Tag: Montgomeryshire
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Emlyn Hooson (1925–2012)

The Barrister Who Carried Welsh Liberalism Through Its Leanest Years In the long aftermath of Lloyd George, Welsh Liberalism did not collapse in a single dramatic moment. Rather, it diminished gradually, election by election, chapel by chapel, until it seemed less a living political force than a surviving memory. Emlyn Hooson matters because he refused…
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Owen Owen (1847-1910) of Machynlleth

Retail, Respectability, and the Democratization of the High Street There is a recognisable Montgomeryshire pattern in the nineteenth century. Men formed in small, chapel-centred communities along the Dyfi valley stepped into the expanding commercial world of Britain and quietly helped to reshape it. Coal and rail have long dominated our understanding of Welsh industrial influence,…
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The Election That Broke an Inheritance

Why Montgomeryshire in 2010 Was So Corrosive for Liberal Wales Since publishing my earlier essay on the decline of Liberalism in Wales, I have been asked how one election result in one rural constituency could prove so damaging for an entire political tradition. (source 1) The answer is that Montgomeryshire in 2010 was never merely…
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The Decline of Liberalism in Wales, and the Fracturing of Its Inheritance

For more than a century, Liberalism in Wales was not merely a party label, it was the organising language of public life. It fused chapel morality, civic ambition, land reform, and a distinctly Welsh insistence on dignity into a durable political culture. (source 1) (source 2). Its decline, therefore, is not simply an electoral story,…
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My Political Heritage, Wales in My Blood, and the Quiet Lessons of Ancestry

Most people assume that political identity is something acquired, a set of opinions formed by the news cycle, public argument, and the shifting pressures of the present. In Wales, that assumption seldom survives contact with history. Welsh political culture was not born yesterday. Nor did it begin with devolution, or with the institutions of modern…
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“My Relations Are Part of a Rich Tapestry of Welsh Heritage” — My Feature in Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine

I’m delighted to share that my family history research has been featured in the latest issue of Who Do You Think You Are? magazine. The article, written by Claire Vaughan, explores my decades-long journey tracing my Welsh roots — from hill farmers and Calvinist ministers to a musical icon and a self-taught solicitor — all…
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When the Last Prince Hid in Our Hills: A Family Legend That Still Haunts Wales

High in the forgotten uplands of Montgomeryshire, where bracken folds over ancient sheep paths and the hills roll unbroken into silence, there stands a farmhouse my family still speaks of in reverent tones. Its name is Esgair Llywelyn — Llywelyn’s Ridge. Even now, the place endures. Weathered, empty, but defiantly upright. Whitewashed stone walls streaked…


