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A Brief History
(Last Modified March 2006)
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The Carmarthenshire Antiquarian
Society was founded in 1905 at a time when there was little in
the way of authoritative history about Carmarthenshire in published
form. Indeed the primary research for such work was yet to be
done. The Society was central in co-ordinating the collection
and dissemination of all manner of historical and archaeological
material.
Through its well-attended field days members
were able to see and hear about field monuments, and reports of
these were published in The Welshman. So popular were these
reports and notes that they were reprinted as our journal - the
Transactions. Artefacts were also collected, and it was
soon decided that the Society should have its own museum to hold
these and the books and manuscripts that came flooding in from
all corners of the County. |
From 1905 to the early 1920s the
Society amassed so much material that its Museum became second
only in size to the National Museum of Wales. It is clear that
by the mid 1920s this by now priceless collection was ill housed
in the Society's ‘Rooms’ in Quay Street. In 1920 Lord Kilsant
had given the Society property in Bridge Street (including part
of the Castle). By 1929 things had come to a crisis point due
to shortage of space, poor storage and then dry rot set in. In
December 1929 Sir Cyril Fox scathingly criticised the Society
for continuing to gather material when its resources were inadequate.
Fox hoped that the County Council would contribute. E. V. Collier,
long-standing member was also ‘Director’ though this period and
he and George Eyre
Evans were active in increasing the collections. Number 5
Quay Street had been used rent free since 1920 and then the Society
bought it for £400. |
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Four years later they bought No.
4 and thus doubled the storage and display area of the Museum.
During the 1930s the collections of books, MS and artefact continued
to grow placing increasing strain on storage and exhibition space.
In November 1939, George
Eyre Evans, one of the founding members, a long serving Secretary,
and indefatigable collector and Curator of the Museum, died. Yet
before his death the Society had already been in discussions with
Carmarthenshire County Council with a view to the transfer of
the Museum into public ownership.
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Thus in November 1940 the Society conveyed 4 and 5
Quay Street, 9 Bridge Street and all the objects, books and MSS for
the sum of £800 to Carmarthenshire County Council. A brief (and wholly
inadequate) catalogue included in the transfer gives some indication
of the sheer vastness and range of the collections - Early Christian
Memorials, objects of Folk Culture, glass and china pottery, much of
it from Llanelli, quantities of love spoons, samplers, paintings, pictures
and 60 cases of stuffed animals. The Society’s collection of early Bibles
was immense, including editions of 1611 and Y Beibl Cysegr Lan
of 1620. Other early printed works included editions of Camden, Speed
and rare illustrated antiquarian tours of Egypt and the Middle East
and fabulously illustrated volumes dealing with natural subjects. There
was also a magnificent collection of journals including Alcwyn Evans’
annotated set of Archaeological Cambrensis and those accumulated
through exchange agreements for the Transactions.
The Society had provided much of the raw material and
to some extent a synthesis for a better understanding of the development
of the area from early times through to the modern era. The Transactions
were continuously published and no doubt were invaluable to the authors
of the Royal Commission Inventory (1917); and the County History,
produced under the capable editorship of Sir John Lloyd in the 1930s.
Field days continued to be popular and an important avenue for providing
members with information about the County’s antiquities, and landowners
with information about the importance of sites on their land.

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Under the County Council the Museum at best can be said
to have remained stable. The Society maintained a presence on
its management committee (a condition under the transfer agreement).
The war years were however a difficult period for the Society:
It is clear that V. E. Collier and George Eyre Evans were sadly
missed, and despite the stalwart efforts of officers like E.
G. Bowen and Sir Gismond Philipps, it was not possible to build
up membership from the then very small base. The immediate post-war
period was not conducive to rebuilding the Antiquarian Society
in its former celebrated form. County ‘Society’ had changed
and many of the old guard had long since passed away.
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During the war years the dwindling membership became
detached from knowledge of the wonderful collection that it been assembled
between 1905 and 1939. Was it surprising then that it had lost interest
in what it had created? It was a council member, J. F. (Fred) Jones,
who became the Curator in the 1950s and held the reins of both the museum
and Society through almost two decades that saw a stagnation in membership.
J. F. Jones was no mean antiquary and scholar, but he was idiosyncratic
and made enemies as well as friends. It must be recognised that he was
working in isolation for a County Council that put little into the upkeep,
let alone development of the museum. Coupled with this was the fact
that the Society no longer owned the Museum. Poorly managed and with
inadequate storage facilities, many manuscripts and books became dispersed
and ill cared for. Dry rot was rampant and destroyed delicate objects
like stuffed animals. During his tenure as Curator J. F. Jones kept
no records of accessions (or returns of loans), nor indeed items destroyed
through poor storage. Even allowing for the isolation within which he
was working, posterity will perhaps judge this omission as indefensible.
