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1979 JOHN
McLAREN - " Angus
Livingston"
Bo'ness Fair was 13 years
old in 1910 and during that
13 years, the children's day
had gone from strength to
strength. Slow the event
was gathering credibility
and character. But 1910 was
to prove a difficult year
for the organisers. Unrest
amongst the woodyard workers
was simmering and talk of
strike was in the offing.
In a community which relied
on coal mining and related
industries, a strike would
seriously affect the economy
of the town and as long hot
summer began thoughts of an
expensive Fair began to
worry everyone involved.
Workers meetings were being
held almost nightly and the
militant attitude was
reflected on the children.
Headmaster at Kinneil School
at that time was Mr Angus
Livingston, an astere
angular man with his skin
stretched thinly over his
bony frame. His dedication
to teaching was renowned,
and equally his interest in
the principles of a young
Socialist party were legend.
The spark which exploded the
industrial flashpoint came
when the employers
introduced a reduction of
sixpence in the wages.
Night meetings were called
and one of the main speakers
opposing what he felt was a
crippling imposition on
workers who were already
living on the breadline was
Angus Livingston.
The result of these rowdy
gatherings was a strike
which attracted the
attention of the Houses of
Parliament.
While the whole of Bo'ness
seethed with outbreaks of
violence and heated
arguments, there was a
growing worry about the
Fair. Young pupils played
truant to sit on the
sidelines watching the
mounting tension.
Angus Livingston, the
teacher and headmaster, came
down hard on any boy bold
enough to take the odd
afternoon off.
His discipline was well
known, he advised his pupils
that should they become
involved in anyway they
would not be allowed to take
part in the Fair.
As the days passed and the
situation in the woodyards
became tension filled,
violence erupted over the
period of a week when an
attempt was made to import
labour from Glasgow
disembarking over 100 men at
Kinneil Station.
Fighting broke out in a
number of areas which had a
great attraction for school
children. The trains
arrived early in the morning
which meant that children
were out of their beds to
see what was going on. The
9 a.m. start to school was
largely ignored in the
excitement, this being borne
out by the many empty desks
at Kinneil School.
Knowing full well what the
reason was, Angus Livingston
donned his black hat and
stroke off to round-up the
truants.
At Furnace Yard he spotted
three of his pupils standing
on a wall. As soon as they
saw him they scurried up the
hill towards the school.
Marching on from there, he
came across another two,
this time the notorious
Sneddon brothers whose
attendance at school in
normal times was not all
that could be desired.
Noting the names, on he went
to see young Agnes Black
helping serve cups of tea to
strikers. However noble her
task was, she should have
been at school and her name
went into the book.
Turning a corner at the Snab
Rows he came face with the
over-sized 12 - year-old Rab
Robertson. Clutching him by
his ear, Angus marched him
up Castleloan Brae to face
the agony of a cane beating
across his buttocks.
Late-comers on arrival at
school were sent to stand in
the queue outside the
headmaster's door to await
the fearful swish of the
cane.
Around lunch-time a tired
but righteous headmaster
assembled the school in the
playground to re-affirm his
decision that anyone
becoming involved in any way
would not be allowed to
attend the Fair. He went on
to say that any pupil found
near to the foreshore
battles would have to face
punishment at his hand.
After the happenings of that
morning when many boys and a
number of girls had
firsthand knowledge of Mr
Livingston's wrath, the
message was fully
understood.
The battles quietened and
life began to return to
normal. The Fair day drew
nearer and nearer, Many of
those punished for
disobedience began to wonder
of the unbending domini
would keep to his word and
deny them the thrill of
walking in the Fair.
Strict disciplinarian that
he was, Angus Livingston
also had a heart. His
threat was never carried
out, and the Fair, although
a little subdued, went off
with Kinneil School fully
represented.
When the battle of Slaghill
is spoken about in Bo'ness,
little reference is made to
the battle of Kinneil School
with Angus Livingston acting
as a whole army supporting
the cause of learning and
discipline.
While respecting his
commitment as a headmaster
he had the task of producing
a Fair Queen that year.
The pupils elected Agnes
Adams on that occasion. And
with the battle over wages
and the strikes which were
going on, willing workers
who would have worked around
the clock erecting arches
and the like had their
thoughts diverted elsewhere.
With most pupils' fathers on
strike there was little or
no money to produce the
standard of Fair expected of
them - or so people thought.
To compensate for this,
Angus Livingston began to
marshall the talents of the
parents and the result was a
Fair blest with excellent
weather which brought out
the colours promoting all
the glamour that one could
wish.
Agnes Adam was a worried wee
lassie wondering if she
would ever be crowned Queen
of Bo'ness. She was and
thanks were as much due to
Angus Livingston as to
anyone else.
JOHN McLAREN
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