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2000
COLIN J. CUTHELL - "
Remember! It's all for the
Children "
NORTH, East, South or West,
Bo'ness Fair is the best as
the rhyme goes, ask any true
Bo'nessian of their memories
of the Bo'ness Fair, I am
quite sure he or she will
come up with a vast and
varied selection of stories,
facts and figures of bygone
years.
My first recollection of the
fair must have been 1956.
Mr Ritchie, the headmaster
of the Grange School at that
time buzzed around the
school on the Fair morning
handing out the traditional
shilling and a banana to
every pupil in every
classroom before we left the
school to proceed to the
Glebe Park for the crowning
ceremony all dressed in
traditional school uniform,
blue blazer, grey shirt,
school tie, grey socks and
grey short trousers, and
thanks to mum a brand new
pair of sandals bought in
the Co-operative shoe shop.
Aye, no track suits and
trainers in those days!!
Mary Ross crowned Queen
Beatrice Stewart in 1956,
incidentally her brother
Willie Ross was the local
jeweller and watchmaker, it
was his job at that time to
maintain the Town Hall clock
and ensure it's mechanism
was in first class order, it
wouldn't do if the Town Hall
clock didn't operate
properly at 11 am on the
Fair Day, would it?
I continued my education at
Grange Primary School under
the watchful eyes of the old
stalwarts of the school,
Miss Clelland, Miss
Anderson, Miss Calder, Mrs.
McColl, Mrs Snedden and
finally that gentleman whose
voice struck fear into the
hearts of every pupil who
passed through Primary 7A,
Mr Bob Cowper, on reflection
though it did us no harm and
we certainly learned to
respect him. Even though we
never won a football match
against the other Bo'ness
schools, when he coached us.
The year 1961, I think will
stick in my mind most of all
because the Queen Elect and
her retinue that year were
being picked from two senior
classes Primary 7A, under
the watchful eye of Mr
Cowper and of course Primary
7B, under the gentle care of
Miss Martin. At last the
big day had arrived, the
retinue were to be chosen
and of course it was every
boys dream to be the
Champion, if not a Herald,
and following that just
about anything would do. We
started with the girls
retinue in the morning and
the boys retinue in the
afternoon. Mr Ritchie as
usual in his own wee way
buzzed around, arranging
voting papers etc. Both
classes were brought
together for the day.
There was tremendous
excitement in the classroom,
every pupil being nice to
each other hoping to get
each others vote. The big
moment arrived, "Right boys
and girls write down who you
want to be the Queen and the
girl with the second most
votes will be the Chief
Lady". The vote was cast,
the court was made, Queen
Elect for 1961, Nancy
Cuthell - no relation, I
don't think. The Chief Lady
for 1961, Marlene Meikle and
so it went on all morning,
bower girls, flower girls,
fairies etc., all had been
picked. During the lunch
break in the playground,
sweeties were in abundance
as never before.
"Hey Cuthell here's a 1d
caramel and a bazooka
chewing gum, mind and vote
for me", bribery as you have
never seen before. After
lunch, back to class and the
voting for the male retinue
started. I could see it
before my eyes, the Fair
Programme 1961 would read
Queen Elect Nancy Cuthell,
Queen's Champion Colin
Cuthell, wishful thinking
perhaps?
The voting took place,
firstly the Queen's
Champion, "Vote for who you
want to be the Champion"
said Mr Ritchie, "but
remember whoever you choose
must have a loud voice".
The announcement was made
the Queen's Champion, 1961
Lawrence Downie, my bubble
burst.
The Chief Lord was next, the
announcement came, Lord in
Waiting 1961 is George
Readman, my bubble burst
again, but Mr McKenna the
jannie said I could carry
the school banner, at last I
was just a wee bit involved
in the Fair, and guess what,
I got to wear my first pair
of long trousers, purchased
at Bishops in Falkirk, who
still remembers that shop?
