Town in Wales
POPULARITY
Scrutiny over the failed downtown development that cost VCU Health $73 million to back out of is prompting a closer look by the Virginia General Assembly's investigative arm; In the days after Art Kellermann relented and agreed to sign off on the costly downtown development deal he'd adamantly opposed, the then-VCU Health CEO's colleagues who'd urged him to OK the project shared, over email, a collective sigh of relief; With another Richmond Folk Festival in the books, work is about to get rolling on the highly anticipated riverfront amphitheater that's planned to keep the Tredegar hillside rocking; and as the Dominion Energy Charity Classic descends this week onto Country Club of Virginia for the eighth straight year, another, less publicized golf tournament was played at another, lesser-known local golf course
Welcome Aboard The Perseverance of Bright Horizons!! Join the Captain and the Cook as our voyage journeys back to it's beginnings with a drink and a chat at The Tredegar Arms Rogerstone, with the pub closing it is a chance for us to reflect on its impact on us and some memories we have from time spent there. Anchors up!! Please like/comment/subscribe and we can be contacted on: Instagram , Twitter or email us at captainandcookpod@gmail.com
As a British revenue officer, David Robinson was in favour of the British Crown buying the sovereign rights of the Island from the Lord of Mann, the Duke of Atholl, in 1765 in order to suppress 'the trade' - or 'smuggling' as the British Government considered it. Professor Van Helsing is trying to persuade Dr John Seward to open his mind to strange possibilities outside of accepted science. And he has a proposal regarding the burial place of Lucy Westenra. Y kiaull ain y cheayrt shoh - TRIP - Turning tides PLETHYN - Ar ben waun Tredegar THE SCOTTISH FIDDLE ORCHESTRA - Medley for the Gay Gordons ANDRE-PAUL & ROBERTIS BARS - Soun ar bouesoun DERVISH - Welcome poor Paddy home KERENSA - Melyn Charlie/Ker Syllan RUTH KEGGIN & RACHEL HAIR - Vuddee veg Y MONIARS - Cofio am Cayo TRIP - Towards the storm
Two websites have excellent content. There are Plymouth Brethren Writings and stempublishing.com. I use both all the time. Most of my videos are from the text on these sites. Brethren: The Story of a Great Recovery By David J Beattie Index Brethren, The Story Of A Great Recovery Author's Note Part I England And Wales (chapters 1-11) Part I England And Wales (chapters 12-22) Part I England And Wales (chapters 23-33) Part I England And Wales (chapters 34-44) Part II Scotland And Ireland Part III Early Days In The Foreign Field https://plymouthbrethren.org/series/6103
Will God answer your prayer if you don't end with, "In Jesus' name, Amen?" Learn what praying in the name of Jesus really means. I taught this week on the call of Abraham and the development of God's missionary call through the nation of Israel as they were responsible to communicate the truth of God to the cultures around them. They were given that great commission. The great commission didn't start in Matthew 28. It started with Abraham in Genesis 12 —the first three verses there —Abraham, chosen by God to raise up a nation who would then be God's priests to the world so that they would be a blessing to all of the nations. They had a unique role in the great monotheistic religion. The Jews were supposed to reflect morality to the world. Israel was to witness to the name of God. When they talked about the name of God and witnessing to God's name, that does not mean that they were to let everybody know what they called God, "Yahweh." Their goal wasn't to cover the countryside with evangelists who just let everybody know what the right word for God was. It meant something different. ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ https://linktr.ee/jacksonlibon -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #realtalk #face #instagram #amour #take #couple #dance #dancers #vogue #voguedqnce #garden #tiktok #psychology #beyou #near #love #foryou #money #ForYouPizza #fyp #irobot #theend #pups #TikToker #couplegoals #famille #relation #doudou #youtube #twitter #tiktokers #love #reeĺs #shorts #instagood #follow #like #ouy #oyu #babyshark #lilnasx #girl #happybirthday #movie #nbayoungboy #deviance #autotrader #trading #khan #academy #carter #carguru #ancestry #accords #abc #news #bts #cbs #huru #bluebook #socialmedia #whatsapp #music #google #photography #memes #marketing #india #followforfollowback #likeforlikes #a #insta #fashion #k #trending #digitalmarketing #covid #o #snapchat #socialmediamarketing H
★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Babs Horton takes us to Tredegar, a small town in the Welsh Valleys, ravaged by coal and politics. Brian Clegg re-haunts the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, where the ghosts of modern physics collect. Tamar Yellin explains the influence of the moorland landscape of Bronte Country on her life and work.
