PENTREF
BOWMEN THE LEGEND
A
hysterical analysis by JI.....
Throughout history, men (and the occasional lady) have pointed
a finger at South Wales as a centre of excellence for archery.
At various times armies have been glad of the expertise
that these marksmen had to offer, and in their turn, enemies
feared and flinched at the fact that a number of Welsh bowmen
had gathered together and were prepared to do battle. Famously,
at Agincourt the French threatened to remove the
two fingers of all Welsh archers who were captured. These
talented toxopholists were a decisive factor in the defeat
of the French army. This gave rise to the alternative V
for victory sign which was signalled by those victorious
archers to the French prisoners-of-war as they were paraded
past at that time (this sign, still in common use, became
colloquially known as flagging).
Prominent among these bands of warriors were the Llantrisant
Bowmen who dwelt not 10 bowshots away from Glyncornel, (well,
with quite a good bow, a little poetic licence and an active
imagination!). Even to this day, descendants of these fighters
are bestowed with the honour of Freeman in memory
of the significance of their contribution. This is the bedrock
that produces the stock that is Pentref!!
Snuggling serenely and sweetly in the Cwm called Rhondda
is the open secret known to all Field Archers Glyncornel
Archery Centre situated between the towns of Tonypandy
and Treorchy. These two places alone have added much to
the myth that all Welshmen wear miners helmets, play
rugby, have a sheep on a rope (Im not sure of the
significance of this one!) and sing Sospan Fach
every hour on the hour. This I can adamantly deny. I have
never owned a miners helmet!!
On 22nd August 1952, eight people sat in the Welfare Rooms
of the Ton Pentre Co-op Society and officially inaugurated
the Pentref Bowmen Archery Club. Future meetings were held
in a room at a local public house (history notes that some
of these were quite sensible!), and the membership gradually
grew. The first practice was held on the 4th Sept. 1952
on a field near TonyPandy Square, which was owned by one
of the members, and so the club was born. As a point of
interest, the Welfare Rooms, the public house and the first
practice field now no longer exist.
Shooting practice continued at various venues in the locality
until in May 1953 the club took over an old tennis club
in Ton Pentre. This had the space of two tennis courts and
a small club house. To get the longer distances involved,
members used to shoot from the side of an adjacent coal
tip across a mountain track and on to the club grounds,
avoiding wandering sheep in the process.
At that time the Club was entirely devoted to Target Archery
and had a demonstration team which visited the local pubs
and clubs, giving exhibitions and competing in Archery Darts.
In September 1956, some of the members took an interest
in Field Archery and the club formed two sections. Gradually
over the next few years the club became devoted to field
archery and affiliated to the British Field Archery Association.
The first major Field tournament was held on the mountain
side above Ton Pentre. This and subsequent ones were so
successful that some years later the Club organised the
B.F.A.A. National Championships at Coedely Woods, near Llantrisant
(see, I told you it wasnt far away!!). This event
attracted the largest entry for a Field Archery Tournament
to that date, and was also notable for the fact that a Field
course was also laid which enabled archers in wheelchairs
to participate. This was the first, and as far as I am aware,
the only time this has happened.
In 1967, the Club acquired the lease of 55 acres of Nantgwyddon
Woods, and this was the birth of Glyncornel Archery Centre.
Much hard work from the members was needed to convert the
old buildings into a club house, as well as constructing
the courses for the members to shoot over.
It was in 1968 that the First All British and Open Field
Archery Championships were organised by the club on behalf
of the Grand National Archery Society and have been held
on the last weekend in May ever since.
Crowning these achievements was difficult, but in 1970 when
due to the late withdrawal of the appointed country, GNAS
was persuaded by the club to stage the 2nd World and 1st
European Championships here in the Rhondda. During the preparation
for this Tournament the club went through its greatest development,
when with grant aid from various bodies, the car park and
roadways, the main hall and log cabin were built. History
records that even though the weather was atrocious for the
weeks before and during the first day of the event, it was
very successful, with eleven countries competing.
To date a number of club members have carried the name of
Pentref Bowmen to other countries throughout the World,
both as archers representing Great Britain and also as officials
in major championships. Names that spring to mind are: Chris
Farr who started as a slip of a girl in 1968 and now more
than 40 years later has become a qualified judge and still
shoots; Cliff Bluck who has retired as national and international
judge but still attends to give advice and occasional short
shrift (may we thank you for your years of incorrect decisions
Cliff); The Howells family at the last count in this
club, there were more of them than bison that crossed the
American Plains in the 18th Century. Their individual records
are remarkable but their joint achievements are a phenomenon;
Jean and Jan Howells recently returned from India. British
Squad members galore Jan Howells; MaryAnn Richardson;
Tony Nielson and Jeff Williams and Alex Bridgeman. Sue Davies
(ex-World Champion). Finally, not forgetting Gerald Farrell
whose expertise has produced some of the most challenging
courses in Britain and now the world!
Our recent endeavours now find us in areas transcending
styles and political grounds and I feel this is as it should
be, involving us with and had several Have-a-go
Field Courses for anyone interested and wanted to acquire
the skills, through the watchful eye of or top coaching
system, and contacting Ray Wysom, Sue Davies or Rob Edwards
will start you on the wonderful road of Toxopholigical techniques(
archery!)
This year (2008) has seen Pentref and Wales host the 21st
World Field Archery Championships. This was a daunting challenge,
not least because it was an honour thrust on some rather
than requested! Nevertheless, the gauntlet was picked up
and the challenge accepted. A gruelling experience it became:
from funding; venues; arrangements; petty bureaucracy and
even to the weather. Despite all these, the difficulties
were overcome and with a lot of help from friends and volunteers,
Jean Howells at the helm and Gerald Farrell in the engine
room, we sailed the seas of adversity. The Good-Ship Pentref
made it home! Many have praised and thanked us for our efforts
and we pass those on to those who did their bit.
If you have never been to this club in the hillsides of
South Wales I extend the greatest of welcomes since it is
the Venice of the archery world You
must do it before you die(Please dont take me
literally as Id hate the problems of clearing the
corpses as well as the butts after a shoot.). Despite all
our problems of vandalism, the elements, finances, bad plumbing,
etc., the thing you will find is that the members of the
Pentref have the pleasure and competition of archery at
heart. You will enjoy the atmosphere that this creates and
the warmth that is produced from these hard working people
even in the wettest and coldest of weekends. We have the
ability not to take ourselves too seriously but to insist
that those who are in a competitive frame of mind that they
must. As we stand in the first decade of a new millennium,
we know that Pentref is the home of The British
of this there is no doubt and a fact of which we are justifiably
proud, for many years we have struggled to improve and that
will continue for many years to come.
PENTREF
The Legend Lives On!!