by Mark Lee Inman

South Wales is historically associated with coal, both in its mining and exporting. However, at the western end of the coalfield, a metal refining industry developed and prospered and thus, in the early twentieth century, ports like Swansea developed considerable volumes of general cargo, with tinplate products making up a substantial proportion. By the 1960s, the last years of traditional cargo shipping, it was possible to see a regular flow of cargo liners in addition to any remaining coal shipments. The establishment of the nearby Llandarcy oil refinery also brought regular movement of crude oil into the docks.

Starting with the Prince of Wales Dock, then moving to the King’s Dock and finally to the Queen’s Dock, it is these movements that Mark Lee Inman has captured and recorded in a nostalgic collection for both shipping and local history enthusiasts of nearly 200 images, never before seen in print.

This is an interesting book about what was a busy port in the 1960s. Unfortunately, the quality of a lot of the photographs is not good but it nevertheless brings back memories of those days.

SeaSunday2023

Published by:

Amberley Publications
The Hill
Merrywalks
Stroud
Gloucestershire
GL5 4EP
www.amberley-books.com

 

Paperback: 234mm x 165mm, 128 pp illustrated

Price: £12.99

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