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1984
WILLIAM F HENDRIE - "
Outstanding Bo'ness Efforts
"
Sceptics have often
suggested that the letters
O.B.E. may possibly have
another meaning apart from
the official order of the
British Empire. Bo'nessians
now know that they
undoubtedly have, because
when our former Provost,
Vice Convener of Central
Region Councillor Charles
Snedden received the O.B.E.
in this year's New Year's
Honours List, Her Majesty
was obviously very well
aware of his " Outstanding
Bo'ness Efforts."
This , therefore, will be a
particularly proud Fair Day
for Charlie, because there
is no Bo'ness event for
which he has in the past
worked harder. Charlie
Snedden is indeed the best
possible example of the
traditional Fair " hand," a
Bo'nessian, born and bred,
for whom the Fair is as
vital as the very blood in
his veins. It is equally
impressive this year with
our Fair Queen coming from
Deanburn Primary School,
that it is the Fair which
has caught so many of the
new families who have come
to live in our town with its
web of magic fantasy and
done more than anything else
to integrate these newcomers
into the community.
It was in 1974 that the
brand new Deanburn Primary,
set high on its hill above
Kinneil House looking out
over the magnificent sweep
of the River Forth and the
Fife hills beyond, first
provided our Fair Queen and
so rapidly do the years pass
that it is very hard to
realise that when Alison
Cross is crowned in Glebe
Park on Friday, 29th June,
she will be the school's
third Queen.
Deanburn's first Fair, when
Linda Dow was the pupils'
choice as Queen will always
be remembered, not just
because her coronation was
filmed and preserved for
posterity by well-known
Scottish producer Mike
Alexander, but also because
of all its innovations, its
new-style costumes and its
heralds, who because of the
school's excellent brass
band, were well able to play
their own fanfare.
Ten years later enthusiasm
for the Fair at Deanburn is
as great if not greater than
ever and Headmaster Jim
Vallance reports that there
was tremendous friendly
rivalry amongst all of his
pupils for the leading
roles, with some of the
girls even querying whether
in these days of women's "
lib " and no sex
discrimination there could
possibly be girl heralds?
So great too was the demand
from boys in the Primary 7
classes to be involved in
the Fair that Mr Vallance
has managed to persuade the
Fair Committee to allow him
to create them Queen's
Escort so that they would
not be disappointed, and so
yet another Deanburn
innovation will be seen when
they parade carrying their
banner in this year's
procession.
It is great to know that in
these days of expensive
computers for Christmas that
the Fair still remains just
as important an event in
the lives of our children as
it did when I was a child.
I was one of the unfortunate
wartime youngsters who had
to wait impatiently until
1946 to see my first Fair,
but even during the years of
the hostilities the Fair was
never forgotten and the
continued teaching of the
Fair songs in the schools
and participation in " Wee
Fairs " during the summer
holidays simply whetted our
appetites for the real
thing.
And I wasn't disappointed
when on a July Friday
morning in 1946 I awoke to
all the excitement of my
first Fair. There was
absolutely no doubt about
the importance of this day,
for already the big Union
Jack, the same one with
which we had celebrated both
V.E. Day and V.J. Day the
year before, was poking out
of the front bedroom window
of "Hallcraig" as I rushed
to catch a glimpse of the
first of the bands marching
along Dean Road.
Despite clothes rationing
there was a brand new white
school shirt waiting to be
put on, along with carefully
pressed grey flannel shorts
and the scarlet tie and
scarlet cap for Bo'ness
Public and as soon as I was
dressed I was all for
marching after the band, but
my mother insisted as
mothers do on breakfast
first.
Even such a mundane matter
as breakfast, however, had a
special excitement on that
Fair morning, because when I
heard the whistle announcing
the arrival of the Co-op car
and dashed out to buy milk,
rolls and my favourite bran
scones, I discovered to my
delight that our milkman, Mr
Auld, had decorated his
patient horse Pearl as I had
never seen before. Her
black leather harness fairly
gleamed and both her mane
and her tail were carefully
plaited with straw and
interwoven with red, white
and blue ribbons, and in
that instant I realised for
the first time the meaning
of that well-known Bo'ness
saying, " All dressed up
like a Fair horse."
