Sunday, 20 March 2016

Pembroke Dock Doors - (PD Doors)





Pembroke Dock did not exist prior to 1814 - that is except for a farm, a ruined mansion and some scattered cottages. It wasn't known as Pembroke Dock then either - it was farmland around a derelict mansion known as Paterchurch. The buildings depicted were built in the nineteenth century as the town grew up around the Royal Dockyard, that was established there in 1814.

Click here for more information about Pembroke Dock

The poster above is available to purchase for:

  • £5.00 (including postage and packing) within the UK
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If you wish to purchase more than one copy, please leave a comment in the comment section below. I will, of course, combine the cost of postage wherever possible.



The cost including postage for other parts of the world can be seen in the drop down list below.


Cost with postage


      The poster is A4 size, printed on good quality card by a local printer.
      It will be sent to you in a cellophane wrapper within a card backed envelope.

      It would make an unusual gift for anyone with connections to Pembroke Dock.

      Perhaps a house you lived in is represented?

      It looks great in a frame!

      The photographs were taken as part of an ongoing project to record and promote the heritage of  Pembroke Dock. The background graphic comes from a late nineteenth/early twentieth century text book on house building that was used by my grandfather, Thomas Samuel James.




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