Showing posts with label Bellingham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bellingham. Show all posts

December 15, 2009

Noble Street kids - Yil het te gan te chorch!

By Dr Clive Dalton

Saturday - day of play
Saturday was the best day of the week for us Noble Street ‘yunguns’ – because there was ‘nee school’ and we were free from the terrors of Jean Milburn in the Juniors, before progressing to Joe Lumley in the seniors. Here you knew that the dreaded 11+ exam would descend upon you and dictate your future, because it meant Grammar School for free, private secondary school paid for by parents, or more of Joe. Nobody, expected us to pass the exam – so most of us confirmed their expectations.

Sunday - day of misery
The only problem with Saturday was that it was followed by Sunday – not seen by us as ‘the day of rest’ but more as a ‘day of misery’, because us laddies knew the mantra that would waft aroond wor lugs all day – ‘New divn’t git yorsels dorty, as yil het te gan te Sunday School, and yill het te gan te church’.

Sunday school was in the morning and church was at some other time decided by mother.

Oh what misery, especially as the other kids in the street I played with like the Benson lads or Billy Little didn’t have to face this. Why had I got to leave the rabbitin, the football or the cricket on the fell behind the houses, and they didn’t? What great benefits would this sacrifice bestow on me, that they would miss oot on? Would the ‘chorchifying’ guarantee that ‘Aad gan up te Heaven’ when I’d much rather ‘gan up Hareshaw Lynn’.

I suppose we were lucky as our parent's Victorian generation were not allowed to play games on Sundays. The lads were not allowed to fish or the girls to knit, and playing cards was a deadly sin. Even whistling in some houses could bring problems from on high!

Drafting into flocks
Walking to church was like sheep being ‘caaed oot’ on to their appropriate hefts on the hill. The Catholics had the longest trek (mornings only for them) to their church on the corner near the Tyne Bridge to hear the good word of Father Delaney.

We Church of Englanders (C of E) headed for the resting place of St Cuthbert carefully guarded by the Black Bull and Fox and Hounds. St Cuthbert’s spirit no doubt rested peacefully because of this as he had been on that spot. The story was that after his death on the Farne Islands, his coffin was carried around by his devotees and where it rested they built a church. They must have had a ‘lang walk te git te Bellingham’. They found a good source of fresh water just by the church which is known as 'Cuddy's well'. To this day it's beautiful water to drink and there to be enjoyed by walkers on the Pennine Way as they pass right by it on their trek.

The Methodists were right in the village, (handy for the public netties) and the Presbyterians had a short hike up the Otterburn road to their church and manse. We all passed each other nodding politely –quietly believing that ‘wor lot’ was better than their lot.

Mixing breeds
We Anglican lot had a bit of affinity with the Presbyterians as they took communion once a quarter, and we were qualified to join them. But there was less affinity between us and the Methodists where any thought of suppin wine at a communion was out of all bounds for them.

Years later our Anglican minister in Leeds told my wife and I that if we used a Methodist Godmother for our son’s christening (who was his aunt), the minister wouldn’t answer for wor lad at the final Day of Judgement! He lost our business after that daftness.

We never worked out what came over the poor sowl. We worshipped in an old tin hut and when the new church and C of E school was built he changed and wanted to go ‘High Church’ and wanted to start confession like the Catholics. I felt sorry for him and he left soon after to go back to missionary work ‘doon sooth’ from where he came. He was a canny lad for a suthenor!

Oh and the other rule he brought in was that you couldn't send your bairns to the new C of E primary school if you were not a 'practicing communicant'. We sent our son to the council school.

Beware of the Catholics
The biggest danger for us Anglicans (and maybe any other church lot in the village as far as I can remember) was to get mixed up with the Catholics! Complete isolation was the safest policy in the village in those days. I have a faint memory that wor lot could have taken mass in the Catholic church, but nobody in my day would ever have dared risk sampling Father Delaney's brew.

It’s hilarious today to see the Pope now having opened his gate to dis-satisfied Anglicans and the farcical antics of the British Anglicans over women clergy and dare I mention - gay clergy. It's hard to believe at times that this is the 21st Century.

