Date: Fri 25-Oct-1996
Date: Fri 25-Oct-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDREA
Quick Words:
Newtown-Wales
Full Text:
Newtown, Wales, Hopes To "Twin" With Newtown, USA
NO PHOTO/POSSIBLE ILLUSTRATION FROM NEWSPAPER CLIPPING
In Search Of -
Newtown, Wales, Unanimously Votes To Pursue "Twinning" with Newtown,
Connecticut, USA
B Y A ps7>NDREA Z IMMERMANN
Some people believe that everyone has a look-alike, or twin somewhere on this
planet. Others, like members of the new executive twinning committee in
Newtown, Wales, are actively seeking those who resemble them - at least in
name. And our very own Newtown is at the top of their list.
"Newtown could be twinning with a town of the same name...in Connecticut,
USA," reported The County Times & Express & Gazette in its October 4 issue. "A
recently held public meeting voted unanimously to continue to look for
somewhere to twin despite the break down of the proposed link with a town in
Ireland... To help the committee with their work, the Town Council agreed at
Monday night's meeting to allow the executive committee to use the council
chamber free of charge for meetings and to donate 100 pounds towards the
investigation's cost."
The twinning committee in Wales will look at several other possible link-ups
with towns in Europe, as well as "Newtown in the USA." But it would be
appropos if Newtown, Conn. became the twin, because long time resident Beryl
Harrison has close ties to the Welsh town.
"My father came from Newtown, Wales. He was the youngest of 14 children and he
was the only who left [the town]. He emigrated to Canada and then moved to
Pittsburgh," said Beryl. "Twenty years ago, when my husband and I were moving
here from Pittsburgh, Jack was driving around looking for a place for us to
live. One day he told me, `I drove through this really neat town. There's this
ship's mast (the flagpole) in the center of town. It's in this little town
called Newtown. It looks really nice.'"
Beryl felt it was a good omen to find a town with the same name as her
father's birthplace. A year after moving here, the couple visited their first
cousins, Nesta and Bill Purnell, in Newtown, Wales. Jack Harrison suggested
they visit the local newspaper and tell them about Newtown, Conn., and give
them a copy of The Bee , but the family didn't seem to think the idea held
much value. This week, though, Beryl received a letter from these same cousins
with two newspaper clippings about the search for a Newtown twin.
"It would be a relatively good match," said Beryl. "I think it's a town of
about 20,000. It's very picturesque. The countryside is just gorgeous; it's
like a patchwork quilt, with sheep dotting the landscape...They've torn down
some old buildings, and actually have some supermarkets - they've come into
the 20th century. They give money out to small businesses and try to encourage
local craftsmen to come in. They're promoting tourism; I'm sure that's what
this is all about."
The town in Wales does have a much more expansive history than we do. Beryl's
cousins live in a house built before our Revolution, and they consider it
relatively new. The church down the road, built in the 13th or 14th century,
they say is old.
But the townspeople in both towns seem to have the same concerns: unchecked
development, economic growth, and the support of the arts. The residents and
government officials in Newtown, Wales, applaud good sportsmanship when the
final score shows a loss, try to enforce laws preventing "pooping canines"
from visiting public areas, bemoan fines on overdue library books, and
maintain old high school friendships by organizing reunions. In twinning,
Beryl sees the possibility of productive exchanges between schools and
libraries through the Internet, as well as other opportunities to share.
Although an agreement to "twin" would probably be arranged by officials on the
governmental or municipal level, Beryl and Jack Harrison would gladly be
couriers for an exchange of formal documentation. The couple last visited
Newtown, Wales in 1991, when they attended the Welsh National Sheep Dog
Trials. Mr and Mrs Pernell last came to visit Newtown, Conn., on their 50th
wedding anniversary in July of 1992.
