Save the date: The Newport Ship’s 15th Anniversary Concert: Riverfront Theatre, Saturday 19th August 2017

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A concert to celebrate the 15th Anniversary of the discovery of the Newport Medieval Ship will be given by St Woolos Sinfonia at the find site of our Ship, the Riverfront Theatre in Newport.MedNewport A4 300dpi (2)

A “happy blend of professional and student musicians, teachers of their instruments and enthusiastic amateurs” (South Wales Argus 2011), St. Woolos Sinfonia have been successful in bringing the joy of classical music to a broad range of people. Many acclaimed performances have been given in venues across South and West Wales. Charitable since 2012. The orchestra, based in the City of Newport accepted the invitation to become “Orchestra in Residence” in Newport Cathedral in 2015.

Under the baton of its exceptionally talented New Zealand Principal Conductor Tianyi Lu, the orchestra plans to mark the occasion and treat the audience with a “Maritime–themed” programme featuring old and newer music including from Handel’s Water Music, Strauss’ Blue Danube, living composer Gareth Glyn’s Anglesey Seascapes, and Mendelssohn’s Hebrides Overture.

riverfront2St. Woolos Sinfonia’s Chairman and Leader of the orchestra Christoph Mädler: “We are honoured to be invited and proud to contribute to such a great occasion in the City to highlight its rich heritage.”

Tickets will be on sale from the Riverfront at a cost of £20 per person, to include a glass of wine before the concert.

RCAHMW Digital Past 2017

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The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales invites you to attend:

Digital Past 2017: New technologies in heritage, interpretation and outreach.

15 – 16 February 2017 at The Riverfront, Newport

Registration will close on Friday: Register Your Place at Digital Past 2017 Now…

The speaker programme for Digital Past 2017 is complete!

The range of fantastic speakers, from around the UK and beyond, can be found on the Conference speaker page. Their expertise ranges from high-tech digital survey methodology to the latest engagement tools, while taking in the complexities of open data and data management. See the full programme.

Registration for the two days is only £89, including lunches and refreshments. As spaces are limited please make sure to book now.

The Friends of Newport Ship will have an exhibition stand at the main event. Stands are selling fast, so if you are interested in showcasing your project, services or products to our wide range of delegates then take a look at our exhibitions page for details of facilities and booking.

As part of the programme there is a visit to the Newport Medieval Ship Centre to see the digital recording process in action – including a sneak preview of the displays for the new season of regular opening from 18 February.

We look forward to welcoming you to Digital Past in 2017.

The Digital Past Team / Friends of Newport Ship

ABP 2016 Sponsorship Finally Acknowledged

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As we rush headlong towards the end of this year, we have finally (and belatedly) handed over the 2016 sponsorship certificate to Associated British Ports (ABP). Port Manager Chris Green is now recovered from his prolonged illness and today received the certificate from Phil Cox (FoNS Chairman), acknowledging their annual sponsorship of the Friends of Newport Ship.

In the forthcoming year we hope to work more closely with Newport Docks and at one of our forthcoming talks will tell some of the stories from the development of Docks and of the disaster of the collapse of the new dock gates.

If you or your organisation as looking to sponsor something that will develop into one of the biggest heritage tourism attractions in Wales, then please get in touch via our website at www.newportship.org

The Medieval Ship Centre is currently closed for the winter period, but will reopen on Saturday 18 February. Check the website for details.

Ship Aground Painting in Good Company

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The paperwork has all been signed, and this fascinating painting is now officially in the hands of the Friends of Newport Ship

The painting by Donald Matthews depicts the SS Brodland which ran aground on Aberavon beach in 1913. Whilst being towed out of Port Talbot in heavy seas the tow rope parted and she was driven ashore. She had been on her way to Punta Arenas in Chile with a cargo of Welsh steam coal. All the crew were rescued by breeches buoy, and the anchor is still on display outside the Aberavon Lifeboat Station.

The painting was purchased for 20 guineas by the Contemporary Art Society of Wales (CASW) in 1957 from an exhibition of the South Wales Group. It was gifted by CASW to BP Llandarcy, unfortunately when that closed the painting found its way into an auction for a private sale so, rather like the Newport Medieval Ship, it had to be rescued and was bought back by CASW!

