Native name: Ynys Arw | |
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North Stack (centre), with a building from the defunct fog warning station (right)
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Geography | |
Location | Anglesey, Wales |
Coordinates | 53°20′00″N 4°41′00″W / 53.333332°N 4.683333°W |
Administration | |
Wales
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County | Anglesey |
Additional information | |
Uninhabited |
North Stack (Welsh: Ynys Arw, meaning "rugged island") is a small island situated just off Holy Island on the north-west coast of Anglesey.
North Stack can also refer to the headland opposite the island. This is the site of a redundant fog warning station, comprising a number of buildings, including the Trinity House Magazine, built in 1861, where shells for the warning cannon were stored. These buildings now house a bird watching observatory, giving a view of South Stack lighthouse across Gogarth Bay, and the studio of artist Philippa Jacobs. The Precambrian quartzite cliffs of this headland, including North Stack Walls and Wen Zawn, provide some of the best-known rock climbs in Britain, such as "A Dream of White Horses", "The Cad" and "The Bells! The Bells!"
The stack was the site of a crash of a US Eighth Air Force B-24 Bomber on 22 December 1944 that killed the eight crew on board.
North Stack: the small island at the end of Gogarth Bay and the headland opposite
Trinity House Magazine, North Stack
Coordinates: 53°19′20″N 4°41′01″W / 53.3223°N 4.6836°W