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Our Festal Day
(History of
Bo’ness Children’s Fair Festival)
To Bo'nessians, Bo'ness without its Fair would today
seem inconceivable as Bo'ness without the River
Forth or Bo'ness without its braes, yet at one time
no self respecting person would have anything to do
with the annual event, which is now the largest and
most spectacular of its kind in the country. Unlike
most of Scotland's summer celebrations in towns
throughout the Borders and Lowlands, which can trace
origins to the traditional riding of the marches
ceremonies or to old cattle fairs, Bo'ness Fair
began, as one witness of the time described it, "as
a drunken orgy" among the coal miners of the
district.
Until
the latter part of the 18th century, it was
customary for all Scottish miners to be thirled,
that is, bound to the pits, as were any children who
were born to them while they worked in them. Thus
the bondage was continued from generation to
generation and if any of the miners tried to escape
from virtual slavery the colliery masters had the
power to send their overseers to drag them back and
to punish them severely. Even when a colliery owner
sold his pit, the miners were included as part of
the transaction. At last, 1774, a law was passed
forbidding the thirling of miners and their families
to the coal pits, but those already tied to the
mines were not granted their freedom straightaway
and it was not until 1779 that an Act declared that,
"all the colliers in that part of Great Britain
called Scotland, are hereby declared to be free from
their seritude."
It was to celebrate this new-found liberty that the
miners of Bo'ness who formed a very closeknit
community of their own, staged their first Fair.
From then on the Fair was held every year on the
Friday in July which fell between the 12th and 19th,
a date already connected with one of the four feeing
fairs for which Anne, Duchess of Hamilton gained
Parliamentary permission shortly after she won her
battle for burgh status for Bo'ness in 1668.
On
this, their only holiday in the whole year, all pit
workers from the long, low miners' rows at
Borrowstoun and Newtown, marched down into the
narrow winding streets of Bo'ness and on out through
Corbiehall to Kinneil House, home of the Duke of
Hamilton, who owned many of the local pits. In front
of the big house, on its hilltop overlooking the
River Forth, the miners, led their elected deacon,
wearing his ornate, bonnet, sash and sword, were
received by the Duke 's estate factor, who provided
them all with glasses of whisky toddy.
From Kinneil the march continued, with frequent
halts for refreshments, to the old Grange, the home
of the other big colliery owner in Bo'ness, Mr.
James John Cadell. Mr Cadell, himself, always
welcomed his men and on this one day in the year it
is reported that the "Maister" relaxed his usually
severe manner and even handed round the whisky toddy
to his miners, an act which greatly delighted them.
A brass band, imported during the early years from
Falkirk, always accompanied the marchers and while
they enjoyed their free drinks, it played on the
lawn in front of the old Grange, before leading them
down to the banks of the Forth, where horse races
were held on the foreshore, throughout the
afternoon.
The most distinguished visitor to the Bo'ness races
was Robert Burns, but he was little impressed with
the standard of the races as he was with the rest of
Bo'ness, which he descrbed as, "that dirty ugly
place, Borrowstounness", and which certainly did not
inspire him to verse. It is little wonder that Burns
was not thrilled by the races, for the mounts were
just local carriage and wagon horses, pressed into
service for the day and generally most of them had
already done duty earlier in the day, carrying the
Deacon and other miners' leaders at the head of the
procession.
Once
the last race was over the crowd returned to
Corbiehall, where the booths and side stalls of the
fairground were set up and the ginger bread sellers
did a roaring trade. Later there was dancing in the
Town Hall, where all miners and their wives and
daughters could afford to join in the merrymaking,
as they paid separately for each dance at one penny
a time.
Drinking, was however, the main attraction of the
Fair and the town's many pubs and inns were crowded.
In those days there were no licensing laws and the
pubs stayed open throughout the night so that the
festivities continued right into the following
Saturday, or at least as long as the miners' money
lasted. The remainder of the weekend the miners
spent sobering up, returning to the pits to start
work again early on the Monday morning. Their annual
holiday was over and there was only the next year to
look forward to, to brighten their dreary existence,
so they immediately appointed a new Deacon to act as
their leader and make a start to the arrangements
for the following year's Fair.
Gradually, as the years of Queen Victoria's long
reign passed, and the barriers between the coal
miners and the other members of the community were
slowly broken down, other workers in the town began
to take part in the Fair and each of the trades
found in Bo'ness was represented in the procession.
