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Monday, 12 May 2008

Greenwich Fair.


It feels a bit wrong to talk about a May Monday fair on one of the few May Mondays that doesn't have a holiday on it, but that's the way the Christian Moveable Feast crumbles. I almost missed this morning, having forgotten that Pentecost and it's old name Whitsun were one and the same festival, but I noticed just in time to be able to talk about the scandalous Greenwich Fair* that went on for centuries before the authorities closed it down.

This was the day when all of London seemed to flock here. It was a great leveller - toffs would rub shoulders (and heaven knows what else) with their servants, tradesmen with their customers, dockers with muckers, sailors with soldiers, and, of course, the criminal fraternity with practically anyone who didn't have their eye (and one hand) firmly on their valuables.

For the duration of the Fair, anything went. The place teemed with life - and the inhabitants, for the most part, took advantage of it. Houses would open up their front rooms as 'tea shops,' locals would hawk whatever they could to the hoardes of visitors and even the Greenwich Pensioners got in on the act by hiring out their telescopes so that people could 'look at St Paul's Cathedral.' They were, frankly, more interested in ogling the pirates hanging from the gibbets down at Blackwall.

Hawkers, sideshows, wax works, lurid theatrical entertainments - there were booths for anything the partying cockney could want, and as the years went on, the upper classes left them to it more and more.
They could get a tooth pulled or watch a prize fight. They could buy a trinket or dance a quadrille. They could hear a trumpet voluntary or get their fortunes told, watch wild beasts fight or drink a barrel of beer. They could visit Wombwell's Menagerie or any one of the dozens of alehouses on the Thames. They could 'meet' a nice young lady and if they were really getting on, that they could engage in a spot of tumbling together. He could even get himself a Scratcher to tease her with. (no - not some strange marital aid - it was little serrated wheel on a stick which you rolled up and down your victim's back. The noise it made sounded as though you'd ripped their clothes. Hilarious.)

By the Victorian age it was really getting out of hand. Charles Dickens described it as "a sort of spring-rash, a three day fever which cools the blood for six months afterwards." Nathaniel Hawthorne wasn't so charitable. The fair merely reminded him that "the common people of England, I am afraid, have no daily familiarity with even so necessary thing as a washbowl, not to mention a bathing tub."

The 'nicer' people of Greenwich, largely those who were moving into the smart new houses going up during the early 19th Century, agreed with him and started to campaign to get the fair closed down. At first the hawkers, tradesmen - and punters - took absolutely no notice. After the railways arrived, it got even more crowded - 200,000 people and more. The Greenwich elite got even more panicked and eventually, after a riot of drunken soldiers in 1850, the fair was suppressed in 1857.

So as we sit here on a May Monday morning, considering another week at work, have a care for the cockney lad and his lass enjoying one of the few days off they'd get a year...

* There was a fair at Easter and also in October. AD Webster reckons it was on 12th, 13th and 14th May and 11th, 12th and 13th Oct - but I find it hard to imagine that it would have always been on those exact dates.

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5 Comments:

Blogger Benedict said...

Sounds like a right good laugh.
I wonder wether when the Olympics arrive we too will all be renting spare rooms ,turning palours into tea rooms, selling bacon butties from our front yards, offering guided tours round the neighbourhood, and generally cashing in? I suspect some of us will and why not!
I was thinking of renting out my studio as stabling for the Equestrian events being held in front of The Queens House.
Although its more Donkey sized really, are there any Donkey Olympic events?

12 May 2008 10:56  
Blogger The Greenwich Phantom said...

Donkey Derby as an Olympic sport, eh? I like it...

12 May 2008 13:34  
Anonymous kirsty said...

Estimating the Olympics budget turned into a game of 'Pin the Tail on the Donkey' - does that count?

Benedict - you'd probably be better off renting out your studio as a studio (of the TV commentating variety)! Though you would miss out on the free manure...

12 May 2008 15:01  
Blogger Benedict said...

Hmmmm..... Free manure or TV cash,
Thats a hard one?
I think I would plump for the little Donkeys, they are just too cute, like Sparkle and Snowflake at Mudchute farm, or the ones at Blacheath Gate that I always want to take home.
Cash comes and goes but a Donkey is for...... the Olympics!?

12 May 2008 17:57  
Blogger Franklin said...

If the soldiers' riot took place in 1850, why did it take 'em seven years to suppress the fair? And how did they suppress it? And what does that mean, anyway? Did the fair drag on, but without its equal rights? ;-)

13 May 2008 18:23  

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