Holyhead, UK cruise port guide
Today the city of Holyhead is connected to the large Welsh island of Anglesey by a causeway known locally as The Cobb, but until the mid-19th century, it was on its own separate Holy Island connected by a bridge. Its protected harbor and location adjacent to the Irish Sea made it an important port from Roman times. Its beautiful St. Cybi’s Church is in fact situated in the remains of a Roman three-walled fort, the Caer Gybi, facing the harbor. The harbor’s three-kilometer breakwater is the longest in the United Kingdom, and made the port a crucial safe haven in inclement weather for ships plying the busy routes to industrial Liverpool and Lancashire. Until the completion of the London to Liverpool railway, Holyhead held the Royal Mail contract for Dublin. Your ship docks today at a jetty that originally served a lucrative aluminum smelting operation, until the closing of a nuclear generating facility cut of the supply of inexpensive power. A waterfront Maritime Museum provides insights into Holyhead’s long history as a seaport. Visitors are welcomed at the picturesque South Stack Lighthouse, and at the adjacent RSPB nature reserve, which offers views of the sea cliffs and their abundant nesting populations of puffins, fulmars, razorbills, guillemots, gannets and other seabirds, as well as seals, dolphins and other wildlife. The Anglesey countryside also holds prehistoric dolmens including the Trefignath Burial Chamber, and a nostalgic old Welsh farmstead called Cyfellion Swtan that charmingly preserves the traditional lifestyle or rural Wales.
About Holyhead, UK
Holyhead is a historic Welsh port town on Holy Island in northwest Wales, its identity shaped by centuries of Irish Sea crossings. The town developed around a sixth-century Roman fort and St Cybi's Church, and today Stena Line and Irish Ferries operate multiple daily sailings to Dublin. Cruise visitors find immediate access to Roman and prehistoric heritage on foot, with South Stack Lighthouse and Holyhead Mountain reachable within a few miles.
The historic Old Town centres on St Cybi's Church, set inside one of Europe's rare three-walled Roman forts. Holyhead Mountain holds the prehistoric hillfort of Mynydd y Twr — containing a Roman watchtower — surrounded by circular huts, burial chambers, and standing stones in one of Britain's highest concentrations. South Stack Lighthouse stands on the western cliffs, roughly 3 miles from town. Holyhead Breakwater Country Park borders the UK's longest breakwater, built between 1848 and 1873. The Holyhead Maritime Museum provides local seafaring context. Dive Anglesey operates diving activities in the surrounding waters.
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