As I said it was great to be
at last involved with the
Bo'ness Fair. My late
father, Archie and Uncle Jim
were involved with the Fair
many many years ago and of
course Uncle Jim was the
musical director of the Fair
for a number of years. With
them, being the local
undertakers!!, they were
contracted by Bo'ness Town
Council to put up the flags
round the Procession route,
and I remember as a boy
going with them on the
Monday morning after the
Fair, the first day of the
summer holidays and helping
them to take all the flags
down using long wooden
ladders, label the flags
carefully so they could be
strung up at the same place
the following year. The
funny thing is I cannot ever
remember these flags having
to be taken down wet because
it just never rained at the
Fair time all those years
ago, in fact it was the
opposite it was too warm
sometimes.
Unfortunately after the
summer holidays the older
primary school pupils must
move on to greater things in
life, the majority of us
were promoted to Bo'ness
Academy that big grey
building on Academy Road,
where all sorts of rumours
were rife about the prefects
and what they would do to
those little innocent first
years as they were called.
I can assure you how quickly
one matures on leaving
primary school to further
their secondary education at
Bo'ness Academy.
Now at this point in our
lives, I feel that is where
the Bo'ness Academy pupils
interest in the Bo'ness Fair
diminishes, not completely,
but for a few years. Many
pupils at Bo'ness Academy in
the mid sixties felt that
they were "too big" to be
involved in a Children's
Fair Festival and alas
Bo'ness Academy were to be
involved with the Queen's
Retinue for the last time in
1969 when Queen Kathleen
Wildeman was crowned by the
then Burgh Chamberlain's
wife Mrs John Burns. But
where one door closes
another opens, enter
Deanburn Primary School,
their pupils now make their
mark upon the Bo'ness Fair
under the watchful eye for
many years of that gentleman
of gentleman the late Jim
Valance, whose wife
incidentally was given the
honour of crowning Miss
Heather Chapman 1989.
As I said earlier once we
moved to Secondary school,
then progress into the big
wide working world, the
teenage years take over and
talking from personal
experience the Fair seems to
take second place. On
leaving Bo'ness Academy in
the spring of 1965 I was
lucky to find employment as
an apprentice electrician
with a little known Falkirk
firm. Incidentally I was
still very involved with and
had been a member of the 4th
Bo'ness Boys Brigade Company
for a number of years, and
as it so happens the Queens
Escort for 1965 was to be
supplied by the Boy's
Brigade.
What an opportunity, the six
Boys Brigade in the escort
were selected from each
Bo'ness Boys Brigade
Company, the 2nd St. Andrews
Church, the 3rd and by far
the largest B.B. Company in
the battalion attached to
the Old Kirk at that time,
and finally 4th Bo'ness
attached to Carriden Kirk
under the ever caring eye of
Tom Mercer. After our
parents night display late
in May which was held in the
Mission Hall, Grangepans, I
was approached by Captain
Mercer or Auld Tam as he was
affectionately known. Would
I like to be part of the
Queen's Escort on the Fair
Day? What an honour, and in
those days it was indeed an
honour to be asked to escort
the Queen's Carriage on the
Procession route, bearing in
mind in 1965 the Queen
travelled in an open horse
drawn carriage. In flash I
accepted the invitation to
be part of the Queen's
Escort, but would my
employer allow me the day
off to carry out my B.B.
duties? Captain Mercer as
quick as a flash said he
would give me a letter for
my employer requesting I be
relieved of my duties as an
apprentice electrician for
the day. Well! Having to
explain to a man from
Falkirk what this escort for
the Queen involved was
rather difficult, initially
he thought it was the well
known other Queen from the
south of the border, who
resides in the big Palace,
boy, did I have some
explaining to do, but I did
get the day off as long as I
worked the extra time to
make up my wages.
Not to worry, I was in there
on the Fair Day proud as
punch and guess who the
Queen Elect that year was,
none other than Miss Ruth
Frank from Kinneil School.
