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Pwll

Village in Carmarthenshire, Wales


Village in Carmarthenshire, Wales

FieldValue
static_imagePart of the Village of Pwll Near Llanelli - geograph.org.uk - 56782.jpg
static_image_width250px
static_image_captionA view of Pwll
coordinates
countryWales
official_namePwll
community_walesLlanelli Rural
unitary_walesCarmarthenshire
lieutenancy_walesDyfed
constituency_westminsterLlanelli
constituency_welsh_assemblyLlanelli
post_townLLANELLI
postcode_districtSA15
postcode_areaSA
dial_code01554
os_grid_referenceSN473010

Pwll is a small coastal village, located between Llanelli and Burry Port, Carmarthenshire, Wales. Situated on a narrow ledge above the tidal Burry Estuary, the village offers panoramic views across the water to the Gower Peninsula and is traversed by the Millennium Coastal Path, a thirteen-mile traffic-free greenway connecting Bynea to Pembrey. Pwll gained historical significance on 17 June 1928 when pioneering aviator Amelia Earhart landed nearby after completing the first transatlantic flight by a woman, an achievement now commemorated by a blue plaque along the coastal path.

Description

The village is concentrated along the north of the A484. The land rises away from the coast providing a view of the Gower Peninsula (). Pwll is part of the Llanelli Rural community and occupies a narrow ledge above the tidal Burry Estuary, midway between Llanelli and Burry Port. The traffic-free Millennium Coastal Path threads the seaward side of the village, giving cyclists and walkers a thirteen-mile greenway from Bynea to Pembrey; the official route guide names Pwll Pavilion Café as a refreshment stop and highlights the broad views across the estuary to the Gower peninsula.

Pwll has a local shop, pet shop, Post Office located in The Blue Anchor (Wednesdays and Fridays 12:00 until 15:00), a few pubs, a steakhouse restaurant The Bryngwyn, a primary school and local football teams senior and junior and previously cricket until the team folded. The area is also where the Millennium Coastal Path runs through allowing cyclists to get between Burry Port and Llanelli without the need to cycle on the road. Just east of Pwll playing fields the path passes a blue plaque commemorating the landing of the Fokker F VIIb piloted by Wilmer Stultz on 18 June 1928. The flight from Trepassey Bay, Newfoundland, made Amelia Earhart the first woman to cross the Atlantic by air and ended after twenty hours and forty minutes on the sands off Pwll, a location now marked in both Welsh and English as the spot where she ‘landed here in the estuary near the village of Pwll’.

Aviation history

On 17 June 1928 pioneering aviator Amelia Earhart landed near the village in a Fokker F.VIIb/3m after flying exactly 20 hours and 40 minutes non-stop from Trepassey Harbor, Newfoundland. She became the first woman to fly non-stop across the Atlantic. A commemorative blue plaque now marks the site. As most of the flight was on instruments and because Earhart had no training for this type of flying, she did not pilot the aircraft. When interviewed after landing, she said, "Stultz did all the flying—had to. I was just baggage, like a sack of potatoes." She added, "... maybe someday I'll try it alone." In 1932 she completed her solo transatlantic flight.

References

References

  1. Dorrell, Richard. [https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3540051 "Amelia Earhart memorial, Pwll."] {{webarchive. link. (November 2, 2017 ''geograph.org.uk'', July 4, 2013. Retrieved: July 9, 2017.)
  2. (1997). "Amelia: The Centennial Biography of an Aviation Pioneer". Brassey's.
  3. (2024). "Millennium Coastal Path". Carmarthenshire County Council.
  4. (2010). "Amelia Earhart blue plaque". Open Plaques.
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