- Mobile site
- E-Newsletters
-
- News feed
- Find us on Twitter
@WTelegraph
All the latest news from the Western Telegraph
- Find us on Facebook
The Western Telegraph
Like us on Facebook
Fishguard and Goodwick (From Western Telegraph)
Get involved: send your pictures, video, news and views by texting WT NEWS to 80360, or email
us
Fishguard and Goodwick
12:04pm Thursday 23rd November 2006 in Town guides
Fishguard and neighbouring Goodwick are said to have derived their names from the Vikings, who were frequent visitors to this part of the coast. The sheltered harbour at Lower Town was a bustling little cargo port with a fishing industry which made it famous from Elizabethan times for its herrings. The local people were widely known as Sgadan Abergwaun (Fishguard herrings) and the local comprehensive school still features the herring in its badge.
In 1797 came the famous French invasion of Fishguard, the bicentenary of which was celebrated with such success last year. The invasion was repelled according to legend, by the amazonian Jemima Nicholas and other red flannel-clad local ladies who were mistaken by the French in the distance for reinforcement troops. A spectacular tapestry now commemorates the event.