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1974
UNKNOWN - "Deanburn Fanfare"
With a fanfare of trumpets
Deanburn Primary School will
this year herald the
crowning in the Glebe Park
of its first Fair Queen, 12
- year-old Linda Dow. The
Coronation of Queen Linda
will indeed be an event
which Deanburn can
justifiably blow about
because this will be the
first time for sixty-seven
years that a new school has
had the honour of electing
the Fair Queen.
The last occasion on which a
new school joined the ranks
of those providing the
principal characters for the
Fair was in fact in 1911
when when the pupils of
Grange School elected Ina
Ritchie to be their Queen.
By then the Fair as we know
it as a Children's Festival,
as opposed to the old style
miners' march from which it
was descended, was fifteen
years old, and looking abck
over this period in the
Fair's history it is
interesting to note the now
almost forgotten little
schools which chose the
first Queens.
According to the list of
former Queens, which appears
on page 17 of this issue,
the first ever Bo'ness Fair
Queen, Grace Stachan, was a
pupil of the Academy, but it
was a very different Academy
to the present 900 pupil
Comprehensive School at
Grahamsdyke, which has this
summer almost doubled in
size with the completion of
the ultra modern extension,
built on the former playing
field. For the Academy
which Grace Strachan
attended was the Anderson
Academy, the ruins of which
can still be seen on
Providence Brae. The
Anderson Academy took its
name from John Anderson, who
was often called "the
Uncrowned King of Bo'ness"
because of his great
influence on the old town in
his roles of merchant,
banker, landlord, ship
owner, and even oil refinery
proprietor, and who donated
much of his wealth to the
erection of the school one
year before his death in
1870.
When in 1897 Provost
Stewart, seeking a
spectacular way to
commemorate Queen Victoria's
diamond jubilee, visited
Lanark's famous Lanimer Day
celebrations and decided to
provide Bo'ness with its own
version of these festivities
he naturally turned to the
Academy as the town's
leading school, to provide
the first Queen.
The new style Bo'ness Fair
was received with great
enthusiasm by the townsfolk
who crowded up the braes to
Craigallen Park to see Queen
Grace crowned by Mrs.
Balfour, wife of the
Chairman of the Bo'ness
School Board. One well
known Bo'nessian who had
vivid memories of that first
Children's Fair Festival was
the late Findlay
MacGillivray, and at the age
of well over 90 he took a
few minutes off from looking
after his famous collection
of cage birds, to look back
and tell me about it.
"It was a really beautiful
day, and she was a real
bonnie Queen, but it's the
procession I remember best,
"he told me as we sat on a
bench in his aviary. " Just
as in the old miners'
march," he continued, "all
the trades in the town were
represented in the
procession. Biggest
favourites with the children
were the wee pit ponies,
which were brought up
specially from the pit
bottom. The miners were
very proud of their ponies,
which were beautifully
groomed for this the only
time in the year they ever
saw daylight.
" After they had
clipped-clopped by, came
five horse drawn decorated
lorries entered by the five
foundries in the town. Each
vied with the other to
display the most intricate
examples of their craft and
on each were patternmakers,
actually at work. The
potters also worked on their
two lorries, which were
decorated with model sailing
ships, wally dugs, and other
china ornaments, made and
painted by them.
Even the local football and
cricket teams entered that
first procession, all
mounted on horses hired from
the neighbouring farms like
the Gauze, the Drum and even
North Bank. I wasn't at all
happy about this for I knew
very well that these lads,
who included my own brother,
knew very little about
riding, and of course the
cheering of the crowd, their
own showing off and the
steepness of the braes
between Craigallan and
Kinnigars Park at Carriden
where the first Queen's
Revels were held, all
combined to make it more and
more difficult for them to
keep control of their
mounts. My worst fears were
realised when suddenly my
brother's horse bolted and
cannoned into one of the
ladies watching the
procession go past. By
miracle she was not injured,
but her new dress was ruined
and my brother had to pay
for it, which made it a very
costly first Fair for him."
The following year the Queen
was again chosen from the
Anderson Academy, but then
it was decided that each
school in the town should
take it in turn to provide
the Queen and her retinue, a
custom which has continued
ever since, and so on in
1899 little Borrowstoun
School chose Lizzie
MacDonald to be its first
Queen. It was as a pupil of
Borrowstoun School that well
remembered Bo'ness school
teacher the late Miss Grace
Livingston, first went to
the Fair, and as she trained
later generations of pupils
at Bo'ness Public School for
their parts in the big day,
she often laughingly
recalled her picture of
herself on her first Fair
morning. "Like every other
little girl I wore a white
frock, and like every other
child, girls as well as
boys. I wore a cap. Each
school had its own
distinctive colour of cap
and for Borrowstoun it had
to be blue and white. Well
do I remember my mother's
search for a cap big enough
of my head, but they simply
did not make school caps in
size 7 and 7/8s and so I
just had to wear what she
could get perched high on
top of my bushy hair. It
was of course no protection
against the boiling sun as
we marched from the school
down through Newtown to the
Glebe Park then all the way
to Castleloan for the
sports, not to mention
walking all the way home
again in the afternoon. At
the end of that day I
remember suffering agonies
with a face and neck burned
to a brilliant terra-cotta
by the sun and the bliss of
mother's old fashioned cure
of buttermilk and baking
soda."
Four years later it was
again Borrowstoun's turn to
pick the Queen, and Queen
Christina Blackwood had
little Grace Livingston in
her retinue as her Queen of
the Fairies, but only after
a protest as Miss Livingston
loved to remember. "When I
heard the result of the
voting I immediately said,
'But what about my poor
feet?' for there were no
hurls for fairies in those
days. One of my classmates
who was much keener on the
idea than I was immediately
offered to go to the
Headmaster and tell him that
she would take my place.
