ONE OF THE GREAT occasions in Bourne during past times was on Tuesday 22nd
June 1897, the day this town celebrated the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria.
It was a joyous and auspicious event which attracted large crowds which we know
from surviving photographs showing the market place thronged with people.
The weather was perfect, hot enough for many to carry umbrellas to protect them
from the sun, and a day of unalloyed enjoyment for both young and old. The town
was ablaze with colour, national flags adorned every property, the streets were
festooned with red, white and blue bunting while the front of the Town Hall was
a mass of patriotic decorations. A public holiday had been declared and so the
shops and businesses were closed and families turned out in their Sunday best to
stroll around, greet old friends, stop and gossip, mostly about the grand old
lady who had been on the throne for sixty years and would be celebrating her
80th birthday two years later.
The women and girls all wore long dresses and large hats while the men were
dressed in suits, starched collars and ties, often carrying a stick and usually
wearing a bowler hat, or more likely a straw boater which became fashionable in
the closing years of the 19th century. It was unheard of for anyone to be seen
scruffily dressed on a public occasion and many actually bought new clothes for
such events.
There were special services at all of the town’s churches where ministers
preached sermons on patriotism and loyalty to one’s country, followed by a day
of celebration and enjoyment for both young and old for this special day that
had been long anticipated. “Children were jubilant from daybreak till long after
the legitimate bedtime”, reported the newspaper, “and veterans of 70 and 80 were
early astir. There was no home undecorated and many were remarkable beautiful
with red roses, evergreens, flags and patriotic emblems. There appeared to have
been a happy rivalry in transforming the old Saxon town into a place of beauty.”
The town was full of people for the rest of the day and at three o’clock, 1,000
schoolchildren gathered in the Market Place to sing God Save the Queen. The town
band then struck up the National Anthem to mark the start of a grand parade with
the Volunteers resplendent in their uniforms and medals close behind and
followed by the friendly societies, always evident on public occasions carrying
their colourful banners. They all marched through the streets to the Abbey Lawn
followed by a huge crowd of people ready to begin the celebrations consisting of
a children’s treat of tea and buns, a programme of sports, a cycle parade, a
supper for the adults in the evening followed by dancing, fireworks at dusk in
the Wellhead Field and to end the day, a torchlight procession to Stamford Hill
on the outskirts of the town where, at the highest point, a huge bonfire that
had been days in the making, some 20 feet in height, was lit to coincide with
others across Lincolnshire and indeed, the entire country.
“It was lighted precisely at ten o’clock”, reported the newspaper, “and the
flaming tongues that flaked the night must have formed a beacon far across the
fenland towards the sea. From near the bonfire could be seen the fires at
Spalding and Crowland, and lights in the direction of Gosberton, Pinchbeck,
Littleworth, Boston and Peterborough, were discernible. From beginning to end,
the proceedings passed off with perfect success.”
There were also long term benefits for the town from that year’s jubilee
celebrations. The parish council decided to mark the occasion by illuminating
the Town Hall clock at night, an advanced innovation for a public timepiece at
that time. The work was carried out by Edward Pearce, a clock and watch maker
with premises in North Street, and the son of Thomas Pearce who had helped
supply the previous clock.
The clock had been in need of restoration for some time and Mr Pearce fitted a
new dial with gilded hands and black figures in an opal glass, allowing the
clock face to be lit up after dark, the illumination being provided by gas light
regulated by automatic machinery and the old wooden turret or cupola on the Town
Hall was lined with asbestos to render it fireproof. The clock mechanism was
sited in the constable's room below and connected to the dial by wires. Total
cost of the work was £47 14s. 1d. [£3,000 at today's values]. "The illuminated
dial of the clock gives universal satisfaction", reported the newspaper. "The
new clock is a decided improvement for which the parish councillors may justly
claim credit."
Unfortunately, on Saturday 31st October 1933, the gas mechanism used to
illuminate the clock overheated and started a fire which destroyed the wooden
turret on the Town Hall. It was never replaced but the clock remains on the
pediment below although no longer lit up at night.
The Bourne Institute, opened only the previous year in a rented property at No
63 West Street, marked the occasion with a Diamond Jubilee bazaar earlier in the
month and the announcement that the committee intended to buy the premises for
the benefit of its 200 members, including 50 ladies. The building remained in
use as an institute, including a spell as the town’s public library, until 1975
when it became the Pyramid Club which flourishes today.
The other significant development was the establishment of the Town Diamond
Jubilee Nursing Association which eventually led to the opening of the
Butterfield Hospital. The inspiration and much of the work came from Alderman
William Wherry (1841-1915), probably the most industrious of our local
representatives in the history of Bourne. It was his vision that medical
treatment should be available to all in their own homes and once he mentioned
the idea to the Countess of Ancaster, she gave her support and became patroness
while he was elected the first president with an organising committee to
administer day to day affairs.
It was envisaged that the scheme could be introduced for the town at an annual
expenditure of £110 with 20 surrounding villages joining later for a further sum
of £130. Then in 1909, the committee was offered a large detached house called
Brooklands, built of red brick and blue slate and situated at the corner of
North Road and Meadowgate, from the estate of the late Joseph Butterfield, to be
devoted to the relief of suffering and, at Alderman Wherry’s suggestion, it was
converted for use as a cottage hospital which opened in 1910 with a ceremony
performed by Lady Ancaster.
In the ensuing years, the nursing service became a valued medical amenity in
Bourne with more than 2,000 home visits a year and continued until the
introduction of the National Health Service in 1948 while the Butterfield
Hospital, as it became known, was in use until as recently as 1983 when it
closed, although the building became a day care centre for the elderly two years
later and is still a much-loved amenity today. |