Now the following year I
lost interest in the Fair
because my employment took
me to such places as
Stirling, Kippen,
Grangemouth, Dumbarton,
Falkirk, etc. And I can
assure you there was nothing
more soul destroying as
leaving for your work to
travel miles away from
Bo'ness on a bright sunny
Fair morning, listening to
the pipers at their various
meeting points, tuning their
pipes, Carriden Band in the
distance marching on to
someone's house rendering "
Morag's Faery Glen ", then
as I drove of of Bo'ness the
floats would be arriving
from all airts for the
judging, didn't it bring a
lump to my throat? It did
and I deny and Bo'nessian to
say it wouldn't to them
either, but the funny thing
was, wherever I was working
on the Fair Day I always had
time to reflect at 11am as
to what I was missing, it's
amazing you know when you
talk to other people about
this they all say the same
thing, no matter where they
are in the world, whether it
be working, or on holiday,
or Bo'ness exiles living
abroad the famous words come
to mind "My it's a braw day
for the Bo'ness Fair".
My next involvement with the
Bo'ness Fair was in the very
early seventies, when I
became an employee of
Bo'ness Town Council, taking
up the post of an
electrician. With David
Cunningham having left the
council to take up his post
as entertainment officer
with Falkirk Town Council,
Harry Cameron was promoted
to foreman electrician, and
I was fortunate to take over
as Harry's understudy.
Being the council
electrician also meant
maintaining the street
lighting system in Bo'ness
and guess where the flags
got tied to on the
procession route at the Fair
time, yes, the lamp-posts.
So it was at this point I
got my education from the
Bo'ness public on where and
where not to put up flags
prior to the Fair Day. "Hoo
come they've got flags in
their street doon their and
we've nae flags here" or "yer
no pittin they scabby things
up in oor street, it's aboot
time the council bought some
new yins, whit were payin
for rent and that's tthe
best ye can dae." " but
missus I'm only doing my job
just doing whit I wis
told". "Weel just get back
doon off that lamp post and
tell Sandy Phillips and a'
rest o' the cooncillers
we're wanting new flags."
Obviously next year, new
flags more the bunting type
of today were introduced by
Mr Renton the then Burgh
Surveyor, much to the
public's delight, and even
more to our delight as we
were now heroes in the
public's eye, because we had
new flags to put up.
Being a town council
employee at that time meant
it was your duty to the
Council and the Bo'ness
public to work without
objection on the Fair Day,
which I must add I did
willingly, it was great to
be in the midst of all the
preparations, the build up,
the sneak preview of the
rehearsals on the Thursday
morning and on the Fair E'en,
watching the finishing
touches being applied to the
Council floats in the burgh
yard, which would convey
many fairies and flower
girls on the Fair Day.
My dear friend Harry Cameron
being the foreman
electrician detailed our
duties on the Fair morning.
He would be in charge of the
public address system in the
Town Hall park during the
crowning ceremony, and I, my
first Fair as a council
employee was to go in the
plumber's van with my
drouthie cronie Willie
Wallace and our mobile PA
system, an amplifier, a huge
microphone and two
loudspeakers on the roof of
the van. Our duties were to
provide an information
service to the public,
liaise with the police and
announce numbers of cars
obstructing the Procession
route and try to find the
drivers and have them
removed, our base was
Kinglass Avenue and the road
along the top of the Academy
Park. I hadn't seen the
Fair for years as I said
earlier on, as an apprentice
I had worked out of town for
years and never got the Fair
Day off.
But this was fantastic the
hustle, the bustle, everyone
smiling, everyone happy
wearing their new Fair claes
and the weather, well
brilliant sunshine from
early morning onwards, I
watched eagerly as the many
many floats were judged who
would get the big one this
year? Would it be Balbardie,
Glenmavis, Pow or would it
be McLucas under the
supervision of Willie
McAllister again, the
atmosphere was fantastic.