There were more Fair
horses, when breakfast was
over, to my mother's
satisfaction. I clutched my
father's hand and together
we made our way along to the
Chance Park, all three sides
of whose triangle were lined
with what to my child's eyes
seemed the most wonderful
decorated carts. There was
Stewart of the Drum's cart
with its big red wheels and
the Store's bread float of
green, closed-cropped
boxwood, and Spowart's junk
cart completely transformed
from its workaday role, and
what seemed dozens more,
certainly completely
out-numbering the few
decorated motor lorries,
which were no doubt in short
supply because of the petrol
shortage.
There was also a shortage of
time, because my father had
strict instructions to have
me back home ready for
school, but even that
prospect had its excitements
for our teacher had promised
that as well as our usual
third pint bottle of milk
with its cardboard top,
complete with hole for a
straw to go through, we
would each receive a real
banana, and I had never
before unzipped, far less
eaten, a banana.
Across in the Glebe Park we
could hear the crowds
assembling and the band
playing in the band stand
and a voice crackling on the
tannoy ( would it have been
that Johnnie Collie?) and it
seemed an absolute age
before our headmaster Mr
Sleath gave the command and
we all marched off, four
abreast up the steep School
Brae.
Miss Livingston fussed over
the fairies and the flower
girls, each with their
Public School scarlet
carnations and Miss Miller
even designed to smile as we
rounded the corner at the
top entrance to the Glebe
Park and saw spread out
before the coronation
platform. After the longest
hibernation in its history
Bo'ness Fair had awoken to
the new post-war world.
These may still have been
rationing and all kinds of
shortages, but mothers had
worked wonders and to my
eyes it was everything that
I had always been promised
the Fair would be, with the
heralds delivered their
time-honoured proclamation,
the champion, his
traditional challenge, and
best of all, oh definitely
best of all the Fair songs.
We had practised them
before, but now we were
singing them for real. Then
as hands of the big Town
Hall clock touched 11
o'clock, Sadie Potter, from
Grange School, was crowned
and Bo'ness had a Queen
again.
The following year there was
even more excitement because
the Fair was from the Public
and I still remember tearing
home up Darien Lane and
Marchlands Avenue to be the
first with the news that the
Queen was to be Mary Sneddon
from Newtown. That meant,
of course, that the Queen's
arch was just round the
corner from my home and
again I remember the thrill
of watching it being raised
into position and how
splendid it looked towering
over Cadzow Avenue.
Queen Mary was succeeded by
Queen Jeanette, from St.
Mary's, and then Queen
Margaret, from the Academy,
but it was the next Queen
from the Academy. Mary
Gibson, who was crowned in
1954 that I remember best
for by then I too had moved
on from the Public to the
big school. My cousin Jean
was one of the August
Seniors who sailed past us
in the corridors and were
allowed the privilege of
entering by the main door in
Academy Road. She was
chosen to be one of Queen
Mary's ladies-in-waiting and
so there was all the family
involvement of building an
arch and the pride of
winning a prize for all our
work.
At school, too, there was
the excitement of decorating
the front of the building
with banners in red, black
and gold. The school
colours which we were proud
to wear and the fun of
trying to lower a massive
shield with the school badge
and motto " Sine Metu " from
Mr Gould's art room window.
Under his stern but
benevolent eye we at last
managed it and by the Fair
morning all was in position
for Queen Mary to make her
dignified appearance. I'll
never forget how proud our
new rector Alan McIntyre,
Andrew Dea's young
successor, looked as he led
his first and only Queen to
her open horse-drawn
landau. Little did we
realise on that Fair morning
how short a time we were to
enjoy his leadership and
guidance before his untimely
and all too early death.
That Fair in 1954 was the
first time that there was
any question of the Academy
senior pupils fulfilling
their customary roles in the
coronation ceremony. Voting
was delayed for a week, but
Alan McIntyre's diplomacy
paid off. Queen Mary and
her courtiers carried off
their duties to the manor
born and Academy Fairs
continued for another 15
years until, in 1969,
Kathleen Wildman became the
last of the line which had
begun in the very first year
of the Fair in 1897 with
Queen Grace Strachan.
I still believe that an
Academy Fair had a style all
of its own, but days have
changed and I welcome the
new ways in which the
Academy's pupils have found
to contribute to the
proceedings from their
lively decorated floats to
collecting along the
procession route for various
charities and to the article
on the history of the Fair,
which an Academy senior has
written specially for this
magazine.
So long as that interest
remains our Fair is safe.
WILLIAM F. HENDRIE
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