One of the most interesting and colourful groups in
the procession was made up by the craftsmen from the
local potteries, for the potters always wore their
white trousers, white aprons tied with balck
ribbons, black tail coats and tall black lum hats
and carried with them examples of their craft and
symbols of their trade, including model china
sailing ships, and miniature kilns.
Although for a time more of the townspeople took
part in the festivities, as Queen Victoria's reign
wore on the Fair's popularity began to wane partly
because of the excessive drinking which took place
at it and which shocked the more soberly minded
citizens.
Finally,
in 1894, the miners realised that something had to
be done if their annual celebration was not to die
out and so they approached the local Police
Commissioners, who at this time governed Bo'ness,
before the creation of a Town Council, and suggested
that these gentlemen should take part in the Fair
Procession. The very proposal caused consternation
in the town and several of the Commissioners were
opposed to associating themselves in any way with
this day of drinking, one demanded to know whether
they would be expected, "to get fou like the rest?"
After long and heated discussions, however, Provost
Ballantine persuaded his colleagues to join in the
proceedings, on the strict understanding that they
would be properly conducted.
Announcing their decision, Provost Ballantine stated
grandly that he felt that, "It became the
authorities of any place that, for one day at least,
they should be on a level with their neighbours",
and that, therefore it was, "quite in keeping that
the Commissioners of Bo'ness and others outside
should for a few hours, join in the general
friendship and forget any differences that have
taken place."
And so that year the parade was led usual by the
miners' Deacon, but he was followed by the Provost
and the Commissioners in open landaux, flanked by
scarlet-coated outriders and led by banner bearers
proudly carrying a large banner depicting the Burgh
Coat of Arms with its ship under full sail and on a
scroll beneath it the town's motto, "Sine Metu" -
"Without Fear".
At last a touch of pageantry had been added to
Bo'ness Fair, but this was nothing compared to what
was to come only three years later in 1897, at the
time of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, for the
wave of celebrations, which swept across the country
was seized by Provost Stewart as the ideal
opportunity to bring the children of the town into
the festivities for the first time. As his model he
chose Lanark's Lanimer Day, at which the boys and
girls of the town elected one of their school
friends to be their Fair Queen. The new-style
Bo'ness Fair was received with great enthusiasm by
the local people and first school girl "Queen",
Grace Strachan, chosen by the pupils of the old
Anderson Academy, was cheered as she rode in her
carriage in the first grand procession after her
coronation, which was performed in Craigallen Park
by Mrs Balfour, wife of the Chairman of the school
board.
From
Craigallen the procession made its way out to the
Kinnigars Park at Carriden, where the first Queen's
revels were held. The route took it down to the new
Philpingstone Road, which was officially declared
open by Mrs Cadell, before the Queen's horse-drawn
carriage entered it from Grange Terrace.
In all over 2,000 children from Bo'ness Infant
School, Grangepans Infant School, Bo'ness Public
School, Kinneil School, Borrowstoun School and
Carriden School, as well as the Anderson Academy,
took part in the first Fair. As well as Queen Grace,
many of her classmates from the Old Academy and boys
and girls from all the other schools played the
parts of gaily dressed lords and ladies of the royal
court and fairies, flower girls and other
characters, just as their grandchildren and great
grandchildren still do every summer.
At the new-style Fair the emphasis was now all on
the children's enjoyment and old horse races were
replaced by a programme of revels, which included
sports and selections of music played by both brass
and pipe bands. These early revels, which were held
alternately at Kinnigars and Kinneil, must have been
very colourful affairs, for all the children, both
boys and girls, wore scarlet, blue and yellow caps,
according to their school colours and all the little
girls were dressed in their new white Fair dresses,
while the little boys were all turned out in white
flannel shorts and white shirts.
For the children there was an added touch of
excitement about the Fair because it always marked
the start of the school holidays and that the long
hot summer weeks of freedom lay ahead.
"The morn's the Fair and I'll be there, And I'll hae
up my curlie hair,"
chanted the little Bo'ness girls as they raced home
from school on the Fair E'en to gaze yet again at
the new white dresses and shoes, which they would
wear for the first time the following morning.
