Butlin's Barry Island

Barry Island
Location Barry Island
Subsequent Name Changes Butlins Barry Island (1966-1986)
Majestic Barry Island (1987-?)
Barry Island Resort (?-1996)
Holiday Camp chain Butlins,
Majestic Holidays
Coordinates
Opening date 18 June 1966 (1966-06-18)
Closing date 7 November 1996 (1996-11-07)

Barry Island was a holiday camp located on Barry Island in Wales. It opened in 1966 and closed in 1996.

Contents

History

Barry Island (Welsh: Ynys y Barri) is a small seaside resort in the Bristol Channel (Mor Hafren) about 9 miles (14 km) south by south west of Cardiff, (Welsh: Caerdydd), south Wales. Until 1896, when a rail link was completed from the mainland, the only access to Barry Island was either by foot across the sand and mud at low tide, or, when the tide was in, by Yellow Funnel Line paddle steamer. Over 150,000 visitors were recorded arriving one August Bank Holiday weekend, mostly by train.[1] Further tourist attractions were developed on the island, and by 1934, the number of visitors to the fairground during the August Bank Holiday week was over 400,000.

Butlins

Billy Butlin's inspiration for his holiday empire came from a less than happy holiday to Barry Island in his youth, when he'd been locked out of his B&B all day by his landlady.[2] He finally decided to build one of the Butlins Holiday Camps at Barry Island.

What was to become the last-built and smallest of the Butlins Holiday Camps came to Barry Island in 1965. Billy Butlin took out a 99-year lease on the headland at Nell's Point in 1966.[3] Building work began there in the winter and the gates opened to campers on 18 June 1966.

Barry Island holiday camp contained all the tried and tested Butlins ingredients: the famous Butlins Redcoats, funfair, early morning wake up with Radio Butlin, dining hall, indoor and outdoor swimming pools, ballroom; boating lake, tennis courts, sports field (for the three legged and egg and spoon races and the donkey derby), table tennis and snooker tables, amusement arcade, medical centre, theatre, arcades of shops and the Pig and Whistle Showbar. A 430 metres (1,410 ft) Chairlift system was opened in 1967. There were 800 chalets, all very basic, 'no-frills' and designed to modern 1960s standards, which, on the outside, meant wooden panels and flat roofs.

The camp continued to be enormously successful throughout until the 1980s, but on the 29 October 1986, Butlins announced that the camp would have no place in the company's future and the camp would close after Christmas. The camp closed on the 31 December 1986.[4]

Majestic Holidays

The camp was sold to Majestic Holidays and re-opened on the 23 May 1987 as Majestic Barry Island (later renamed The Barry Island Resort). Majestic Holidays had plans to demolish the camp and rebuild the site didn't reach fruition though the camp was given a complete refurbishment, including refurbishing swimming pools. Majestic Holidays continued to use the Redcoats until 1989 but they became the Bluecoats in 1991, following Butlins threat of legal action over the name.

Maintenance had now became such an issue, especially with the chalet's flat roofs and wooden paneling, that a clause was added to the booking conditions limiting action to 20% of the cost of the holiday.[5] Following numerous complaints over the camp, the BBC show That's Life! investigated. The report aired in January 1989 and the report said "It's Barry Awful, It's Barry Hell" and the presenter at the end said "If you're off to Barry Island this summer, send us a postcard". They did. By the end of the summer of 1989, That's Life had received 8,000 postcards in praise of the camp, with only about 40 complaints.[6] Majestic Holidays' owner, Rick Wright, sued and Majestic received £500,000 damages.[3]

By 1996, with storm damage causing more maintenance problems, Vale of Glamorgan Council threatened to refuse renewal of Barry Island Resort's entertainments licence, unless work was carried out to improve the now 30-year-old site. Majestic's now trading company, Insurebowls Ltd, continued through the summer, but closed the camp for good on 7 November 1996, owing local companies thousands of pounds in unpaid bills,[5] although they had originally intended to reopen the following year.

Closure

The holiday camp site was sold for £2.25m to Vale of Glamorgan Council, in October 1997, who demolished the camp and sold it to Bovis Homes for housing development. Now known as Bryn Llongwr, houses were built on the site between 2002 and 2003,[4] with the remaining two original camp buildings and outdoor pool being demolished in early 2005.

Film and television appearances

Between Butlins' closure and Majestic's reopening the camp was used as for filming scenes in the "Shangri-La" holiday camp from the Doctor Who serial Delta and the Bannermen.

References

  1. ^ T. Clemett (2002). "T Clemett's History of Barry website". A Walk Around Barry Island. http://www.barrywales.co.uk/tomclemett/walkbi.asp. Retrieved 9 September 2008. 
  2. ^ "Bygone Butlins website". Barry Island. BygoneButlins.com. 2007. http://www.bygonebutlins.com/barry/. Retrieved 8 September 2008. 
  3. ^ a b "walesonline". Barry Island in the news. Media Wales Ltd.. 14 January 2003. http://www.walesonline.co.uk/expats/expats-newsletter/page.cfm?objectid=12533600&method=full&siteid=50082. Retrieved 8 September 2008. 
  4. ^ a b "Attractions in Barry". Barry Island. dooyoo.co.uk. 2006. http://www.dooyoo.co.uk/sightseeing-national/attractions-in-barry/1033790/. Retrieved 12 September 2010. 
  5. ^ a b "Butlins Memories". Butlins Memories. butlinsmemories.com/barry. http://www.butlinsmemories.com/barry/index.htm. Retrieved 13 September 2010. 
  6. ^ "Butlins Memories". Barry Island on That's Life. Butlins-Memories.com. 2004. http://butlins-memories.com/forums/showpost.php?s=1ac974b768ac3b7fa442e1228c5658d5&p=35497&postcount=39. Retrieved 13 September 2010. 

External links