" Noo son " said Willie
Wallace, " We go doon tae
the Masonic Temple during
the crowning and we'll get a
couple of pies, then after
the crowning up to the park
to pick up the PA System and
set it up in the Douglas
Park for Davie Cunningham to
officiate at the afternoon's
ongouns." Davie
incidentally came back for
the day to help with the
commentary that was before
John Stanners took over,
prior to Douglas Snedden
taking control as he still
does to this day.
Now having set up the PA
System for the afternoon's
entertainments Willie said,
" Right Son over tae the
Redcroft Hotel for a wee
snifter than along tae the
Academy for oor lunch". By
the way the Council being
beneficent society gave us
our lunch free. By this
time I was over the moon at
the Fair Day, two pies, 2
Carlsberg specials, two
whiskies and a free lunch
what a Fair Day this was
turning out to be.
After lunch I asked Willie,
what do we do in the
afternoon? to which he
replied "Noo son back to the
Douglas Park and we'll park
the van at the sign that
says lost children and if
anyone loses their wean or
if anyone finds a lost wean
they bring them here and we
pit oot an announcement and
hopefully they'll pick up
this lost bairn shortly."
There being a few stories to
be told regarding this! But
we always found the parents,
whether it be in the park or
elsewhere!!
Soon the afternoon's
entertainment was over, we
packed up our gear, loaded
it into the plumber's van
and back to the yard. I
worked with the then Bo'ness
Town Council for a few years
after that and can honestly
say I loved everyone of the
Fair Days. The Town Council
Yard, or Burgh Yard as it
was better known then, was
situated directly to the
rear of Bo'ness Part-time
Fire Station, in the Links
Road. It wasn't too
difficult in 1972 to tell
when there was a fire in the
town because of the siren
situated on top of the Fire
Station which was sounded to
alert the retained Firemen
as to the fact that their
services were required
urgently.
If any of the maintenance or
direct works employees were
in the burgh yard at the
time of the fire, it was
customary to pop round to
the Fire Station and find
out where the fire was, if
it was a council house,
joiners, electricians and
plumbers attended to make
the property safe and secure
and do what they could to
help the family involved.
One day on the return of the
firemen from a fire, I was
approached by George
Marshall, the Station
Officer in Charge of Bo'ness
Fire Station and told there
was a vacancy for a fireman
in the station if I was
interested, and after
consultation with my fiancee,
Marian, I accepted eagerly.
How many of you remember
these marvellous summer
evenings spent the week
prior to the Fair called
Foreshore Frolics. The
people of Bo'ness would
turn out in their hundreds
night after night to watch
the events , the piano
smashing held on the
foreshore, the quoits held
on the green where the bus
station is now, the gir race
up Market Street for
children and adults alike,
the pram race round the
town, only to mention a few
of the events, all under the
watchful eye of the
organisers Messer's McLucas,
McFarlane, Smith, Frank
etc., to name but a few.
Then the Fair Clay Pigeon
Shoot was held on the Sunday
before the Fair, on the
foreshore, opposite the now
old burgh chambers, where
the tourist information
office now is.
Our Fire Station training
nights were held on a
Wednesday evening and as it
was the Foreshore Frolics,
we were obliged to send a
crew and fire engine along
to Bo'ness Harbour and put
on a display of our fire
fighting skills, this
usually ended up by shooting
foam all over the harbour
and generally finishing with
soaking all the spectators
with water. Not much skill,
but in the spirit of the
Fair all good fun. But
let's not forget the
torchlight procession, held
every year on the Fair E'en.
Carriden Band would leave
from Bridgeness Club with
their supporters, and
Kinneil Band would leave
from Kinneil Club with their
followers and everyone would
arrive at the Harbour area
in the town at midnight and
all the torches were thrown
on to a huge bonfire.
Sadly my dear respected
friend George Marshall died
in March of this year. I
know how much he loved the
Fair and in particular the
Brass Bands, "Morag's Faery
Glen" was rendered many a
time in the Fire Engine on
return from a call out,
whether the time of year had
been the Fair E'en,
Hallowe'en, or New Year's
E'en. Happy, happy memories
indeed.
