Dreaming a City - From Wales to Ukraine

The Story of Hughesovska/Stalino/Donetsk

Colin Thomas author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Y Lolfa

Published:21st Apr '22

Should be back in stock very soon

Dreaming a City - From Wales to Ukraine cover

The history of Ukrainian town Hughesovka, a mining/steel town founded in the 1870s by Welsh entrepreneur John Hughes and 70 Welsh workers, which later became Stalino and then Donetsk. Includes free DVD of 1991 BAFTA Cymru-winning documentary series 'Hughesovka and the New Russia', directed by the author and presented by Gwyn Alf Williams.

John Hughes was a very remarkable man. In 1870, at the age of 54, he decided he wanted to create a town, and did just that. Moreover, his town was nowhere near his native Merthyr Tydfil, but rather in the heart of Eastern Europe. Together with seventy Welsh workers, and with the support of the Russian and British authorities, he created an industrial centre for mining and steel-making that still exists today. Colin Thomas' book is partly based on the 1991 TV documentary, Hughesovka and the New Russia, which he made with the late historian Gwyn Alf Williams. A DVD of the film, which won a Bafta award, is included with the book, and it is clear that in revisiting the film, Thomas has been able to retell and expand on the story of Hughes' town with the gift of the perspective of the last two decade's major historical changes. Through the history of Hughesovka, now called Donestak, Thomas is able to tell a bigger story; the rise and fall of the Soviet Union in microcosm. From Bolshevism, through Stalin and on into the post-Glasnost age, Hughes' town's fortunes mirrors those of the Soviet Empire through name changes, huge industrial development, persecution and eventual liberation. A book for anyone interested not only in one man's remarkable vision and drive, but also social and political history played out on a large stage, but examined on a very human level. -- Michael Nobbs @ www.gwales.com

ISBN: 9781912631438

Dimensions: 200mm x 210mm x 5mm

Weight: unknown

112 pages