Sunday School
For us C of E bairns, Sunday school was held at 10am in the Reeds School, and I considered it an absolute agony going back there on a Sunday, as Monday to Friday was enough for any laddie. We had a woman teacher (Miss Turnbull I think) and her good work was regularly supplemented by the appearance of the Rev (later to be Canon) W.J (Daddy) Flower himself, when his other Sunday duties allowed. Who named him Daddy would have been interesting to know as you couldn't call him a 'father figure' and they had no children.

St Cuthbert's church Sunday School 1935?
Daddy Flower far right

The parish was officially ‘Bellingham and Corsenside’ (in Woodburn) so Daddy had a fairly busy day on most Sundays. When he visited the ordinary Reeds school classes (which he did regularly), one of his favourite lessons was the story about tea picking in Ceylon as he’d served there during his naval service.

He’d bring a bit of privet hedge along, as it was the nearest he could find to the tea plant, and show us how the pickers plucked out the very top leaves and threw them over their shoulder into a basked on their back.

Stories
Sunday school meant that our young lugs were bashed with concepts far above ‘wor heeds’ like what sinners we were (which we knew from many other sources too), why Jesus suffered death on the cross for wor sins, and what we had to do to fix the situation (‘repent’ - which we didn’t really understand). Then there was the Holy Spirit who could help us oot, but he always seemed a hard man te git a howld on!

Christmas
The Christmas story was good as it was associated with Santa, and I knew plenty good shepherds who came to the marts although most would not have been attracted by a star in the East – but more like the light above the Railway Hotel door!

We had to turn out at midnight for a service and communion for this celebration. The big bonus was when Christmas day fell on a Sunday - yipee a double banger so no extra church during the week!

Easter
Easter was a very confusing time for kids with all its grief of the death of Jesus and then his return (at any time like the thief in the night) to save us. Then IF we got to heaven, we’d be sorted into sheep and goats (which I knew a lot aboot) so we’d better behave worsels and keep confessin wor sins! Whew - it was heavy stuff for young heeds.

The bad news about Easter was that there were services on Good Friday that we had to attend. We only had one day's play between more church. But the good news was that it was the end of Lent and the end of official fasting - whatever you had decided to give up for Lent.

In our case - mother encouraged us to give up sweets or chocolate, which was not a great sacrifice as we'd got used to going without these during the war. But the feast at the end of Lent was worth it, even if feeling a bit sick was the result.

Noah and mucking oot
I liked the story of Noah and his ark imagining him getting all the animals in there and tied up. I could appreciate his problem, knowing what it was like in a byre when cows got into the wrong stalls. And then I wondered how he mucked them oot each morning, as spending so much time at Dove Cottage I knew it was no easy job hoyin muck high on to the midden each morning with a shovel. But then all Noah had to do was to hoy the muck ower the side of the ark inte the watta! I thought that would have been handy, but then he'd have nee muck left to spread on his hayfields when the rain stopped.

Adam and Eve
This was a canny story but then you dare not look too close at their pictures 'wi nee claes on' and in any case the bits you really wanted to see where covered in leaves! We all knew about 'forbidden fruit' thanks to a bloke called Hitler who cut off our supplies so we were never tempted.

Joseph and his coat
We could all identify with the story of Joseph and his coat of many colours as we all had jerseys like that, made by our mothers during the war from all the odd bits of wool left over from various jobs. We were all good knitters too making blanket squares for the soldiers and scarves.

Recognition for good attendance
The only tangible benefit most of us saw from suffering Sunday school was a new book at the end of the year for our good attendance. Our parents didn’t buy us books as there was no money for such things so our Sunday school books were very precious,

I was not a great reader, but I well remember receiving and reading many times ‘Treasure Island’ and ‘Black Beauty’ that I got at Sunday school. Always in the front was a little label with St Cuthbert’s Parish Church Sunday school and your name and ‘Presented by Rev W.J.Flower for good attendance’.

Trip to Whitley Bay
But the real ‘Big Deal’ form Sunday school was the annual trip to Whitley Bay on a bus. “The Spanish City” with all it’s roond-aboots and staalls begging for wor money – oh what sins that could have entered on wor slates.

Mrs Mary Mitchell of the Black Bull, (our church organist when needed and often the only member of the choir), always went with us to Whitley Bay- accompanied by her accordion. This alone was worth the trip, as some of her antics on the way home playing while dancing up and down the aisle of the bus, hyping up us bairns was unforgettable. We loved her.