The consequence today is that it has proved impossible to trace many
very valuable items and books that are now missing.

A rebirth developed
as a result of a number of factors which came together in the
1960s. An awakening interest in the past, especially in
archaeology, coincided with local excavations lead by a young
and enthusiastic Dr Barri Jones of Manchester University. His
excavations in Carmarthen provided supporting evidence for his
assertion that Carmarthen was not just a Roman Fort, but a civitas
capital with its own walls, distinct from the fort. The Society’s
membership started to climb dramatically after a shake-up of officers
with the election of a new Council. Field days took on a fresh
dimension, with much interest being shown in Roman sites. J. F.
Jones had already discovered the important marching camp at Arosfa
Garreg (which was not far from the already known overlapping camps
at Y Pigwn). In addition the confirmation of the fact that Carmarthen’s
amphitheatre was proved, after survey work, provided a further
focus for the archaeological dimension to the Society’s interest.
The Transactions had made way for the Carmarthenshire
Antiquary from 1940 and by 1969 Barri Jones was able to publish
interim results from his 1968 excavations. By 1970 more reports
and the results of work at the Roman mines at Dolau Cothi appeared.
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In the early 1970s local government
reorganization was being planned and with the creation of Dyfed
a new curator (John Little) along with the Society lobbied for
the removal of the Museum from Quay Street to the Old Palace at
Abergwili (the latter had been vacated by the Bishop leaving the
Old Palace without a use). In 1974 the Dyfed Archaeological Trust
was set up making its headquarters in Carmarthen. The Trust brought
in professionals who became involved in the Society’s activities,
helping cement the archaeological direction that had been the
driving force for the growth in membership.
One of the distinctive elements in the way the
Society now developed was that its own members were carrying on
field work and historical research, and these often formed the
subject matter for lectures and field days. This active work by
our own members then formed (and still underpins) much of the
subject matter in the Antiquary. Typical of such field
work and lectures was the pioneering work of the late M. C. S.
(Mike) Evans on the early iron industry. His pre-Turnpike roads
research became one of the most successful series of lectures/field
days that in turn became Antiquary articles and are warmly
remembered by the membership. Excavations by the young Anthony
Ward at Mynydd Llangyndeirn and elsewhere, provided opportunities
for members to become involved in excavations, and a project aimed
at younger members included a gravestone recording project at
St Ishmael’s Church. It was the drive to provide ever better field
days that sparked off the revisiting by members of the programme
sub-committee of field monuments that had been left forgotten
for decades. Attention was directed at the renewed interest in
Industrial Archaeology, and members were surprised at how early
Carmarthenshire’s industrial history had developed. This provided
a magnet for work in the south-east of the county, with a spin-off
of membership growth in the Llanelli area. The programme of field
days thus became a forum for showing the results of field work.
The Antiquary, under the capable hands of the late Bill
Morris, attained a well deserved reputation with its exceedingly
wide ranging subject matter, a mirror of the wide range of interests
that the Society’s Council members had. The Society continued
with this pattern of field days, lectures and publications, with
monographs like Terrence James' Carmarthen: an archaeological
and topographical survey(1980), Francis Jones’ Carmarthenshire
Homes and their families (1987), Heather James (ed) Sir
Gâr: Essays in Carmarthenshire History in memory of Bill Morris
and Mike Evans, and John Davies’ The Carmarthen Booke of Ordinances
(1995). In 1990 the Society commenced the ‘Carmarthenshire Place-name
Survey’, which epitomised the type of collaborative activity members
enjoyed. Under the guidance of six co-ordinators a large number
of members worked on collecting place-names from four primary
map sources and these were assembled on slips for input into a
computerised database . The project was then taken over by council
member Peter Wihl, who single-handedly typed in the complete data
set of about 15,000 headwords and some 40,000 historic forms and
continued to collect place-names from other historic sources.
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To mark the new millennium, the
Society decided to undertake an ambitious project to make an archive
of 20th century reminiscences of Carmarthenshire folk. The project
was co-ordinated by Eiluned Rees who went on to edit the publication
Carmarthenshire Memories of the Twentieth Century. It contains
nearly 130 contributions from ordinary people recording a very
wide variety of extraordinary activities, events, occupations
and trades spanning much of the 20th century. Other types of publication
to meet the demands of the digital age was Glenys Bridges’ CD
database of Maps of Mapbooks for Carmarthenshire estates launched
in 2005 which coincided with the launch of the Society’s web site.
The Antiquary, through our capable editor Muriel Bowen
Evans, continues to be the main vehicle for the publication of
members’ research interests, the changing subject matter reflecting
changing attitudes and interests of members in the 21st century.
Read more on the early history of the
Society and its first curator George Eyre Evans
See more
photos of past field days |
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