Listen to how Anna Kershaw, Teacher and International Languages (IL) lead, and Damian Briggs, Teacher and IL provider from Bryn Bach primary, Tredegar, one of our lead International Languages primary schools, are developing International Languages through a whole school approach, engaging in professional learning development and are connecting and linking languages through engaging and practical approaches. Gwrandewch ar sut y mae Anna Kershaw, athrawes ac arweinydd Ieithoedd Rhyngwladol (IR), a Damian Briggs, Athro a darparwr IR o ysgol gynradd Bryn Bach, Tredegar, un o'n hysgolion cynradd arweiniol ar gyfer Ieithoedd Rhyngwladol, yn datblygu Ieithoedd drwy ymrwymo fel ysgol gyfan, ymrwymo i ddatblygiad proffesiynol ac yn cysylltu ieithoedd drwy ddulliau ymarferol ac atyniadol.
Actor and Tredegar Boy Darren Evans links up with Kyle & Sean and chats Gaming, Darts & a dream summer living with one of out hosts! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Since returning to Tredegar Town Band in 2008, Ian has guided the Welsh band to new heights, enjoying considerable contesting success. Under Ian, Tredegar hasn't been afraid to think outside the box, from its involvement in the ballet Dark Arteries to recording for TV and film. From getting the thumbs up on Britain's Got Talent to having lunch with actor Bill Nighy, Ian shares some of his fond memories with the band down the years. He also looks back on some major musical influences, discusses conducting appointments in Austria and the National Youth Brass Band of Scotland – and explains why he doesn't tend to use a baton. But first, Ian's reflections on life in lockdown.
Actor and comedian Miles Jupp takes his friend Anna Antebi to Tredegar House in Wales, where they explore the beautiful gilded interiors of this 17th-century manor house, uncover the history of the aristocratic Morgan family who lived there, and learn all about the eccentric Evan Morgan, famed for his wild parties and outrageous behaviour. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What was the impact of the Tredegar Iron Works during and after the Civil War?
Michael Sheen explores Aneurin Bevan's roots in Tredegar. A spectre is haunting Tredegar. It feels a little like that at least. This town high in the South Wales Valleys is understandably proud of its most famous son and makes the most of his memory. Aneurin Bevan was born in Tredegar in 1897. And he was the local MP there until his death in 1960. Memories of Bevan still populate the streets. Aneurin Bevan was a coalminer at the age of 13. He was a troublemaker with a stutter. An autodidact. He won a scholarship from his union for further study in London. He joined committees. He was a town councillor, then a district councillor, before reaching Westminster in 1929, where his greatest legacy must surely be his central role in the founding of the NHS in 1948. The civic religion of the NHS. And he fought for it in the image of Tredegar. It's perhaps ironic then, that it's in Aneurin Bevan's home town that the effect of the NHS was felt least of all. By that time an estimated 96% of the town's population was covered anyway, by a voluntary scheme: the Workmen's Medical Aid Society. This is what Aneurin Bevan was referring to when he said, "All I am doing is extending to the entire population of Britain the benefits we had in Tredegar for a generation or more. We are going to 'Tredegar-ise' you." He said that while he was battling to establish the system nationwide. Or he said it with a jeer to Winston Churchill across the dispatch box in the Commons. Or maybe he wrote it somewhere. Anyway, it's etched on a plaque outside the old Town Hall in Tredegar. The now dilapidated town hall, just down the street from one of Bevan's old meeting places, which is now a DWP Assessment Centre, itself just down the hill from the Medical Centre, which has been trying unsuccessfully for months and months to recruit new staff. Those details shouldn't be the beginning or the end of anyone's image of Tredegar. It's more various and interesting - and more beautiful - than they might suggest. But those details, and others like them, do lead eager programme-makers to feel pleased with themselves when, after spending a necessarily small amount of time in the town, they reverse that old slogan of Bevan's and ask, idly it must be said: who is going to Tredegar-ise Tredegar today? With Dr Alfazuddin Ahmed, Eryl Evans, Iwan Fox, Megan Fox, Alwyn Powell and Nick Thomas-Symonds MP With grateful thanks to the Tredegar Brass Band and the Tredegar Local History Museum. Producer: Martin Williams.
