On the morning of 21 October 1966, Beynon was in his classroom when the Aberfan disaster unfolded and the slurry from the
colliery spoil tip hit the school. Beynon scooped up the five nearest children into his arms and braced himself against a blackboard to shield them from the oncoming avalanche. Beynon and all 34 children in the classroom were killed. The
South Wales Argus reported that he had been found dead, still clutching the children in his arms. A rescuer at the time said: "He was clutching five little children in his arms as if he had been protecting them." His son Philip later recalled: "My mother came home at 2am the next morning and said my father was dead. She had spent all day there hoping he would be found alive. He was a good father, a well-respected man. There were hundreds at his funeral. I remember the front lawn at our house was covered in wreaths." The
Leslie Norris poem 'Elegy for David Beynon' commemorates the poet's childhood friendship with Beynon, and is one of Norris's most anthologised poems. ==References==