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Conservation of Oystermouth Castle. Works to date. What happens next. Queries answered.

Conservation of Oystermouth Castle. Works to date. What happens next. Queries answered. First Norman fort built at Oystermouth. 1136.Welsh attacks probably destroy this castle. 1203. King John gave the lordship of Gower to

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Conservation of Oystermouth Castle. Works to date. What happens next. Queries answered.

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  1. Conservation of Oystermouth Castle. • Works to date. • What happens next. • Queries answered.

  2. First Norman fort built at Oystermouth. • 1136.Welsh attacks probably destroy this castle. • 1203. King John gave the lordship of Gower to • William De Braeos –. It is probable that he built a castle. • 1215. Oystermouth Castle was attacked and burned by Rhys Gryg. • 1241 William De Braeos (grandson of William De Braeos) a second castle was built • 1256 destroyed by the Welsh under Llewellyn ap Gruffydd. • William then built a much stronger castle with military potential and entertained King Edward I in 1284.

  3. 1320 Lady Alina De Breos and her husband John De Mowbray lived at the castle and made great improvements including fine windows. 1396 valued at £600 1403 Welsh rising under Owain Glendwr locals burned down the castle 1432 valued at £12.00 “ A fine manor at Oystermouth” 1287

  4. 1650 Oystermouth Castle given to Oliver Cromwell “an old decayed castle.” 1847 “A romantic ivy covered ruin. … so much hidden by ivy that its outlines were barely distinguishable”. Archaelogia Cambrensis.

  5. “Miserable , filthy and almost unapproachable”. Colonal Grant Francis 1850 Duke of Beaufort agreed to its restoration. Colonal Francis contributed £200 to its restoration and 4,000 tonnes of rubbish were removed.

  6. In 1927 Swansea Corporation purchased the castle and its surrounding land from the Duke of Beaufort and carried out a very thorough restoration of the building.

  7. The Friends of Oystermouth Castle were formed opening the castle to the public. • 2002 City and County of Swansea develop a management plan for the castle. • 2004 £150k Emergency repair works to the castle undertaken, funded by City and County of Swansea and Cadw. 2006 Decision to progress with Heritage Lottery bid.

  8. £1.8million total project cost. Heritage Lottery Funding, City & County of Swansea, Cadw, Friends of Oystermouth Castle. September 2008 HLF Stage 1 approval achieved. If successful at Stage 2, project will fund; Repair and conservation of the castle Building of visitor facility. Fees Castle community co-ordinator – 4 years Interpretation materials Training, staff & volunteers Activities & events.

  9. Strong community involvement. • Proposed volunteer programme…..not just the Friends. • Community groups undertaking a series of projects. • Friends to archive film and video footage of works in progress. • e.g. Red Cafe & schools …videos in and around the castle. • Youth Offending Teams….photographic interpretation of the castle and exhibition. • Mumbles Community Council… events • Mumbles Development Trust….festivals / walks / leaflets. • Met University …..stained glass window exhibitions. • GGAT community archaeological digs.

  10. Provisional Timeline of Events. January – September 2009 HLF Stage 2 May 2009 Cadw Heritage Tourism approval in principle (535k) September 2009 Submit to HLF October –December 2009 Bills / Tender documents January 2010 Out to tender April 2010 Works start on site 2010 – 2014 Phased works on site.

  11. A four year work programme. 2010 -2014 • Aim. • Ensure parts of the castle are open to the public every April – September. • Contractors to undertake weekend workshops eg mixing types of mortar. • Plans to show what works are taking place each year. • Community archaeology • Archiving • Recording • Other events?

  12. Signage: potential through convergence funding application. Parking: doesn’t qualify for tourism brown signs. Discussions with highways – disabled parking bay Footway signage - Distribution of pedestrian access from a number of locations

  13. Friends of Oystermouth Castle. • Role of the Friends 4 years and beyond. • Training opportunities. • Consultation on interpretation. • Raising cash from ticket sales which will contribute to the long term maintenance of the visitor centre . • Ongoing sustainability of the Castle Community Officer. • Potential for archiving, investigation and research.

  14. Convergence funding bid. European funding. • Heritage Tourism Bid. Cadw. £535k • Upgrade toilets. • Lighting. • Events celebrating Oystermouth Castle. • Signage and interpretation outside of the castle grounds. • Links to citywide heritage trails. • Promote alternative means of access and transport • Other ideas/ needs?

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