Johnston, Pembrokeshire

About Johnston, Pembrokeshire

Johnston is a community in the hundred of Roose, Pembrokeshire, Wales, and a parish in the diocese of Diocese of St David's. It lies on the A4076 road approximately midway between Haverfordwest and the port of Milford Haven and is served by Johnston railway station. Until the end of the 19th century, anthracite was mined here. The village is now a dormitory for Haverfordwest and Milford Haven. The parish church has the typical tall, slim castellated tower of churches in English-speaking Little England beyond Wales. In 2011 11. 4% of inhabitants could speak Welsh, down from 13. 81% in 2001, but 18. 5% had at least some Welsh language ability. This is lower than the overall percentage for Pembokeshire and Wales, which are 19. 2 and 19. 0 respectively. The village is just over 1 mile long and almost a mile wide from the furthest main points. HistoryJohnston was founded as a small farming and mining village sometime before 1801 when 99 people lived in the village. Maps from 1579 show Johnston as an already established village. The population steadily grew to 600 in 1951 and almost doubled in the next 10 years to 1133. Since then Johnston has had a steady population growth. DemographicsJohnston is not an ethnically diverse village with 99. 55% of the population identifying as White. It is also a majority Christian village with 62. 4% of people identifying as a Christian, 0. 2% as a Buddhist, 0. 4% as a Muslim, 0. 5 as Other and 26. 5% as No Religion. 9. 7% of people did not state a religion.

Johnston, Pembrokeshire Description

Johnston is a community in the hundred of Roose, Pembrokeshire, Wales, and a parish in the diocese of Diocese of St David's. It lies on the A4076 road approximately midway between Haverfordwest and the port of Milford Haven and is served by Johnston railway station. Until the end of the 19th century, anthracite was mined here. The village is now a dormitory for Haverfordwest and Milford Haven. The parish church has the typical tall, slim castellated tower of churches in English-speaking Little England beyond Wales. In 2011 11. 4% of inhabitants could speak Welsh, down from 13. 81% in 2001, but 18. 5% had at least some Welsh language ability. This is lower than the overall percentage for Pembokeshire and Wales, which are 19. 2 and 19. 0 respectively. The village is just over 1 mile long and almost a mile wide from the furthest main points. HistoryJohnston was founded as a small farming and mining village sometime before 1801 when 99 people lived in the village. Maps from 1579 show Johnston as an already established village. The population steadily grew to 600 in 1951 and almost doubled in the next 10 years to 1133. Since then Johnston has had a steady population growth. DemographicsJohnston is not an ethnically diverse village with 99. 55% of the population identifying as White. It is also a majority Christian village with 62. 4% of people identifying as a Christian, 0. 2% as a Buddhist, 0. 4% as a Muslim, 0. 5 as Other and 26. 5% as No Religion. 9. 7% of people did not state a religion.

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