Daddy always smiled politely at Mary’s antics, but certainly not Mrs Flower who had a face like thunder! It would have done her the world of good to have hiked her skirts up and joined in – and who was to know she wasn’t craving to do just this!

Tommy Breckons – the Good Shepherd
My old friend and great Northumbrian Tommy Breckons of the Foundry Farm in Bellingham, sadly now passed on, had this story told about him when he attended Sunday school as a wee laddie.

The tale goes that young Tommy was asked by the teacher – ‘why the Good Shepherd had left the ninety and nine sheep in his flock, to go and seek that which was lost’? Tommy replied that ‘Well - it was probably the only tup he had’!

Confirmation
But things got worse for a growing laddie who had things to do at weekends. In my case from age seven I couldn’t wait to go to Jimmy and Helen Wood’s little farm at Dove Cottage at Reedsmouth. I biked there and also went on the train and could have lived there all weekend – sometimes I was allowed to. They were like extra parents to me as they lived next to us in Noble Street when first married and before getting the Dove Cottage tenancy from Robbie Allen.

At Dove Cottage there was muck to spread, the cow and goat to be milked, and hay to be made – all in my view far more essential events than ‘ganin te chorch’ to be harangued about what sinners we were and to ‘git riddy for the next woorld! But in mother’s views – ye had teg an te chorch and that was the end of it.

At around age 12-13 I think, Daddy Flower came around (always in time for a cup of tea and rock buns) and suggested that it was time I started ‘Confirmation Classes’ so I could be ‘confirmed’ and then be allowed to take ‘Holy Communion”.

Mothers were the decision makers on religious issues in most houses, as fathers were usually fairly reluctant churchgoers, and were generally ‘oot’ on essential business like tending their leeks when the vicar called.

Hareshaw Head village hall
I had to suffer confirmation classes at Hareshaw Head on a Sunday afternoon in the little corrugated village hall there. My Reeds schoolmate Kenneth Pick was another candidate, and as Ken couldn’t get to Bellingham on a Sunday as there was no school car, Daddy Flower collected me and we’d take off in his little blue Standard 10 car for Hareshaw.

Ken and I must have had half a dozen of these weekly classes, confirming that we were little sinners, for ever in need of repentance, and going through a little red book that we had to keep and use regularly thereafter, to guide our prayers before we were ‘ready’ for the Bishop of Newcastle to ‘lay his hands on wor heeds’ and give us his blessing, and allow us to take communion. This book then had to be our lifelong companion.

I had to get cleaned up for these classes and couldn’t just ‘gan in me aad play claes’ – so that was more agony, especially if I had to leave a game we were in the middle of.

Falstone church
Confirmation took place in Falstone's St Peter's Church of England, and I remember mother and I having to get there on Norman’s bus. Ken and I were there in ‘wor Sunday claes’ along with lasses that we’d never seen before from other parishes in white dresses. We had afternoon tea in the church hall, which I thought was the best bit of day. Then back home on the bus back to Bellingham.

But what I didn't appreciate at the time was that being confirmed made Sundays even worse, as the decision had to be made about which Communion to go to. Each week, Daddy Flower before he started the sermon would read out the ‘announcements’ from the pulpit.

There was a range of these, starting with the passing of a parishioner where - ‘We have heard with great regret of the passing of Mrs So and So, and passing on all our sympathies to the family.

Then there was reading the bans of marriage at the morning service –‘Where if any of ye had any cause or just intent why these two etc etc’.

Then there were other events like meetings of the Mother’s Union in the Rectory. Finally we were told about who the collections would be for next Sunday.

Communions - which to go to?
I was always depressed by this announcement:

‘There will be celebrations of the Holy Communion on Sunday next at 7 o’clock, 8 o’clock and at the 11 o’clock service’.

The reason was the decision about which one ‘te gan te’. Thank goodness you were only allowed to take the bread and wine once on a Sunday. Somebody in the Anglican church, presumably guided by higher authority must have been keen to prevent us becoming alcoholics!

Getting up early for the seven and eight-o-clock session was never a good option on a Sunday, yet it was a way of getting it over with so you had a clear day ahead to play. But then you were reminded that going to Communion didn’t absolve you from the other services of ‘Matins’ (11am) or ‘Evensong’ (6pm).

