Oswestry
Shropshire
is quintessential England,
obviously. But as you
head towards Oswestry
in our northwest corner,
you get an inescapable
feeling of, well...Welshness
washing over you.
For here, the mountains of Wales embrace our green and pleasant county at no extra charge. As you delve deeper you'll find a blending of cultures that's created a unique and genuine Anglo-Welsh alliance.
Oswestry, is a pretty town in northern Shropshire. It was named after King Oswald of Northumbria, who died in AD641.
King Oswald met a sticky end when he was nailed to a tree, hence the name "Oswald's Tree". A local legend suggests that an eagle took a limb and flew off. The eagle later dropped it and where it landed a spring burst forth which became known as St Oswald's Well.
The
many remnants of more
turbulent times show
that Oswestry was once
a strategically vital
frontier town. An ancient
hill-fort - said to
be the birthplace of
Queen Guinevere - stands
proud overlooking the
town, and Offa's Dyke
marks out the border
between these two great
nations.
Oswestry is the best place to start exploring the Welsh Mountains and discover the delights of Lake Vyrnwy and the charm of the majestic castles of Powis, Chirk and Whittington which formed part of a later chain of fortifications, and are just down the road.
Celtic mists and forests immediately tell you, here is a land of myth and legend. In the dark ages, all Shropshire was part of the Kingdom of Powys, and the earliest references to a real King Arthur point to his being the post-Roman, pre-Saxon king of this region.
Ancient
signs abound. All around
lie the wells and springs
of saints, blessed with
the power to heal believers
- or at the very least,
to inspire the more
cynical. Less holy but
every bit as inspiring
is the Pistyll Rhaeadr
waterfall, at 240 feet
taller than Niagara
and one of the Severn
wonders of Wales. It
certainly impressed
George Borrow who wrote "An
immense skein of silk
agitated and disturbed
by tempestuous blasts.
I never saw water falling
so gracefully" -
a must see or at least
worth a visit anyway
!
Oswestry has been home to many poets, musicians, eccentrics and villains. The greatest of Great War poets, Wilfred Owen, was born here in 1893, but it must have been a blushing crow to the English teachers at the local Grammar School (now Oswestry Heritage centre) when they produced the Reverend Spooner, of Spoonerism fame.
The ability of the Reverend to get his words tupsy-torvy was legendary. His dinner toast to Victoria, "our dear old Queen", for example, came out quite, quite differently ("our queer old dean"). Could it be that the unfortunate cleric's tounge-tied state can be explained by his Shropshire roots? There are numerous fine pubs and local brews to be sampled around the county, many of which would have been familiar to the Reverend.
Another local eccentric was 'Mad Jack' Mytton, whose exploits included riding a bear across his dining room table. His famous cure for hiccups - setting fire to his shirt - is, we believe, still practised in some more isolated parts of the region.
Spectacular
limestone cliffs at
Llanymynech where lead,
copper and zinc have
been mined since Roman
times is now a haven
for wildlife and a unique
Hoffman Horizontal Kiln
(Whatever that is!).
Nearby there's lots to see and do:- Nescliffe Country Park - site of an iron age hill fort and the cave of the 18th Century highwayman Humprey Kynaston - Shropshire's very own Robin Hood.
Offa's Dyke, the Oswestry Transport Museum and the Llangollen and Montgomery Canals. Don't miss the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct at 126 feet above the River Dee it is one of Thomas Telford's masterpieces.
You can also go on a themed walking tour of the town, with costumed guides that reflect the towns past. For more information on costumed and themed guided tours around Oswestry contact Oswestry Town Visitor Information Centre on 01691 662753.