THE FUNFAIR arrives in Bourne at the end of October every year and it is
easy to imagine the delight in the hearts of hundreds of children awaiting with
eager anticipation their visit to this wonderland of sights and sounds.
English fairs have a long and honoured tradition and have always been associated
with merrymaking. In fact the name fair is derived from the Latin feria
meaning a holiday but their object was a serious one and far removed from the
swings and roundabouts we see today. Fairs meant commerce and as many were
established by the grant of a Royal Charter, the right to hold them became
highly prized.
There is no evidence of such distinguished approval for a fair at Bourne but a
Royal Charter was granted to Baldwin Wake, then Lord of the Manor, by King
Edward I in 1279 enabling him hold a weekly market every Saturday and extract
tolls from those who came to sell their wares. These rights passed to the Cecil
family in 1564 and in recent times were acquired from the Marquess of Exeter by
South Kesteven District Council who continue to hold markets on Thursdays and
Saturdays.
Many fairs however were established in towns during the period between the
Norman Conquest of 1066 and the Black Death in the 14th century but most of them
were cattle fairs although sheep were sometimes involved and other trading was
also carried out. There was one annual fair at Bourne in the Middle Ages but by
1816 the number had risen to three, held on the Thursday nearest to March 7th,
May 6th and October 29th and by the end of the century there were four, held
similarly on April 7th, May 6th, September 30th and October 29th. People came
from long distances to attend, bringing a bustle of activity to a small
community that was absent at normal times, and the shops clustered around the
market place welcomed the additional business. Performers arrived to entertain
visitors and to add to the revelries while the inns and alehouses were filled to
overflowing.
The 18th century brought about changes in the nature of fairs and as the
distribution of goods from manufacturers to the shops became more efficient,
there was less trading as the years progressed and more emphasis on amusements
such as peepshows, rope walkers, freak shows and the first of the rides we know
today, swing boats, merry-go-rounds and the big wheel, which in the absence of
electricity, depended on the treadmill and crank for power.
They eventually became purely pleasure fairs and it was the travelling showmen
who kept them alive, pursuing a nomadic way of life on the fringes of society
but the place they once occupied in our folk heritage has been eroded by the
advent of the cinema, increased mobility, holidays abroad, a wide variety of
recreations and now television and so their arrival in town is no longer the
grand event it once was. Consequently, our attitude towards the travelling fair
varies from indifference to thinly veiled hostility.
Itinerant showmen have been coming to Bourne for centuries and the present fair
operators, Roger Tuby and Sons, have been involved with travelling fairs since
1853. Their October engagement is part of a hectic schedule that lasts from
February to the last week in December and covers a 100-mile radius from their
home base at Doncaster in Yorkshire. Roger Tuby's great grandfather was Alderman
George Thomas Tuby who became one of the most prominent fairground proprietors
in the country. He served for more than thirty years on Doncaster Borough
Council and was mayor from 1921-22. Fairs carrying the Tuby banner now appear in
Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire and have made regular appearances in
Bourne for over 30 years.
Today, the October fair is the only one left in Bourne but has been criticised
as being noisy and disruptive to the everyday life of the town. Almost 100
parking places are lost for five days, access to West Street, North Street and
Crown Walk is impeded by showmen's trucks and caravans resulting in a manic hunt
for somewhere to leave the car. The showmen too have their own problems with
rising running costs, expensive new rides to keep pace with changing fashion and
health and safety rules and regulations that must constantly be addressed.
The travelling fair has for centuries held an affectionate place in our history,
a romance of the road, of moving from town to town and spreading pleasure and
enjoyment in its wake, but such imagery of a living, breathing example of the
mediaeval past is no longer valid.
We must now ask ourselves whether the annual fair has become an anachronism, a
tradition rooted in the past but totally out of keeping with the tempo of life
in Bourne today. No one suggests that the sheep fairs once held in the town
centre should have continued. They have long been driven out by the changing
times and an increasing use of the motor car. Even the weekly market has been
moved off the streets for the past decade in the interests of road safety and
the last circus to visit twenty years ago set up its big top in a field at the
far end of Mill Drove and so we cannot plead that our age-old customs are
sacrosanct. Progress is inevitable and there will be casualties.
The visual textures of our travelling fairs, mostly remembered from childhood,
fade as the years pass but there will always be those who lament their changing
face and wallow in the nostalgia of these attractions as they were but if the
appeal of the candy floss and cake walk are as magical as they insist, then they
will be just as appealing from a meadow on the outskirts as they are on a
cramped and awkward site on a valuable and much needed car park in the middle of
a busy market town. Perhaps the Bourne Chamber of Trade and Commerce is right
and the time has come for our annual fair to be moved. Oh for the eyes of a
child again for we would never see the problems that this transitory but
bewitching world creates. |