The worst deal was to go to the morning service and then discover that it was communion as well – and you felt that you had to stay and participate in full. You had to be fairly brave to walk out before the communion started unless you had taken communion earlier – because you knew that ‘God knew of your every move’. Communion at Matins really did stuff up your morning, as it lengthened the hour’s service to an hour and a half. Such valuable time wasted was my view.

How much to mix
We used to laugh at this, and there were other vicars up the valley apparently that were even better at it than Daddy. What they had to do was to look around the congregation and do a mental calculation of how much of the communion wine and water to mix to serve the numbers present.

But they were masters at just underestimating this and running out before the last row. So they had to mix some more, and for this mix they always overestimated, and of course they couldn’t pour this consecrated mix doon the drain. They had to ‘knock it back’ before the alter before God, and it was easy to tell how generous they’d been by the length of their swig! You could tell this from the vibrations of their Adam's apple - nee doot Adam would have approved.

Sermons
Pulpits and lecterns have always fascinated me as a place to demonstrate power over fellow beings. Sometimes in the empty church, I’d sneak up into the pulpit and have a quick look down on the pews.

What an impressive feeling it gave you ‘looking doon’ on your audience – I felt the power, even an empty church! I could easily have ‘borst forth’ haranguing the sinners sitting before me, threatening with hell’s fires unless they behaved and confessed their sins!

Maybe this was the job for me – I knew aboot sheep and what a good shepherd had to do. Sheep were my favourite animal and playing auctioneers was a game I regularly played. Great qualifications I thought for herding a parish! As we used to joke - in the human flock 'the tups stay oot aall year roond'.

But I never dared stay long in the pulpit or try out my voice incase I got ‘copped’. The mind boggles over the feeling of power you must get high up in the pulpit of a mighty Cathedral and a full hoose. The other funny thing about raised pulpits is that they seem to make folk speak in that great pontificating sing-song voice that bishops and archbishops seem to develop. That muckle eagle that often fronts the pulpit lectern may add to their feeling of superiority when speaking on behalf of God.

I liked the few lay preachers that came never addressed us from the pulpit and spoke to us from floor level. It gave us all a more comforting feeling and usually you could understand their message.

‘May the words of my lips ….’
As we gave voice to the last verse of the hymn, and Daddy mounted the few stairs to the pulpit, took out and fitted his ‘pince-nez’ specs on his nose, my only thoughts were – how long will be going for this time.

We stood for the initial salutation - ‘May the words of my lips and the meditations of all our hearts, be always acceptable unto thee etc etc, before parking our backsides on the hard varnished pine pews - often as cold as charity on a winter's night, if you weren't lucky enough to get into the pew first and get beside the scalding hot pipes by the wall. 'Gentlemen' never went first into the pew!

Some of the pews had cushions but you had to be very careful that you got into your ‘right pew’! From olden days certain families paid for ‘their pew’ as a means of financing the church, and there was a little bit of that left in our day. You certainly never sat into the pew Mrs Flower sat in! She would have glowered you out of the church.

The collects
Then we had the ‘Collects’ – (pronounced ‘col-lects’ ). The ‘Collect for the day’ is usually the prayer proper to the Sunday of the current week. However, the Collect of a Principal Feast, other Principal Holy Day or Festival always takes precedence over the Sunday Collect and becomes the Collect of the day. When a Lesser Festival falls on a weekday its Collect may be used in place of the Sunday Collect. (Mr Google told me that).

The Text for the day
Then we’d have the appropriate ‘text for the day’, which Daddy read to us twice for maximum emphasis. My old memory still remembers what must have been Daddy’s favourite text, as we seemed to have it often, or it’s hard wired into my old brain:

‘And He will come like a thief in the night, He will come like a thief in the night’!

This was a serious warning to us to be prepared, and not take any risks with our sins as we ‘cud git catched oot’ when our Redeemer came back to save us – IF we had been behaving like sheep and were worth saving, and had not acting like goats! I knew a lot about the behaviour of both these animals so the message was always clear.

Then away we’d go – my mind on the long wander, occasionally lapsing back to what Daddy was saying, now and again taking a sly look at the watch, then back to looking around the stone roof wondering how on earth they built those stone arches and got the stone slabs on the roof to stop the reivers' fires.

