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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Barney Davis

Prince and Princess of Wales solemn as they visit site of 1966 Aberfan disaster

Prince William and Princess Kate appeared solemn as they visited the memorial to the mining disaster that killed 144 people in the Welsh village of Aberfan.

Crowds of well-wishers lined the streets as the Prince and Princess of Wales visited the memorial garden on the site of the 1966 disaster which saw 116 children killed when a colliery spoil tip collapsed and sent tonnes of ash slurry onto the village below.

William and Kate arrived to pay their respects to the dead on Friday.

The Aberfan Memorial Garden sits on the site of former Pantglas Primary School, which was engulfed by the landslide at 9.13am on October 21 1966, just as lessons had begun.

William and Kate greeted by wellwishers (PA)

They were guided around the memorial garden by Aberfan survivor David Davies, a former pupil at Pantglas Primary School, and Professor Peter Vaughan, Lord Lieutenant of Mid Glamorgan.

They met trustees from the Aberfan Memorial Trust who are involved in ensuring the maintenance of the garden, alongside some of the Aberfan Wives group who lost relatives in the disaster.

It is the first time the royal couple has been to the village near Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales.

The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to the Aberfan memorial garden (PA)

Queen Elizabeth II visited eight days after the tragedy and shortly after a mass funeral had taken place.

Her decision not to visit sooner was said to have been one of the greatest regrets of her reign.

Despite this, mourners gathered to meet her and the bond she made with those she spoke to during that visit on October 29 1966 endured throughout the rest of her life.

In 1974, she opened the garden to commemorate the victims and provide a place for bereaved families, survivors and the community to pay their respects.

Kate speaks to the crowds (PA)

She visited again in 1997, with her final trip to Aberfan in 2012 when she opened a new school called Ynysowen Community Primary.

On the 50th anniversary of the disaster, her son Charles – then the Prince of Wales – visited the village and delivered a message from the Queen.

More than 140 people were killed when the coal tip collapsed. (Getty Images)

In it she said: “I well remember my own visit with Prince Philip after the disaster and the posy I was given by a young girl which bore the heart-breaking inscription ‘from the remaining children of Aberfan’.

“Since then we have returned on several occasions and have always been deeply impressed by the remarkable fortitude, dignity and indomitable spirit that characterises the people of this village and the surrounding valleys.”

The disaster was the result of one of seven spoil tips that sat on slopes above the village collapsing.

The victims of the Aberfan Disaster are remembered every year on October 21. (Getty Images)

The one that devastated the village below was created in 1958, stood 111ft high and went against the National Coal Board’s (NCB) rules because it was partly built on ground which had water springs underneath.

After three weeks of heavy rain the slurry slipped down the side of the hill.

A minute’s silence is observed for the victims of the Aberfan disaster outside the Aberfan Memorial Gardens in the village in Wales, on the 50th anniversary of the tragedy (Andrew Matthews/PA Archive) (PA Archive)

An official inquiry into the tragedy eventually blamed the NCB leaders, who had ignored repeated warnings about the tip’s dangerous condition from local residents and Merthyr Borough Council.

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