Within seconds she was
back. 'The Maister says
YOU'LL WALK', She
reported, and that was the
end of my Fair rebellion.
Walk I did, and looking back
on that Fair Day I will
always recall the story of
the little Glasgow pupil
who, on being asked by his
teacher how he knew when
summer had come, replied at
once, 'By the tar bilin' up
in the streets.' Well, the
tar certainly "biled" on
that Fair Day, for it was a
real scorcher, and my most
vivid memory of it is of
Miss Duguid, Grange School's
Infant Mistress, wrenching
one unfortunate wee girl
from the tarry moorings in
Corbiehall in which she had
become firmly embedded
during one of the long halts
in the procession."
While Miss Livingston's
memories of Borrowstoun
Fairs were all of sweltering
July days, Bo'ness Public
School was not so lucky when
it came its turn to choose
its Queen in 1906. That
first Public Queen was Jane
Grant, who later became Mrs.
J. Jones of Maidenpark, and
she remembers wakening on
the morning of her big day.
"My mother told me as soon
as I woke that it was
raining, but of course I
kept on hoping that it would
go off. All morning,
however, it got heavier and
heavier, and by 11 0'clock
it was simply lashing down,
and so I became the only
Queen to have her Coronation
in the Town Hall. Everyone
was so kind to me and said
how pretty it all looked
under the lights."
Fortunately the following
year the sun did shine again
and Mrs Jones was able to
wear her beautiful flowered
bonnet and carry a parasol,
when she surrendered her
crown as ex-Queen to Queen
Mary Duffy of St. Mary's
School. Queen Mary was St.
Mary's first Queen and with
its participation in the
festivities the list of
schools was almost
complete. Only Grange
remained to be opened and it
was several years before its
turn came round to choose
Ina Ritchie as its first
Queen in 1911.
The opening of the new
Grange School meant that
older pupils stopped
attending Carriden and so
after choosing only two
Queens, Margaret East in
1901 and Margaret Allen in
1905, it disappeared from
the list of schools. Just
as Grange School took over
Carriden's senior pupils so
it in turn lost its
secondary pupils when all
secondary, schooling in
Bo'ness was centralised at
the new Academy when it
opened in 1931. Next year
the Academy pupils chose
Helen Burnett to be their
first Queen from the new
school in Academy Road, and
Grange School from then on
chose its Fair characters
including its last pre - war
Queen, Andrea Walker, from
amongst its remaining
primary pupils.
The 1930s brought changes in
the educational scene not
just at the Grange and the
Academy, but also at the
Public and Borrowstoun. For
as the Public took over the
old Academy building
overlooking the Forth it now
had room to accommodate
Borrowstoun's dwindling roll
of older pupils and
Borrowstoun chose its last
Queen, Margaret McMahon, in
1933.
From then on, with the
exception of the war years,
the regular rota of Kinneil,
Grange, Public, St. Mary's,
and the Academy has been
used to select the Queen,
until now Deanburn is ready
to take its place. As a new
school it is appropriate
that while jealously
protecting the old
traditions which it so
proudly inherits Deanburn
also plans to introduce its
own novel touches to the
proceedings, because it is
by thriving on new ideas
that the Fair has retained
its youthful vigour.
Most striking of the
Deanburn innovations will be
the appearance of eight
State Trumpeters, and as
Deanburn is already well
known for its excellent
school brass band it will
come as no surprise to learn
that the youngsters will
play their own fanfares
instead of miming as the
heralds have done in former
years.
Not only will the heralds
take on a new look this year
but the Yeomen of the Guard
as well, because instead of
wearing the customary
scarlet beefeater uniforms
of the yeomen warders of the
Tower, the young Yeomen will
this year wear the Yeomen
warders' distinctive but not
so well known blue outfits.
New uniforms have also been
specially designed for the
Lords in Waiting, Crown
Bearer, Sceptre Bearer,
Sword Bearer, who will wear
officers' dress uniforms
featuring the school
colours, and Hamilton tartan
sashes as a reminder of the
school's close links with
Kinneil House, the former
home of the Hamilton family,
a fact which will also be
marked by the Page Boys
wearing Hamilton tartan
trews.
Completing the picture the
Champion will also take on a
new appearance as he will be
turned out as a trooper in
the Life Guards. In keeping
with the Life Guards and
with Bo'ness Fair tradition
the Champion will of course
be mounted and oldtimers
will bedelighted to hear
that Deanburn School hopes
to reintroduce more horses
into the procession by
having four of the eight
State Trumpeters mounted.
For many Bo'nessians the
traditional Fair E'en round
of the arches will be the
first time that they have
seen Deanburn School in its
magnificent setting
overlooking the Forth, and
the school is therefore
going out of its way to lay
on an attractive display
including a floodlit tableau
depicting Snow White and the
Seven Dwarfs, a story which
Deanburn's younger pupils
will bring to life as
presentees on the Fair Day.
Another major part of the
school's decor scheme will
be shields bearing the
badges of all other schools
which have ever contributed
Queens to the Fair, and
below each shield will
appear the names of that
school's Queens. Thus while
the pupils of Deanburn
School look forward to the
crowning of their first
Queen, Queen Linda, they
will also be encouraged to
look back and remember all
the other Bo'ness children
who have played their parts
to keep Bo'ness Fair alive
for almost eighty years and
to make it Britain's
foremost children's
festival.
UNKNOWN
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