Since
Provost Stewart launched his new children's day the
pageant has been staged every summer apart from the
years during the First and Second World wars and the
Industrial depressions in 1921 and 1926 until today
it is the largest and most popular event of its kind
in the country, until today it is undoubtedly the
largest and simply the best children’s day in the
entire length and breadth of the United Kingdom.
Nowadays the night before the Fair, locally simply called
the Fair E’en, is the night when the population of
the town is swelled considerably with the influx of
many visitors from all over Central Scotland, thanks
to the availability of modern transport. They come
in their droves to join with the local inhabitants
to view the fantastic creations constructed by the
parents and friends of the children who will be
participating in the Fair the next day. The
ingenuity and inventiveness of our local townspeople
have to be seen to be believed and some of these
house frontages are almost beyond description. In
bygone years, “going round the arches” meant just
that, for our ancestors started it all. Then there
were huge arches which in the main were built by the
miners and they spanned the roads leading into the
town at Kinneil, Newtown and Grangepans. In
addition of course were dozens od smaller versions
and these were to be found outside the homes of the
children chosen to be characters at the Fair.
These huge arches were works of art – made generally with
boxwood and nature’s evergreens – and great was the
rivalry between the three areas competing for the
First Prize Cards which were awarded by the judges.
With Artisan art at its very best, and combined by
the craft and expertise of our townspeople, many
quite spectacular creations were produced, and it
was with bated breath that the builders awaited the
arrival of the judges on the Fair morning.
It wasn’t only the arch builders who were keen on being
recognized as being the best in town, for horse
drawn vans and subsequently motorized lorries were
always beautifully decorated with greenery and
flowers, both natural or made with crepe paper. The
builders of these were also extremely competitive,
and their products were always the highlight of the
mile long procession. In the case of the horse
drawn vehicles, the horses themselves were decorated
to a wonderfully high standard, and were the sources
of unbelievable and genuine admiration.
Today,
apart from the Champion’s mount, horses have all but
disappeared from the procession, but that old saying
still remains – “she’s aw dressed up like a Fair
horse”! And whilst many people rue the lack of
decorated vehicles in the processions of latter
years, it must be remembered that keeping a lorry
off the road for any length of time is a very costly
business. Those which do appear are to be
commended, and are of an unusually high standard,
and their builders are as enthusiastic and as
artistic as their predecessors. Indeed, some of the
tableaux, especially created for the Fair, have been
entered later for the prestigious Edinburgh Festival
Cavalcade and been recognized as the best in their
class.
Naturally, with Bo’ness having at its disposal two
Championship class Brass Bands in Unison Kinneil and
Bo’ness and Carriden, Bo’ness Pipe Band, and the
Salvation Army Band, music has always played a large
part in the general festivities, from the early
initial years until the present. In the very
earliest of the Children’s Fairs the songs sung
were, “Scots Wha Hae”, “Red White & Blue”, and “Auld
Lang Syne”. The first of our present Fair songs was
“Our Festal Day”, words by R. Fleming, music by E.
C. Schofield, and it proved so popular that in a
couple of years later in 1903, “Hail to our Queen”,
words by Hope A. Thomson with music by L. Dyer
Appleby, was added to the musical content. Over the
years these songs have become very dear to the
hearts of Bo’nessians, and have been sung whenever
they meet, in the most unlikely places all over the
world!
More recently, on the occasion of the Centenary Fair in
1997, a third song was added to the Bo’ness
Children’s Fair Festival musical repertoire. “The
Best Day of the Year”, words and music by J. Douglas
Snedden and arranged for brass bands by Ian Boulter,
reflects the demise of the varied industries that
made Bo’ness almost self-contained as a Burgh, and
the joy and enthusiasm that our Fair brings to the
town every year. Sung at the coronation ceremony of
Queen Ashley Oldham by a specially formed Centenary
Choir, it is now played as the Queen and her retinue
leave the stage after the coronation each year. The
phrase “The best day of the year” is now generally
recognized as being a direct reference to the Fair.
It has also been used as the title by the makers of
the film depicting the 100 years of Bo’ness
Children’s Fair.