There was the old church’s history to ponder, the flaking paint, the stained glass windows and those families who had paid for some of them, the joints, knots and grain in the wood of the pews, anything to pass the time waiting for the magic words which signalled that maybe the end of my agony was nigh. And there was always the mystery of the ‘Lang Pack’ to ponder as the stone coffin lay outside by the church door. What was in it now - old bones or dust?

It was all too easy to nod off taking great lunges forward before you came to, or your head would fall back creaking your neck. The biggest fear was to start snoring – as some of the older gentlemen members of the congregation sometimes did before some kind wife would dig them in the ribs. This had to be done carefully otherwise they’d awaken with a muckle snort like an old bull or their lurch upright could break wind!

‘And finally dear brethen..’
You waited with baited breath to hear Daddy say these magic words – ‘And finally dear brethren’! It was a sign that he was coming to an end. It was his last big point to make before my release.

But it was a trick, and one I have used over the years –thinking of Daddy whenever I did. It’s a ‘sucker punch’ as you can see the poor sufferers at your feet visibly suddenly brighten up in anticipation of you finally relieving them of their agony. But it’s NOT over!

Daddy wasn’t going to end there. He would get going again, supposedly to summarise his message, except that the summary would introduce new issues, and further warnings about ‘the thief in the night’. He’d try another ‘And finally dear brethren’– but he had worked out that a third was too much.

‘And now to God the Father…..’
Oh those magic words – still imprinted on my old memory. It was when Daddy finally gathered up his notes, took off his specs and put them in their well-worn case, turned to the alter and out came those magic words:

‘And now to God the father, God the son and God the Holy Spirit, be as is most justly due, all glory, might, majesty, dominion and power, now and for ever more. Amen.

It was over, and I had to be very careful not to be the first to leap to my feet, as I was so keen to get out of there. Wonderful – I’d be home after the next hymn, the collection and the blessing.

Brownrigg Camp School
Brownrigg school was in its hey day in the 1950s and the pupils used to go to their appropriate churches in the village – probably under threat. The Anglicans came to St Cuthberts, sitting in the back pews behind Mrs Flower, and the poor beggars used to get bored during the sermon and started whispering and yakking quietly to each other. Then a bit of pushing and grabbing developed to help pass the boredom and Daddy's words where at risk of being drooned oot.

Some of the old stalwarts in the congregation would turn around and give them a ‘glower’ hoping they would get the message and shut up, but on occasions – Daddy had to reprimand them from the pulpit! He didn’t realise they were maybe getting fed up with his interpretation of God’s word! He didn't realise the best thing he could have done was to 'give ower'.

How may times?
The question I used to wonder about frequently, but never dared ask anyone for an answer was – how many times did I need ‘te gan te chorch te be safe from etornal damnation’?

It seemed to me that the Catholic kids in our street (The Weltons) had it made. They only had one morning service each week, and got their slates cleaned for the following week – no problem. If I’d gone to all the possible services on a Sunday – would that have guaranteed me freedom from this sinful life I was leading, and the very high risk of endin up in hell?

How come the Presbyterians only had to take Communion once a quarter and I had ‘te gan ivry week? I never debated religion with my parents, nor with anyone else either. It was not done in those days. I wanted to know what was the least I could get away with to balance playtime with keeping a clean record for the next world! I should have asked Daddy at our Hareshaw meetings – imagine that.

Blowing the organ
At about age 12 I think, I was asked to blow the organ – for pay! But this meant going to both morning and evening services – and listening to even more sermons.

Along the side of the organ was a narrow passage with a solid wooden handle sticking out of side. This had to be pumped up and down to work bellows on the inside, and your guide was a little metal weight which slid down the wall on a string, which must have some how been attached to the bellows.

There was a mark on the wood to show ‘full’ (at the top of its range) and one to show ‘empty’ (at the bottom). Empty meant no air so no music, and you’d hear the organist in a loud whisper saying – ‘Blow Clive Blow’.

These marks kept changing because as the string came out of a wooden hole in the side of the organ, after a time it wore thin and would break, having to be shortened.

When you heard Daddy announce a hymn, you started pumping like mad to build up a head of wind before the first verse. You could have short breaks during the playing as the slide slowly fell, but it was unwise to let the weight get down below half way, just incase there was a sudden demand for air in the music.

