The Monmouth Police Station at 19 Glendower Street
a leading figure in nineteenth century Monmouth.
the catalogue can be seen in the Monmouth Museum.
Monnow Street, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales is a public house
Monmouth has had a cricket club since at least 1838.
Monmouth College has a distinctive approach to the study of commerce;
Glendower Street, the site of the Monmouth Police Station since 1895,
No. 1 Agincourt Square, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales is a notable early
taking place annually in Monmouth on the last Thursday in August.
Symonds Yat, Monmouth and Tintern, meeting the Severn estuary just below Chepstow.
The house
is located on Castle Hill, off Agincourt Square in Monmouth town centre.
The Monmouth Police Station at 19 Glendower Street
is a mid 19th-century, listed building.
was rebuilt in 1671 by William Roberts of Monmouth, whilst serving as Receiver
6th Earl of Leicester, Monmouth Castle passed into the hands of Edmund Crouchback,
Monmouth has a distinguished military history,
counting four Medal of Honor recipients among its alumni.
Monmouth has a distinguished military history,
counting four Medal of Honor winners among its alumni.
does not appear on the 1610 map of Monmouth drawn by cartographer John Speed,
the soldiers were honoured with a parade through Monmouth, a salute near Shire Hall,
In 1911, the address of the Monmouth Police Station was recorded as 15 Glendower Street.
That same year the show
moved to a new site on the Redbrook Road in Monmouth.
It continued until Monmouth Hospital and Dispensary was opened at Cartref,
St James' Square, in 1868.
The Angel Hotel, Church Street, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, south-east Wales is a Grade II listed building.
James Crofts, later Scott(1649-1685), created Duke of Monmouth(1663) in England and Duke of Buccleuch(1663) in Scotland.
Agincourt House, No. 1 Agincourt Square, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales is a notable early
seventeenth century half-timbered building.
Monmouth Fire and Rescue Station has
one Station Commander who is also responsible for two other stations.
The unit first adopted the
royal name in 1804, when it was the"Royal Monmouth and Brecon Militia.
Kelly's Directory of Monmouthshire indicates that, in 1901, the Monmouth Police Station on Glendower Street was
The White Swan Inn, White Swan Court,
Church Street, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, south-east Wales is an eighteenth-century
former coaching inn.