I am not an emotional person, and I do not tear up easily. This is especially true when watching TV dramas and films (one notable exception being Titanic). However, the ITV drama Mr Bates Versus the Post Office had me blubbing like a baby, partly out of rage at the sight of ordinary, decent, blameless people being wrongly convicted, bankrupted and in some cases driven to suicide following what was described as the biggest miscarriage of justice in British legal history, and partly out of joy at the end, when the Court of Appeal overturned the convictions of some of the subpostmasters (those still alive to see justice) and the ensuing scenes of jubilation outside the Court, all as the result of the tireless efforts of Alan Bates to get justice not just for himself, but for all his fellow subpostmasters..
The horror brought on by this shocking story is offset by the beauty of some of the locations used in the series, particularly the scenes filmed around North Wales. The seaside resort of Llandudno, where the real life Alan Bates was a subpostmaster, puts in an appearance at the start. The shop containing the post office was in the Craig-y-Don part of town, and St David’s Hospice on Queens Road was used as the location for it.
Llandudno, looking towards the Great Orme.
After the Post Office terminates Bates’ contract when he is wrongly accused of accounting errors, he and his partner Suzanne move to a house in an idyllic location in Snowdonia. The real life house which serves as their home is in the Nant Ffrancon valley in Eryri National Park.
There is a pub in a beautiful riverside location which features in several of the scenes. This is the Saracen’s Head in the Snowdonia village of Beddgelert, reachable both by road and via the Welsh Highland Railway, which runs between Caernarfon and Porthmadog.
Bridge at Beddgelert, Gwynedd - geograph.org.uk - 2630855. Photo by Peter Trimming, via Wikimedia Commons.
Llandudno is a typical seaside resort with a long promenade
and a pier, but what sets it apart from other resorts is its magnificent
setting, dominated by the Great Orme, which can be ascended on foot, via the
Great Orme Tramway or via cable car. The
mountainous area surrounding it is a National Park, formerly known as
Snowdonia, but now with its Welsh name Eryri.
Beddgelert is in the heart of the National Park and is very popular with
walkers and other outdoor enthusiasts.