Trecwn

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Trecwn
Welsh: Trecŵn
 Trecwn shown within Pembrokeshire
OS grid reference SM 96691 32638
   – Cardiff 107 mi (172 km)  
Community Scleddau
Principal area Pembrokeshire
Ceremonial county Dyfed
Country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town HAVERFORDWEST
Postcode district SA62
Police Dyfed-Powys
Fire Mid and West Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK Parliament Pembrokeshire
Welsh Assembly Pembrokeshire
List of places
UK
Wales
Pembrokeshire

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Trecwn (Welsh: Trecŵn [trɛˈkuːn]) is a village in Pembrokeshire, west Wales, 1.6 miles (2.6 km) east of the A40 (Fishguard to Haverfordwest) road in the community of Scleddau.[1]

History

The history of Trecwn in the 18th and 19th centuries is linked with the Barham family, who funded the building of the school in 1877. Barham Memorial School, a Grade II listed building,[2] closed in 2001 following the closure of the armaments depot (see below) a few years before.[3] Joseph Foster Barham (1759–1832)[4] and his son Charles Henry (1808–1878)[5] were both members of parliament for Stockbridge, Hampshire.

Trecwn was a community in its own right until 2007; however, the population had decreased significantly from 366 to 260 in the years 1980 to 2006, so it was merged into the community of Scleddau.[6]

Church

The church of St Justinian is a Grade II* listed building of mediaeval origin, rebuilt in the 19th century.[7]

Armaments depot

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RNAD Trecwn is a decommissioned 1100-acre (450 ha) Royal Navy Armaments Depot. It was closed in 1995 with the loss of 500 jobs.[8] Omega Pacific in 1998 tentatively proposed the site could be used for storing low-level nuclear waste, a plan shelved owing to public opposition. In 2001 German company EBV suggested using the site for weapons reclamation.[9][10] In 2003 the owners announced that the tenanted homes on the site would be sold on the open market.[8]

Plans submitted by The Valley (Pembrokeshire) Ltd to build a 25-megawatt biomass energy plant on the site were conditionally approved in 2015.[11]

References

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External links