Heart of Stone – Written in Court at Abingdon Assizes 1823

Abingdon Assizes
To treat thus a Maiden’s a shame and disgrace;
‘Twas vile to desert her – unfeeling and base;
Yet, what but such conduct could any one hope;
(Not forgiven, I’m sure, would it be by the Pope)
From one, who by evidence clear it is shown,
Was really possessed of THE HEART OF A STONE.

Written in Court at Abingdon Assizes (Abingdon County Hall Sessions Hall) circa 1823, during the trial of a breach of promise of marriage.

Thursday 8 October 2015 is National Poetry Day. The day is a chance to break with the tyranny of prose by sharing poetry with the hashtag #nationalpoetryday.

Abingdon Michaelmas Fair – now and then

Abingdon Michaelmas Fair
Jessica couldn’t get to the fair this year and so she asked me to take a picture of her favourite ride. She remembers it best as Jump ‘n’ Smile. More recently it has been known as Froggit. This year it had been reincarnated as Super Bounce.
Abingdon Michaelmas Fair
I sometimes try to imagine what Abingdon Fair was like in the past with the help of old newspapers … In 1830, instead of Superbowl, you might have seen “an exhibition of wild animals and fat ladies, and elephant and dwarfs, monkeys with hands and a child without any.
Abingdon Michaelmas Fair
Instead of The Waltzers “for  the price of one penny, you could have seen the lying in state and funeral procession of George IVth, and the glorious battle of Paris during the very last revolution.
Abingdon Michaelmas Fair
In 1840 “Our Police Force needed to be vigilant in detecting the hordes of pick-pockets who could be seen in every direction pursuing their vocation.
Abingdon Michaelmas Fair
By 1882 rides had started to replace the shows, and exhibitions, so instead of Captain Hook  you could have experienced “Bailey’s Steam Yachts with the simulated motion of the sea. Three electric lamps stationed outside gave a brilliant light, but they were not seen to best advantage amid the smoke and the blaze of paraffin lamps.
Abingdon Michaelmas Fair
“Birds was the only steam roundabout at the fair , but there was a rickety one in the Sheep Market at which a pony provided the power.”

A wet start to the Fair

A wet start to the Fair
It has been raining all day, but that did not stop people going to the fair. It was just not so crowded as previous years.
A wet start to the Fair
But there were still a lot of fun lovers: many with umbrellas and waterproofs, and quite a few who did did not seem to worry about getting wet on this one day in the year.
A wet start to the Fair
At least being a Street Fair it does not get muddy underfoot
A wet start to the Fair
and you can fly above the rain on some rides.

Maybe tomorrow the weather will be better.

Fair Set Up and Fair Service

Fair Set Up
The Michaelmas Fair in Abingdon was set up in the years following 1349 when Black Death swept the country. Laborers had become scarce and a new law was introduced to regulate wages – to be set at the Michaelmas Quarter Sessions.
Fair Set Up
In Abingdon the annual hiring fair was held on the Monday following Michaelmas and has continued to this day. Its importance as a hiring fair has long since disappered.

There is now a mile long Street Fair stretching from the Market Place to the end of Ock Street – held on the Monday, and Tuesday, before October 11th.
Fair Set Up
2015 is another year, and the Fun Fair was set up this Sunday morning with a lot of hard work and logistical experience.
Fair Set Up
It is the first year that the new Mayott House, independent living scheme, on Ock Street, has experienced the Fair, and for three days it looks like Sunset Strip.
Fair Set Up
There has been a religious service of sorts, at the start of the Michalemas Fair, for a very long time. Mr Woodford, Father and Son, have offered Woodford’s Golden Galloping Horses as a venue in the last few decades.

There was a short service with hymns and a blessing took place this evening at the Galloping Horses. But for family reasons Mr Woodford could not be there and so Hebborns of Oxford helped out with their carousel.
Fair Set Up
Then everybody was given a free ride on the horses.

The service used to be a chance for the town to show their appreciation to the show people. Back in the Abingdon Herald of 14th October 1882 it says “The show people were regaled at the Liberal Hall with a substantial tea, to which over a hundred did justice, and after their bodily wants had been satisfied, addresses, interspersed with hymns, were given.