Marian and I were married in
1974 whilst I was still a
Town Council employee, but
by this time I was a little
unsettled and moved my
allegiance to Ballantines
Foundry as a maintenance
electrician, and guess what
the Fiar Day was a public
holiday, now at last since
leaving school an official
Fair Day off. But believe
it or not Mr Ballantine
approached me prior to the
Fair week, "Colin", he said,
"We need to put up some
flags outside the foundry
here's a cheque, pop through
to Edinburgh and buy some,
and, when you come back just
put them up". Here we go
again, just left the Town
Council and what am I doing,
putting up flags again, HIP,
HIP, HOORAY!
In 1982 my mother-in-law
Gweneth Cochrane was
honoured to be asked by
David Brown to crown Queen
Lesley Anne Culbert, a day
in her life she still fondly
talks about to this day.
Marian and I remember it
well, along with next door
neighbour Dan Wright, we
were in charge of the
refreshments in the back
garden at the house in Dean
Road after Kinneil Band had
paid their traditional early
morning visit and
entertained us with their
musical skills, Marian's
sister, being very musically
gifted composed a short
piece of music dedicated to
her mother, which Kinneil
Band rehearsed and played to
Gweneth on the Fair
morning. A very proud lady
went on that morning to
crown the Queen.
I am now settling into the
family business and guess
what, it's Fair time again
and you'll never believe
this, being the local
undertakers, we received a
letter from the Fair
Committee, can we please
no,.....no,..... please not
do the flags , but supply a
car or two on the Fair Day
to uplift the Queen Elect,
Page Boys, Ex Queen and the
Chief Lady and supply a car
for the officials to travel
in the Procession route, who
will drive the car? Like a
flash.... I'll do it dad.
I am an undertaker now and
besides, I've experience of
this type of thing before (
but I didn't mention Willie
Wallace and the plumber's
van ).
I have driven the official
car on the Fair Day every
year expect on two or three
occasions since 1983 and
wouldn't miss it for the
world, it's like being back
with the Town Council, the
atmosphere, the cheering
crowds, the wee children
waving their flags on the
happiest day of the year.
People often say to me, "
Colin, you certainly looked
happy on the Fair Day
driving that car through the
town smiling and waving at
everyone ", and the car is
driven through the town by
drivers with very serious
faces due to the business
purposes of the vehicles,
and I can assure you this
one day alone you don't know
what it's like to use the
car for a happy occasion.
HIP! HIP!.
It's fun on the Fair morning
picking up the Page Boys and
taking them to the Queen
Elect's school. Almost
every year whilst the Page
Boys are sitting lost amidst
the vast expanse of the back
seat of the limousine,
whispering to each other, a
wee voice pipes up "Mister",
or if they are from the
Grange School it's " Mr
Cuthell ", Yes sonny, what
is it?" An the usual
question comes forth " Is
this the motor you use for
the funerals", Yes son but
not today", (I hope ).
After a great Fair day it's
back to the garage with the
car, remove the Bo'ness "
SINE METU " pennant from
bonnet, take out the flowers
from the back window and
prepare the car it's more
serious duties the following
morning.
It's amazing you know how
much difference a few weeks
makes to the confidence of
young children. It's mid
August now and the Fair
Committee have requested the
use of the limousine at the
Falkirk Family Day. So off
we go again with a much more
mature Queen, Chief Lady and
the Page Boys. First stop
Falkirk Town Hall Car Park,
where we are to be placed in
order of procession for the
grand parade of Gala Day
Queens throughout Falkirk,
and on to Callander Park to
be introduced in the arena
to the assembled crowds.
Now on the arrival at the
Town Hall in Falkirk the
organiser always asks which
Gala Day are you
representing, before I can
answer a cluster of voices
from the back of the
limousine remind him
politely, "NONE!, we're from
the Bo'ness Children's Fair
Festival". Well done
children.
