Carew Castle

  • by Bev Thomas
  • 23 May, 2017

Right on our doorstep                                                                             23/05/17

Today the weather was dry but very overcast, nevertheless my group that I teach of Springboard learners from one of our local primary schools, were scheduled on a photographic course with Springboard.  Their aim was to capture images of the castle in order to sell at their enterprise fayre which is soon to be held in Haverfordwest.  So weather aside we set out on our journey to Carew Castle.  

At the end of the 11th century the Normans extended their conquest of England into Wales and Pembroke Castle became the centre of Norman rule in South Pembrokeshire.  Gerald de Windsor was constable of the Castle on behalf of Henry I, when he decided to build his own fortification on the Carew River, some ten miles up the tidal waterway from Pembroke.  This became know as Carew Castle.

When I attended the same school many years ago, we learnt the story behind one resident of Carew Castle.  His name was Sir Rowland Rees, he was believed to be a tenant of the castle in the 18th century, he was a well travelled man who had visited the Barbary Coast and brought back with him an injured ape he had rescued from a wrecked Spanish galleon.  It is said he was able to train his devoted pet to respond to his every wish with a series of whistles.

'The story goes that Sir Rowland had one son who ran off with the daughter of a local merchant, not a union that Sir Rowland approved of.

On the fateful night there was a storm brewing. The wind screamed around the castle and the rain lashed at the windows. The ape was restless, sensing Sir Rowland's evil mood. There was a knock at the door and the girl's father, a merchant by the name of Horowitz, demanded admittance, distressed and upset that his daughter had run away with Sir Rowland's son. Sir Rowland did not believe his story and after a fierce argument he released the ape from its chains and ordered it to kill Horowitz.

The merchant fought off the ape and, although badly injured, managed to drag himself from the room.  He shouted for help from the servants who tended him for the night.  Horowitz cursed Sir Rowland with an evil fate and, as he cursed, great piercing screams were heard from the tower room.  The servants, who were terrified of their master, were unwilling to venture into the tower room to find out what had happened.

At first light the following morning they summoned up the courage to enter the silent room. There, lying in a pool of blood was the body of Sir Rowland, but of the ape there was no sign.

Legend has it that the ghost of the ape returns to the castle on dark, stormy nights where he has been seen and heard by passers-by.  Why does the ape return? Nobody knows...'


This story has stayed with me all these years, and I will continue to pass onto future generations when we visit Carew Castle.  This castle has always fascinated me and its always felt like a haunted castle, guess what we learn from young has a way of resignating into the future and connecting us with the past.

Bev 





For more info on Carew Castle:  http://www.pembrokeshirecoast.org.uk/default.asp?PID=262
For more info on Springboard: http://www.pembrokeshire.gov.uk/content.asp?nav=107,2047,2048,1489




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