Ship Aground 2 croppedWhen members of CASW visited the Newport Medieval Ship in the summer of 2015 they saw our “Ship Aground” pub sign and thought how we might well want more art work on similar themes for the proposed Newport Ship Museum, and that this would make a very good new home for this excellent painting.

Originally loaned to the Friends of Newport Ship by the Contemporary Art Society of Wales in May 2016, now gifted.  During our main opening period (Easter until the end of October), the painting is displayed on the front of our conserved timber store alongside the pub sign. For the winter period, the painting has been taken down and kept safe within the timber store, but clearly visible to visitors.

This Saturday 10 December is the last opportunity to visit the Medieval Ship Centre this year. We will re-open on Saturday 18 February and thereafter every Saturday until December 2017. Friday opening will resume on Good Friday through until the end of October.

Getting Ready for ReAssembly

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Recent visitors to the Medieval Ship Centre will have noticed that at the back of the conserved timber store are 8 planks and a section of false keel.

Four of these planks are currently held together using plastic teaspoons – they fit the holes without slipping through, they are inert and will not damage the timber, and they were available.

These 8 planks are strakes 1, 2, 3 and 4, plus strakes 6, 7, 8 and 9.  Strake 5 is still undergoing conservation in the remaining tanks.  Along with a fabricated (fake) strake 5, these planks will be reassembled as the first test for the potential fixings that are being trialled.

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The initial supply of threaded pink bolts are matched with ‘natural’ coloured nuts and washers and will also use a sponge pad to ensure that the timbers are held securely but gently.  These will be used in place of the original clench nails/rivets that have all corroded.

The larger brown threaded bolts and nuts will replace the trenails that would have held the planks in place against the frames when we come to add the frames into the structure.

The assemblage will then be visible in the extended timber store from next spring.

All the Medieval Ship’s timbers will have completed conservation by the end of 2018, after which time we hope to have a suitable location in which we can reassemble the hull for everybody to come and see. This magnificent vessel will attract visitors into Newport and SE Wales from all around the world – will you be there?

Thanks to the Friends of Newport Ship, the Ship Centre opens for the last time in 2016 on Saturday 10 December.  The Centre will reopen on Saturday 18 February for Spring half term, and every Saturday thereafter until the middle of December.  Friday opening will recommence on Good Friday until the end of October.

FoNS Chairman’s Annual Report

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The Chairman’s Annual Report as delivered at the AGM on 12 November is now available on the FoNS website at www.newportship.org/committee

The newly elected Committee is also listed.  Many thanks to all who came to the AGM to support FoNS and a special vote of thanks to those who stood for election and co-option. We can always do with more help.  If you have latent skills that could be put to good use, then please get in touch with me at chair@newportship.org

FoNS at Ludlow Medieval Christmas Fayre

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What a fabulous event!  It’s the first time that the Friends of Newport Ship have visited the Medieval Christmas Fayre that takes place within the walls of Ludlow Castle.imag1716

Ludlow castle has outer walls and an inner keep.  Within the keep were the main attractions, the medieval surgeon, the falconry master and the re-enactors camp.  Outside was the main market, in which FoNS had our stall.

The weather forecast was bright and clear….. and cold!  Very cold!!  The crowds were queuing, waiting to come in each morning, eager to look around the vast array of craft stalls, listen to the music from a wide variety of minstrels armed with all sorts of ‘interesting’ instruments.

imag0557The FoNS ‘medieval gazebo’ (complete with our travelling exhibition and a wide selection of our retail stock) was sited to catch everybody that was on the way out.  Many history enthusiasts stopped to find out more about the project, even some from Newport and Cardiff who had never heard of the Newport Medieval Ship!

It was a long day – the event closed at 9pm on the Saturday.  There was a rime of frost forming on the display outside the gazebo!  Time to retreat to a local hostelry for food and warmth, ready for Sunday opening, and doing it all over again.  This great event finished at 4pm when we were able to strike down and get home for a Sunday dinner!