We take our place in the
procession amongst, the, as
they say, " Gala Day Queens
" and wait a good half hour
for the procession to
start. I can assure you
when that car drives into
Callander Park into the
centre of the arena and
receives the applause of the
thousands of people gathered
there, we hear the
intimation over the PA
System say " And now we
welcome the Queen, her Chief
lady in Waiting and her Page
Boys of the oldest and
probably the finest of all
children's days in Scotland,
if not the whole of the UK,
Bo'ness Children's Fair
Festival. Oh dear, the lump
is in the back of the throat
again. It's our town, our
children, our history the
commentator is referring
to. Am I proud? That's an
understatement.
In 1990 Marian and I were
fair chuffed when our
daughter Michelle came home
one February lunch time from
the public school and
announced that she had been
chosen to be a fairy. Paul
announced that he had been
chosen as a presentee in
South Pacific. Paul was in
the class which supplied the
Queen's retinue in 1992.
Unfortunately Marian was
recovering from a serious
illness in Falkirk Royal
Infirmary when Paul walked
in so proudly to tell his
mum he had been chosen to be
the Sword Bearer at the
forth coming Fair. What a
tonic!! Something to look
forward to and I'm sure
every parent whose child had
been chosen as a character
at the Fair will agree when
I say, we're proud of our
own, regardless of how big
or small a part our children
have on the Fair Day. I
defy any parent who says
they haven't a tear in their
eye or a lump in their
throat when they watched
their child on the platform
in the Glebe Park on the
Fair Day. I did, I am not
afraid to admit it.
Michelle after Paul once
again was picked as a
Presentee in 'Country
Style', the theme from the
Public School that year.
When your son or daughter is
nominated as a choice fro
the Fair Day, the lady of
the house is delighted to
organise the costume, and
the man of the house has the
privilege of organising the
arch or house frontage. In
all I constructed four
separate house frontages at
our home, the preparation
starting in April,
constructing piece by piece
this thing that would adorn
the front garden on the Fair
morning. What a delight it
was the week of the Fair
working away in the evenings
watching the efforts of the
past months come together
and every year Marian would
say " This is ridiculous,
this house frontage is twice
the size you said it would
be." I got a wee bit
carried away sometimes. But
never the less on the Fair
E'en, Linlithgow Reed Band
would march up Jeffrey Bank
and honour us with their
presence and entertain us,
at which point friends,
neighbours and locals alike
would join in the evening's
festivities and participate
in some liquid refreshment
before the band marched off
to their next Fair E'en
engagement.
After all my efforts I may
add, nothing gave me so much
pleasure as to sit on my
neighbours wall opposite my
house late on the Fair E'en,
when all was quiet and
admire the finished article,
a feeling of satisfaction
and contentment, and, in a
small way, help to the
successful continuation of
the Bo'ness Fair.
If I may at this point quote
part of a speech made a few
years ago by Monsignor
Brennan, now a retired
Priest, formerly of St
Mary's RC Church, Bo'ness a
speech he made at an
induction service in Bo'ness
Old Kirk attended by many
members of the clergy and
public alike, when he said,
"As an incomer to the town I
notice many people in and
around the town of Bo'ness
criticise the Fair fro the
effort, the time and at
times the expense that goes
into constructing arches and
house frontages and making
the Fair Day in general a
success. But remember as an
incomer I also notice that
without the Fair Day, there
would not be this community
spirit where everyone gets
involved, for several weeks
prior to the Fair and help
their neighbours, friends,
or just the person in the
street, a time when people
of different denominations
come together and friends
are made and so are lasting
friendships." Hear Hear!
Truer words never spoken.
How many times have you said
I'll just go and give so and
so a wee hand and get all
involved.
On closing I would say to
all the parents of the
children involved in the
preparation for this year's
Fair and the future Fairs
Days, when you are building
your arch or house frontage
or the dress making is not
going well, you are down in
the dumps, there is still a
lot of hard work to do,
stop,...think...AND REMEMBER
RAIN, HAIL OR SHINE, IT'S
ALL FOR THE CHILDREN...Have
a lovely Fair Day.
COLIN J. CUTHELL
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