New Quay is a seaside town (and electoral ward) in Ceredigion, Wales with a resident population of around 1,200 people, decreasing to 1,082 at the 2011 census. Found on Cardigan Bay with a harbour as well as big sandy coastlines, it rests on the Ceredigion Coast Path, as well as continues to be a popular seaside hotel as well as conventional fishing town. Along with stores, restaurants and also bars, New Quay has a large primary school, a doctors' surgical procedure, a little branch of the county library service and also a fire station. New Quay Lifeboat Station, run by the RNLI, houses two lifeboats: a Mersey course called Frank and Lena Clifford of Stourbridge in devotion to its primary benefactors and also an inshore inflatable D course. In 2014 the terminal celebrated 150 years of service, throughout which period it made 940 callouts. Public transport is offered by regular bus services to Aberaeron, Cardigan as well as Aberystwyth. The community has never ever had a train solution, as systems to open up courses to Cardigan or Newcastle Emlyn were abandoned in the 1860s, which from the Aberaeron to Lampeter branch line (the Lampeter, Aberayron and New Quay Light Train) was never finished because of the First World War. A few miles outside New Quay is a honey farm. There is a public park at the top of New Quay alongside a tennis court.