The Friends of Newport Ship intend to be out and about next year at all sorts of events, all over the country. We aim to raise awareness of the project as well as raising funds for the Ship Centre development.  If you want to come and help out, to help tell our stories and inspire others to join the crew, then please get in touch.  Watch our website for more details of where we are and when – and come out and see and support us.

BACKING NEWPORT: Volunteers make city’s history come alive

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Very many thanks to the South Wales Argus for publishing this piece that Newport’s heritage groups put together to highlight how heritage is doing its bit to draw visitors into Newport.

See the full article (and all the pictures!) here

Philip Cox, re-elected chairman of Friends of Newport Ship, writes about Newport’s Heritage for the Argus campaign We’re Backing Newport. From the Medieval Ship to the Transporter Bridge, the city has lots to offer.

“Our rich heritage is fascinating, and each site is deliciously intertwined with others. Newport Museum holds many key artefacts for the projects that are ‘owned’ by the city, the Museum itself, the Medieval Ship and the Transporter Bridge, plus it links with Roman Caerleon, Caerwent and Fourteen Locks; a veritable ‘string of pearls’ with which Newport is blessed.

Our maritime trading history is enriched by the many vessels found on the fringes of the Severn Estuary which need to be displayed and interpreted for all to understand.

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From prehistoric plank boats, the celtic-romano ‘Barlands Farm’ boat, the Medieval Ship and so many others, Newport acted as a hub, a lowest crossing point of the Usk, a major port with canal connections, a ships’ graveyard and so much more.

The Friends of Newport Ship have always taken the widest possible view about supporting all heritage tourism in and around Newport and South East Wales. It is only by collaborative working that we can piggy-back on each other’s visitors and encourage people to learn about Newport’s past, its heritage and its attractions.

The Newport Medieval Ship project will see over 2,200 visitors this calendar year (almost double last year’s figure), many referred by other Newport sites, and most of our visitors are referred on to other sites, including St Woolos’ Cathedral, our canals, our ornamental gardens and more widely the CADW sites and other regional attractions.

When a final home is found for the Medieval Ship, it is estimated that it will draw somewhere around 150,000 visitors a year into Newport – that’s worth something like £7million to our local economy. All these visitors can be directed to other ‘linked’ sites to increase footfall and potential spending in Newport.

The Medieval Ship Centre is open on Saturdays until Saturday, December 10, and reopens in mid February 2017 (see our website for details)

Newport Transporter Bridge

One of the many attractions Newport has to offer visitors is our iconic Transporter Bridge. Only eighteen “Aerial Ferries” were ever built and just eight remain, of which six are working. There are three bridges in Britain; the other two are at Middlesbrough and Warrington.6am

People visit from all over the world and the visitors’ Book in the Visitor Centre indicates their amazement and admiration for our magnificent Bridge. Some come because they have seen it on Michael Portillo’s Great Railway Journeys or Fiona Bruce’s Antiques Road Show, which are shown worldwide.

The Visitors’ Centre will remain open seven days a week until the end of November, despite the Bridge itself being closed until Easter.

Following the success of this year’s calendar, the Friends have produced a 2017 edition. Last Christmas, it was sent all over the world. It shows our splendid bridge in all its moods with stunning photographs.

The calendar is available at the Visitor Centre, Maindee Library Plus and by ringing the contact number below.

Our Chartist Heritagedscf0182

“Newport – City of Democracy” asserts the unique identity of the city, affirming its involvement with the Chartist and Suffragette movements.

This marque, which is just as important to the city’s future as to its past, will allow Newport to develop sustainable assets that reinforce its heritage, raise its profile and market the city for tourism, education and investment purposes.

Our Chartist Heritage aspires to create assets to raise the profile of Newport’s Chartist heritage, making the area become more widely known nationally and internationally as the location of the Newport Rising – one of the most significant events in the shaping of British democracy.

By providing a better appreciation of its central role in the ultimate achievement of Votes for All, many opportunities will be created for the city to hold fun-filled festivals and special events celebrating “Newport – City of Democracy”.

