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Bull Bay, Anglesey

Coordinates:53°25′N4°21′W / 53.417°N 4.350°W /53.417; -4.350
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bay and village in Anglesey, Wales

Map
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670m
730yds
Bull Bay/
Copper Kingdom Centre
Copper Kingdom
B u l l  B a y
Site of Bull ay Lifeboat Station
site of
Lifeboat sta.
I r i s h  S e a
East
Mouse
East Mouse
East Mouse
Bull Bay Golf Course
Golf Course
Parys Mountain
Parys
Mountain
Map of Bull Bay, part of Amlwch Community

Bull Bay (Welsh:Porth Llechog) is a village andbay on the northern coast ofAnglesey, Wales, close toAmlwch. ItsWelsh name,Porth Llechog, means "sheltered bay". The English name is derived from Pwll y Tarw ("the bull's pool"), which is located near the shore close to the bay.

The village is located on theA5025. It is the most northerly village in Wales. Also, it contains Wales' most northerlygolf course which was opened and funded by a local aristocrat in 1913 to a design byHerbert Fowler.[1] The island ofEast Mouse lies within the bay, the coastline of which is rocky and contains many caves. Some of these rocks are over 570 million years old which make them amongst the oldest inWales. The population as of the 2011 census was 287 with 61% having no form of Welsh identity.[2]

Bull Bay is the home of Trireme Ynys Mon Rowing Club, a sea rowing club affiliated with the Welsh Sea Rowing Association. It mainly races with three classes of boat: Pembrokeshire Longboat, Celtic Longboat and Euro, with a boathouse near the site of the former lifeboat station.[3]

Lifeboat Station

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Life boat house, Porth Llechog, photographed around 1875

In 1867 theRNLI opened theBull Bay Lifeboat Station. A 32 ft boat named "Eleanor" was first in action in 1871, saving the crew of the schooner "Albion", and in 1877 rescued 20 passengers from the SS Dakota. The next two boats were both name "Curling", first a 34-foot self-righting Woolfe & Son which was called out 6 times in 5 years, then a self-righting boat by Henderson & Co which cost £441 and continued in service until 1903. "Jamie Cullen" a 38 ft Watson Class non self-righting boat arrived in 1904 at a cost of £993 from a legacy of Miss Marianne Cullen of Nottingham, which also required a new boat house.[4] In June 1924 the RNLI closed the station. In 58 years the Bull Bay lifeboats were launched 41 times saving 63 lives and 7 ships.[5]

References

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  1. ^"Bull Bay Golf Club". Retrieved6 March 2019.
  2. ^"Custom report - Nomis - Official Labour Market Statistics".
  3. ^"Trireme Ynys Môn Rowing Club".ynysmonrowing.co.uk. Retrieved6 March 2019.
  4. ^Lifeboat Station, Bull Bay (ID NPRN525339). at theRoyal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW)
  5. ^"Lifeboat".Amlwch History. Retrieved6 March 2019.

External links

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53°25′N4°21′W / 53.417°N 4.350°W /53.417; -4.350

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