Tradition
has been maintained in the coronation ceremony,
which has changed very little over the years. But
in 1968, which was the Tercentenary Year of the
Burgh of Borrowstounness, certain changes were made
to the continuity of the total coronation
festivities in the Glebe Park. The stage was
revamped and made larger by the introduction of a
flat apron stage. Its purpose was to provide a
stage for the presentations provided by the various
schools. Up and until that time there had only been
two children chosen as presentees, but from that
year until the present upwards of sixteen children
from each school perform a musical number for their
newly crowned Majesty’s pleasure and entertainment.
In that year also, several changes were made to the old
style Royal Revels. The name became the Royal
Command Performance, and over the years since then
the afternoon show in the Douglas Park has seen
every major theatrical and TV star in Scotland come
to entertain the vast appreciative crowds on a
medieval style double-tiered stage. International
acts and bands, singers and dancers from Canada,
Russia, America, Poland, Ukraine, France, Denmark
and Norway have helped consolidate our Fair’s
reputation as being the outstanding Children’s Day
in the United Kingdom.
1968 also introduced the Kirkin of the Queen Ceremony,
which is held on the Sunday immediately before the
Fair, a service organized and conducted by the
children and teachers of the particular school
providing the retinue of that particular year.
Up
and until Regionalisation which took place in
1973/74, our Fair was, organized and run, in
conjunction with schools, the Town Council. When
that was swallowed up by Central Region and Falkirk
Council, the responsibility of the existence and
continuity of the Fair became that of the
townspeople of Bo’ness. Bo’ness Children’s Fair
Festival Executive Committee was formed and the
running and organization of the Fair has been in
their hands ever since. Each convenor of the
various sub-committee has a specific job to do, and
it is to their credit that the Fair has not only
continued, but has gone from strength to strength.
One such committee, the Entertainments Committee, was
inadvertently responsible for a little piece of
history in 1978. In the year previous to that, at
that committee’e instigation, the Musical “South
Pacific” was produced in the Town Hall by the
enthusiastic, collection of talented musical friends
in aid of Fair Funds. In the audience at the
opening Gala Performance were the Commanding Officer
of the United States Marines in Scotland, and the
U.S. Consul General in Edinburgh, Mr. Theodore B.
Dobbs.
Mr. Dobbs, in conversation, became interested and then
intrigued when he was given details of our Fair. As
a result, he, his wife and children, were guests at
Bo’ness Children’s Fair Festival in 1978, and when
he walked out to take his place on the guests
rostrum, the Band of Her Majesty’s Royal Marines
struck up the national anthem of the United States
of America. It was a unique moment!
As
the personnel of the committees have changed
throughout these latter years, so also have the
conditions under which they have operated. Health
and Safety have seen to that. Since the 90’s both
stages in either park have had to be replaced from
their original wooden structures to those of modern
scaffolding. In the Douglas Park the medieval style
split level stage has been replaced by a completely
flat stage. Wheel chair access to the Town Hall
became a necessity and was provided by Falkirk
Council, and its necessary course interfered with
the situation of the Coronation Platform. This
difficulty was also overcome. The glamorous
tableaux floats which housed not only the Queen and
her Retinue, but also the Fairies and Flower Girls,
had also to be scrapped. Brass and Pipe Bands are
no longer as easily obtained as they once were, but
again, each year, the procession continues to
flourish.
Support for the Fair from everyone is necessary for it to
continue, and to improve. It just doesn’t happen
without the dedication of the children, the
Teachers, Falkirk Council, but probably above all,
the hard work of all the members of all the
committees which is in operation ALL of each year.
Is that hard work worth while? Well, just think what
this little town would be like if these magic words
weren’t spoken each year – “Ladies and Gentleman,
Boys and Girls, we have a new Queen”. It’s an event
well worth working hard for, and although our
Centenary Fair was celebrated in 1997, our One
Hundredth Fair was not celebrated until 2008 because
of the gaps created by the two world wars.
In
2008, as in 1997, every existing Ex-Queen who was
able, attended the Fair. Some travelled from all
over the world, and were introduced to a massive
crowd before the crowning ceremony. They then took
their places in the procession in specially acquired
limousines, and relived their dream.
In this history, only three Queen’s have been named,
and although the others are equally deserving of
mention, space unfortunately prevents such a
listing. Nevertheless, every past Queen, young or
old, would surely say they accepted the greatest
honour that their home town of Bo’ness could bestow
upon them – the day that they were crowned Queen at
Bo’ness Children’s Fair Festival – was not only the
best day of that year, but one of the very best days
of their lives.
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