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Pillgwenlly

Pillgwenlly
  • Pillgwenlli
Waterloo Hotel, Pillgwenlly - geograph.org.uk - 666381.jpg
The Waterloo Hotel
Pillgwenlly is located in Newport, Wales
Pillgwenlly
Pillgwenlly
Pillgwenlly shown within Newport
Population 7,318 (2011 census)
OS grid reference ST315875
Principal area
Country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town NEWPORT
Postcode district NP20 2
Dialling code 01633
Savoy exchange
Police Gwent
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
Wales
Newport
51°34′56″N 2°59′24″W / 51.58218°N 2.99001°W / 51.58218; -2.99001Coordinates: 51°34′56″N 2°59′24″W / 51.58218°N 2.99001°W / 51.58218; -2.99001

Pillgwenlly (Welsh: Pillgwenlli) is an electoral district (ward) and coterminous community parish in the city of Newport, South Wales. The area is governed by the Newport City Council.

Its name may come from 'Pwll' the Welsh language word for a water inlet, harbour or pool, and 'Gwenlly', a corruption of the name of Saint Gwynllyw, the name meaning Gwynllyw's harbour. Supposedly it derives from the period when Gwynllyw was a pirate and he based his ships in this area.

The ward is bounded by the River Usk to the east and southeast, the Ebbw River to the southwest, the Great Western Main Line to the west and Cardiff Road to the north.

It is an inner-city district to the south of the city centre and the built-up area is commonly shortened to "Pill". It contains the Newport Docks and the western ends of the Newport Transporter Bridge,City Bridge and George Street Bridge.

Pill hosts the annual Pill Carnival, on the last weekend of August. The Old Town Dock area is currently undergoing a huge mixed-use regeneration to bring the derelict dock lands back into use. A lively market takes place on a Saturday morning at the Newport Auctions site.

Portland Street in Pill was the birthplace, in 1871, of the famous "Tramp Poet" W. H. Davies and the nearby Church House Inn, where he was brought up by his grandparents, has a commemorative blue plaque.

The opening line 'Libraries gave us power' of the 1996 song A Design for Life, by Blackwood band Manic Street Preachers, was inspired by the legend above the entrance to the former Carnegie Library.


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