegraph each morning, I am reminded that even the finest creations have their own natural lifespan and eventually reach obsolescence. The red London phone box is a globally recognised instant symbol of our capital city. Yet who needs public phones today? The six exemplars I pass have all had their phones taken away, but the boxes can't be removed as they are listed. The kiosks have instead been resolutely drilled shut. This leads to the daily spectacle of tourists furiously but forlornly tugging at their doors hoping to pose for holiday snaps – but all to no avail. Saving our heritage is to be applauded, but whether we need to preserve quite so many of Gilbert Scott's now redundant cubes is another matter. Might the black cab be facing a similar trajectory? In 2013-14, there were 22,810 licensed cabs on London's streets – an all time high. By 2023-24 this had fallen to around 14,500, a fall of one third in 10 years. The number of licences issued to new drivers stood at 1,010 in 2016 – it was 110 last year. On current trends, the Centre for London think tank has estimated the last cab will be off our capital's roads by 2045. The rate of decline could actually speed up as Transport for London figures show 62pc of cabbies are aged 53 or over. Future tourists might be reduced to posing in a fibreglass mock up of a black cab taking them nowhere, perhaps conveniently positioned in the by then superfluous ranks outside London's railway stations. Or they may instead decide they can only get their much desired quintessential London photo by travelling to Baku in Azerbaijan. In the run up to hosting Eurovision in 2012, the Azeri government decided their capital's streets could do with some black cab glamour and ordered 1,000. Before hosting the Cop-29 climate conference last year, they acquired a further 300 zero-emission capable hybrid models. Most conveniently, the oil town on the Caspian Sea also has a small neighbourhood modelled on London's garden squares (and another on Parisian arrondissements). So post-2045, Baku may be the very best place to snap a now lost London street scene. An argument can be made that the decline in the cab trade is the inevitable product of human progress. Who needs a cabbie who has spent years cramming to acquire The Knowledge when a driver who only arrived in London a few months ago can instantly find the same, or even a better, route via sat nav? Black cabs thrived on restrictive practices – they can be overpriced and infuriating. In my experience, the one trade that out-moans cabbies is that of the university academic – any casual conversation will likely soon turn into a hard luck story in both cases. Back when Ken Livingstone was mayor in the 2000s, the traditional cabbies' complaint was that licences were being handed out like confetti and there were too many now on the road. Now it is that Sadiq Khan is strangling the trade. Sadiq has indeed been a nightmare for black cab drivers. Low traffic neighbourhoods and complicated one way systems, the insistence on new vehicles all being expensive and electric, forcing old diesel models to be taken off the road after 12 years – these have all made the cabbies' lot an unhappy one. But just as with the old print unions, technology means the decline is almost certainly inevitable. Nevertheless, the cabbies' decline is a tragedy which has nothing to do with the much vaunted argument that London has the best cabs in the world. The trade has traditionally been that rare thing – a route for working-class men with few academic qualifications to make a decent living. Cabbies can still reportedly make £100,000 or more if they put in a six-day week. One does not want to cast aspersions on the honesty of the trade, but in years gone by when most rides were still paid for in cash, it would have compared handsomely to the take home pay of all but the most successful professionals. While no longer the case, it is true that in the past London's cabs were overwhelmingly driven by white men. But even then, the trade was more diverse than sometimes imagined. It is estimated that in the 1960s, about one third of all cabbies were Jewish. The children of penniless immigrants from the shtetls of Eastern Europe found a way to relative prosperity by driving cabs. It took them out of the East End and to suburbia. Their children in turn went to university and joined the professions. The quintessential white, male, working-class profession is in fact also an immigrant success story.

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