Carmarthen Journal

An amazing wealth of informatio­n stored in county’s archives HQ

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

KNOWING where you can and can’t fish isn’t a trivial matter, and it seems our forebears thought so as well. Nestling in the heart of Carmarthen­shire Archives’ new building are documents cataloguin­g fishing rights on the River Towy dating back to the 13th century.

They are the earliest collection­s of a treasure trove of maps, plans, ledgers, books, sketches, photograph­s and glass plate negatives at the building at the rear of Carmarthen Library, St Peter’s Street.

To give you a sense of how many there are, if laid out from end to end the collection would stretch four miles. The new £2.2m building has been built to Passivhaus standards, meaning it has an airtight fabric and is extremely energy efficient.

Hayden Burns, archives transforma­tion manager, said maintainin­g a 17°C temperatur­e and 45% humidity was especially important for the two main storage rooms – known as strong rooms.

The building opened to the public on July 13, closing the chapter on a tricky few years for the county’s archives service, during which time the collection was stored in different buildings including one where a significan­t mould issue came to light in 2014. The affected documents were transferre­d to specialist­s in Oxford who fumigated and cleaned them. They then returned to Wales and were held in establishe­d collection­s such as the Glamorgan Archives, Cardiff, and the Richard Burton Archives at Swansea University.

“The council [Carmarthen­shire], acutely aware of the importance of the collection and the needs of the community, decided to invest in a new archives building,” said Mr Burns.

The building has three levels and includes a public search room, office space, a digitisati­on and preservati­on suite, the two strong rooms, and enough capacity to grow the collection for the next 25 years. Should fire break out, an automatic nitrogen argon gas fire suppressio­n system will kick in.

Mr Burns said the collection had a particular­ly comprehens­ive record of landed estates in the historic county of Carmarthen­shire. Names such as Cawdor, Stepney, Aberglasne­y and Glasbrook will mean something to many residents today.

There are estate and tithe maps going back to the 17th century, details of owners and renters of fields, various taxation records, and shipping registers – the administra­tive bread and butter of its day.

The collection also has records of courts of quarter sessions, where civil and criminal appeals and criminal charges were heard, and petty sessions where criminal cases were held.

“I think one of the most interestin­g collection­s is the felons’ register from the 19th century, which includes photograph­s of the felons,” said Mr Burns. Some of those found guilty for crimes such as stealing sheep or cutlery found themselves transporte­d to distant lands.

The collection also provides evidence of decisions made by the council and its predecesso­r bodies going back to 1889. There are parish records – a good starting point, said Mr Burns, if you wanted to trace your family history.

Rather than just store documents, the service is always on the lookout for new documents to fill gaps in the collection, particular­ly groups which aren’t well represente­d.

People regularly ring up to say they have things which might interest the archivists.

“I will ask about the volume (of the material offered) and its condition,” said Mr Burns. “Then we will have a look – in nine out of 10 cases we won’t keep them all.”

Items which need repairing are attended to, and then the new addition to the collection is catalogued and uploaded digitally onto the archives hub – there for anyone in the world to see – in a process known as accession.

Mr Burns grew up in Galway, Ireland, studied an archives course at Aberystwyt­h, and was the county archivist for Anglesey before taking up his Carmarthen­shire post in November 2020.

“I love it,” said the 54-year-old. “Every day is different. People think it’s a very academic job, but it’s not. It’s a practical job. You need many skills.”

It includes contacting schools and other education organisati­ons, and getting the word out more generally to the community. Mr Burns is one of two archivists employed in the building. There are also two search room assistants, with support from volunteers and colleagues in the adjacent library.

Speaking just ahead of the public opening, Cllr Gareth John, cabinet member for regenerati­on, leisure, culture and tourism, said: “I am delighted that our archives collection is now back where it belongs in Carmarthen­shire, full of fascinatin­g stories of people and places, a wealth of material is available to the public for study and research.

“This new building has been purpose-built to the highest standards and will make sure our archives are protected from all potential risks of damage or loss.”

The strong rooms with their rows of shelving are simple, functional. What they contain is a different story.

I look at an impeccably-written page from The Book of Orders of the County Borough Carmarthen, from 1738 to 1757, and think of the wheel of time’s slow turn and the hopes, dreams and sorrows of those it aged.

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 ?? RICHARD YOULE ?? Hayden Burns, archives transforma­tion manager, in a strong room at Carmarthen­shire Archives’ new building in Carmarthen.
RICHARD YOULE Hayden Burns, archives transforma­tion manager, in a strong room at Carmarthen­shire Archives’ new building in Carmarthen.
 ?? RICHARD YOULE ?? The Carmarthen­shire Archives building, St Peter’s Street, Carmarthen.
RICHARD YOULE The Carmarthen­shire Archives building, St Peter’s Street, Carmarthen.
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 ?? RICHARD YOULE ?? Some of the large collection of books at Carmarthen­shire Archives.
RICHARD YOULE Some of the large collection of books at Carmarthen­shire Archives.

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