Fourteen Locks and the Monmouthshire, Brecon and Abergavenny Canals Trust

The guiding principle of the Monmouthshire, Brecon and Abergavenny Canals Trust is ‘progress through partnerships’ and, through managing the Fourteen Locks Canal Centre, it is backing the future of our local heritage in partnership with Newport City Council.

Although only small, the Canal Centre has excellent facilities, including a wonderful cafe and is well placed off Junction 27 of the M4.

Vitally for Newport, the centre attracts around forty-five thousand people each year; it is also an important hub for the community. Heritage Lottery Funding has played a crucial role in the restoration of the top section of the Lock Flight and in developing a volunteer programme.

One of the most recent developments has been to establish a Canal and Countryside Volunteer group with Newport Council. This is an exciting project which can only help maintain this wonderful location for the benefit of all. Fourteen Locks is most definitely backing Newport.

Newport Cathedral: “A Norman Jewel Set in a Medieval Casket.”

This is how Newport Cathedral has been described, standing on a site which has been practicing Christianity for over 1500 years.normanarch

Today, the Cathedral stands in all its glory, surrounded by an island of trees at the top of Stow Hill, here, in the city of Newport, beckoning visitors to come and “Walk Through Time” and explore this ancient historic building.

Steeped in history, the Cathedral also has connections with the Chartist movement and an inscribed plaque reminds us of the story of over twenty people who died in 1839 when troops fired into a crowd of Chartist supporters demonstrating outside the Westgate Hotel.

Ten of the Chartist martyrs were buried in unmarked graves within the Cathedral churchyard.

Whether you have known the Cathedral before or have never been inside, do come along and visit Newport’s oldest and most beautiful interior public space. You can be assured that a warm welcome awaits you on your visit.

Volunteering

All these visitor attractions are staffed by volunteers. Anyone who is interested in volunteering and has the time is asked to contact the attraction direct:

Friends of Newport Ship: 07411 149678, newportship.org

Friends of Newport Transporter Bridge: 07802 487042, fontb.org.uk

Fourteen Locks: 01633 892167, fourteenlocks.mbact.org.uk

Friends of Newport Cathedral: 07933 627 594, newportcathedral.org.uk

Our Chartist Heritage: http://www.our-chartist-heritage.co.uk

Support your local heritage – support the many local projects that bring people into Newport, to stay in our hotels, guest houses and B&Bs, eat in our restaurants and spend money in our shops.

Newport’s heritage sites are all backing Newport – are you?

 

 

Christmas is Coming! Get yours now!!

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The Friends of Newport Ship are pleased to announce that we have a special 15th Anniversary Calendar and Christmas Cards available for purchase.

As you will see from the attached image, the calendar celebrates the 15th Anniversary of the discovery of our ship and is dedicated to the memory of Kate Hunter. The pictures in the calendar are a chronological illustration of the Ship Project to date.

The Christmas cards are 5 to a pack and the message inside is  “Seasons Greetings”.  On the back there is a short description of the Newport Ship Project.

The calendars are £6.50 each and the Christmas cards are £5 a pack. These are available from the Cabin shop at the Ship Centre which is open every Saturday (10.30am – 4.00pm) until 10th December. There is also stock of the calendars at ‘Crafted’, in the Kingsway Centre in Newport (next to Peacocks)

Alternatively, you can order them from FoNS and we will post them to you. Postage and packing cost £1 for the calendars and £1 for up to 5 packs of Christmas cards. Please contact us for details of how to pay.

Thank you for your continued support and we look forward to your taking advantage of the limited quantity we have of these excellent calendars and Christmas cards.

Cardiff Garrison to Visit Medieval Ship Project

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The medieval, living-history re-enactment society, The Cardiff Castle Garrison will be demonstrating fourteenth century weapons, armour and crafts at the Medieval Ship Centre on Saturday 20 August.

This should be a fascinating day to complement the regular displays at the Ship Centre and give an amazing insight into medieval life and times.

It’s free to come in, but we welcome donations towards the running of the exhibition and support of the Medieval Ship project. We will be open from 10.30am until 4.00pm – we look forward to seeing you there.