This film is part of Free

Welsh Counties Car Club and Mountain Ash Carnival

The Car Club, filmed by a Cardiff garage-owner, offers petrolheads a chance to race (speed trials at Pengam Airport) and have fun with their vehicles (musical motor cars).

Amateur film 1930 12 mins Silent

From the collection of:

Logo for National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales

Overview

The Car Club petrolheads let their hair down at Pengam Aerodrome, indulging in a game of musical motor cars and speed trial racing.

The events were filmed by Ernest Gough, a mechanical man (proprietor of Maindy Garage, Cardiff, and of the ‘Gough’s Welsh Motorways’ touring bus company) who was married to a musical woman - Beatrice V Gough, a founder member of The Welsh National Opera Company. The film includes footage of their family and a carnival in Mountain Ash. The aerodrome at Pengam (variously known as Cardiff or Splott Aerodrome or Pengam Moors Aerodrome or Airfield) was opened in 1931, taken over by the RAF during WWII but returned to Cardiff City Council, for civilian use, when hostilities ceased. The land around the airfield, once a farm, had been sold, however, and large housing estates built were built on it which impinged on the airfield’s opportunity for expansion. In 1954, the airport was moved to what had been RAF Rhoose during the war, where there was room for an up-to-date airport to be built and it was variously known as Glamorgan or Rhoose Airport, Cardiff International and now Cardiff Airport.