
A Tiny Gallery of a Very Unique Collection of Photographs
Just outside Cilgerran, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK
August 18, 2011, 13:57 UTC (14:57 local time)
© 2011 Robert Bilsland, All Rights Reserved.
This phone box sits just outside the small town of Cilgerran, an area that Tom Mathias called home. Tom lived between 1866 and 1940, a self-taught photographer who captured a unique collection of photographs showing rural life at the turn of the century. He made his livelihood recording important family occasions but also captured other local events too.
But this collection was almost lost. After his death the collection of glass negatives were dumped in an outhouse where they lay forgotten for years. It wasn't until after the death of his son in the 1970s, that the negatives were found again in the family home. Luckily they were found by another local photographer who took on the painstaking task of trying to get prints from what negatives survived.
In 2009 British Telecom launched an "Adopt a Kiosk" competition where they were looking for the most innovative uses of their old red phone boxes. The a tiny gallery dedicated to their local photo hero, Mathias. Luckily they were chosen and given £1,000 to help towards their goal.
Well after a bit of an icy mishap at the beginning of 2010, where a vehicle slid on black ice and crashed into the phone box, which then had to be replaced, the Cilgerran Language and Heritage Committee put forward their plans to turn their phone box into a tiny gallery and it finally opened to the public in May, 2011. While the phone box has been given a fresh coat of paint inside and out, the area outside was ringed by a low Cilgerran slate wall. When you stand in the phone box you are surrounded by a unique collection of photos showing a snapshot of rural life long gone. Loads of tourists must drive past this phone box every day, not realising what photos it contains.
Lost photographs uncover unique snapshot of rural Wales
Tom Mathias Photographs