In a series tracing decisive moments in the life of our National Health Service, medical historian Sally Sheard tells the story of some enterprising individuals who took matters into their own hands to improve health in their own communities. While the Peckham Experiment revealed the value of preventing illness in South London, the Tredegar Medical Aid Society provided miners and their families with free healthcare in their Welsh mining town. Having grown up in Tredegar, Health Minister, Aneurin Bevan, began to envisage a far more ambitious scheme to meet the health needs of the whole nation. He later took that vision from the Welsh coalmines to Westminster. Producer: Beth Eastwood.
In the latest programme of the monthly series, Mishal Husain introduces dispatches from journalists and writers around the United Kingdom that reflect the range of contemporary life in the country. Petroc Trelawny celebrates the glittering world of Dingles, a Plymouth department store which weathered two firestorms and introduced him to glamour, magic and red gingham - but tellingly has now been humbled by the mundane; Alison Holt reflects on a thought-provoking conversation with an older woman in a Dorset care home about the growing financial pressures she and the home itself are facing, while Gareth Jones ponders the links between the NHS and the town of Tredegar - whose MP set up the service 70 years ago but who today might wonder at what he found there; Charmaine Cozier dons her best I-don't-care-look and reveals the pleasures of going to gigs alone; and Andrew Green, who is himself a villager in the Chilterns, wonders what the often tense relations between weekend cyclists and locals on country lanes tell us about life today on the open road. Producer: Simon Coates
In his time, Aneurin Bevan was, according to one biographer, "the most colourful and controversial, most loved and most loathed political personality in Britain". The founding father of the NHS is the choice of Lord Kinnock, the former leader of the Labour Party who, like Bevan, grew up in Tredegar, in the heart of the Welsh coalfields, where he met his hero many times. Kinnock regards Bevan as a hero on a level with Nelson Mandela and believes it was Nye alone who had the force of personality and political will necessary to get the Health Service established after the war. But the presenter Matthew Parris and his other studio guest, Bevan's biographer, John Campbell are more sceptical. Campbell goes so far as to argue that, the achievement of the NHS not withstanding, Nye Bevan's life was essentially a failure because, in his commitment to socialism, he misread the trend of history so completely. Now, with the NHS facing radical reform, this programme captures some of the passion and debate that surrounded its inception and provides personal insights into the life and character of the man responsible for its creation. The producer is Isobel Eaton. Future subjects in the series include Barry Cryer on JB Priestley.
Sixth Century Gwent- South Wales having bee Christianised by very holy saints following the removal of the Romans is threatened by another people the superstitious and irreverent Angles and Saxons. Having done a deal with Ceowulf at Gloucester, they begin wandering down into South Wales and raiding for what they ould get. Pickings were poor on the whole but the Kings who had set up their daughters in religious foundations, or who had retired to live as religious having finished their childbearing of then had a few items around, living peaceably supporting the communities on the foothills of the Brecon Beacons and in the lovely valley North of Pontypool.No doubt they thought they were worth raiding, carrying off the young women. Tegfedd and Tydfil (mother of St Teilo) stood their ground, however, asking the Saxons to leave Holy Ground they were dragged off and suffered their fate. There is a song 'O Perfect Love' from www.music.podshow.com Homily of Benedict XVI on www.sqpn.com and some videos of his visit if you were not able to get EWTN streaming on your computer. Visit www.maryinmonmouth.blogspot.com for all sorts of newsof catholic life in Monmouthshire, including the opening of the new Lourdes Grotto at Tredegar to celebrate the Lourdes anniversary. Please remember to leave a review.........www,podcastalley,com, digg.com and iTunes store-it would help people to find this podcast. Finall please send me some Mail on the MaryinMonmouth Group on Facebook or on www.googlemail.com.
The Original account of the Life of the Holy Saint David of Wales. The thwarted mission of Patrick, the Prophecy and the Stag, the Bees and the fish, the conception of David by the nun St Non and King Sandde of Camarthen (Ceredigion) St Gildas loses the power of preaching, the Birth of David and the thunderstorm. Upbringing and education and the miracles . This is part one, which finishes the night before the big showdown with Boya the Scot and his wife and lascivious daughters, Brilliant results for Cwmbran at the Urdd St David's Day Eisteddfod at Pontypool as Cwmbran and Newport Children go through to the final in Conwy in the summe. A Pontifical Mass (Tridentine) at St David's Cathedral in Cardiff on May 18th at 11am. A new Lourdes Grotto at Tredegar with an Apostolic Blessing for anyone who goes there and prays for the world and for all thouse suffering sikness. Part Two Next week!