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1972 LINDSAY EASTON - "A
Future for the Fair"
During the last four years
"The Fair Magazine" has
covered many aspects of
history of the Fair. This
Year we change the emphasis
and ask Bo'ness Academy 6th
Formers James Braes and
Lindsay Easton, who have
brought great honour to the
town by winning the English
Speaking Union Public
Speaking Competition, for
which they received the
Balfour Trophy, to give the
younger generations' views
on......
A FUTURE FOR THE FAIR part
2
I approached the writing of
this article with not a
little apprehension. Not a
native Bo'nessian, I
wondered if it was not
sticking my neck out a very
long way for me to comment
on the Fair. However,
having gone thus far there
can be no turning back.
In this, a computerized,
high-speed society, many old
customs and festivals have
been neglected and have
fallen by the wayside as men
look to the future and turn
their backs on the past.
It, therefore, reflects
great credit on Bo'nessians
that their festival is not
only surviving, but is
thriving, and showing every
sign of continuing. That
the Fair continues at all
shows the depth of community
spirit and feeling for the
town which exists in Bo'ness.
However, lest we become
complacent, may I point out
what are, in my opinion,
some minor defects whose
correction would, I feel,
improve the Fair and help to
ensure its future? Firstly,
is it really necessary to
include the Academy in the
schools from which the Queen
is chosen? We now have five
primary schools from which
to choose the Queen. Would
it not be better to allow a
primary schoolgirl a chance
to be Queen than to give
honour to a girl from the
heady heights of Class 6 at
the Academy?
The same arguments can be
applied to asking girls from
1st and 2nd year to be
fairies and flower girls.
Would it not be better in
future for organisers to bow
to the wishes of the girls
and exclude the Academy, for
great difficulty is
experienced in getting girls
to fill the available
places? The Academy
contingent is always the
smallest from the schools at
the Fair: why not omit the
Academy, accepting
philosophically that the
mites, like the times, they
are a-changin'.
Another criticism is that in
recent years, the Fair has,
like Topsy, just growed.
New events of great
spectator appeal have been
introduced - the soap-box
derby, piano-smashing,
ladies football tournaments,
etc. This escalating of
Fair events is fine but as
the Fair gets bigger and
bigger, so people will
become blase, they will grow
to expect bigger Fair each
year. There is a limit to
the number of external
events which may be
introduced without losing
sight of the original
concept of a children's
Fair Festival - a
celebration at the end of a
school year. Already, I
think that the primary
schoolchildren, for whom
the Fair was originally
intended, are beginning to
be overlooked. The main new
activities of recent years
have been intended more for
adults, such as clay pigeon
shooting and the Fair Club.
Is this the correct state of
affairs at a children's
Fair Festival? I doubt it.
Opponents of this argument
will say, "So why shouldn't
the whole of the community
have a good time at the
Fair?" There is, of course,
no reason why they shouldn't
but if the function of the
Fair is to amuse adult
Bo'nessians, is it not
hypocrisy to call it a
Children's Fair Festival?
Likewise, can the Queen's
Revels honestly be described
as children's
entertainment? How many
children prefer folk-dancing
even from South Africa or
Poland, to Punch and Judy
shows, clowns or performing
dogs? Of recent years,
there have been puppets and
clowns, I'm glad to say, but
not as part of the main
entertainments. Is this not
losing sight of the
objectives of a Children's
Fair Festival?
I think that the time has
come for a reappraisal of
the whole Festival. The
Fair must continue: it is
part of our heritage,
eagerly anticipated by young
and old alike. It keeps
Bo'nessians' links with the
town very strong - even when
they are thousands of miles
away. It encourages good
neighbourliness and
friendship, as people join
together to build that
special arch, make a costume
or simply turn out to watch
the procession. It is the
highlight of the Bo'ness
year: long may the sun shine
on this,
"Our Festal Day".
LINDSAY J. C. EASTON
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