So hymns like ‘Onward Christian Soldiers’ were hard work compared to ‘There is a green hill far away’. ‘Jerusalem’ generated a sweat! You had to know the service well, as wind was needed in small bursts for all the responses, and it was easy to nod off when there was not a lot of action. The air also slowly leaked from the bellows so you couldn’t rely on your past pumping staying in storage.

During the sermon you could come out and sit in the pew opposite the pulpit (and be watched so had to behave), rather than perch on the hard stool, hidden in the cubby-hole. You had to stand to pump and could only sneak an occasional quick sit on the hard stool while watching the metal weight move up as air was used up. For it to drop you had to pump!

Log of past blowers
The wooden side of the organ held a wonderful log of past organ blowers, as in moments of idleness, and secure in the fact that nobody could see, it was essential to write your name for posterity.

My name is still there a friend told me some years ago when they went to check! How wonderful – I hope it scores me some points when the sheep and goats are drafted! I remember older lads like John Howarth, Aynsley Glass, Fenwick Daly and my brother Geoff having their names engraved in pencil on the soft pine.

Collecting my pay
To do this I had to go to the rectory at an appointed time, met at the door by Mrs Flower or the maid, and shown into a small side room where we’d sit down at a small table and Daddy would get out a little note book with a red cover.

In it he had recorded each time I had blown the organ and the fee of I think a few shillings for each job. I was paid on a quarterly basis so after signing on the final page beside the massive grand total which he had added up, I proudly ran home with a small fortune of a few quid to show for my labours.

Organists
Tommy Hedley was a regular organist at Evensong while Jean Milburn generally played at Matins. It suited Tommy’s schedule because after church Tommy he was regular pianist at the Black Bull around the corner till hoyin oot time at 10pm.

Tommy had another trick - after the slow semi-solum music played as the congregation filed out of the church, after he had a bit keek around the curtain to see they had all gone, he was a demon for letting strip with a piece of air-guzzling Mozart which you had to be prepared for. I think he was warming up before the Black Bull session.

Mrs Mitchell (landlord at the Black Bull) was also an accomplished organist, and when she wasn’t playing, she was often the only member of the choir! She read the music as she sang – the remaining few in the choir couldn’t do that! She loved to get into a high note that echoed through the ancient roof.

During the sermon the organist always sat in the pew directly below the pulpit and facing back to the organ rather than the alter. Tommy Hedley being a farmer at the Demesne loved the Harvest Festivals, as the pulpit was always surrounded by sheaves of oats – probably donated by him.

He spent the time during the sermon selecting grains, removing the chaff and chewing the grain. Tommy knew what a decent ‘pickle’ was – a good fat grain. He really gave the organ full bore when he got back to play ‘We plough the fields and scatter’ and he knew the great feeling of satisfaction when ‘All was safely gathered in –ere the winter storms begin’.

For those in peril on the sea
 With Daddy Flower being ex Royal Navy (he always had a small anchor embroidered on his stoll) we knew that if it was a really clarty rough winter’s night, we’d launch into the sailor’s hymn of ‘Eternal Father strong to save’ with great gusto. We'd build up great gusto on the 'Oh hear us when we cry to thee' and slowy come back down to earth on the 'for those in peril on the sea'. A great hymn without doubt, and one to give the organ blower a decent work out.

And of course during the prayers, we always prayed for ‘Those who went down to the sea in ships and occupied their business in great waters’, after we did the Royal Family. No wonder the Queens have been long livers – with all the praying I said for them.

Tolling the bell
As well as blowing the organ, there was also the bell to toll. This was a tricky job, as pulling the long thick rope had to be done with a sharp click so the hammer hit the side of the bell and didn’t just move in sync with it, as there’d be no ring. You hadn’t to let the rope go free but keep it under tension between pulls.

It was a good feeling hammering the old bell that had been up there for a few hundred years. If you got the tolling wrong, everyone in the village heard your stops and starts.

Reading the lesson
I was never allowed to read the lesson as Joe Lumley had the job sewn up. He always did it well too. But I did fancy the job and remember doing it maybe twice. It paid you to know which were the lessons for that Sunday and have a practice beforehand as you could easily have been 'catched oot' by a biblical name that got you tongue tied.

Taking the collection
After a great deal of fund raising (I forget where from now), the organ got an electric motor so there was no more manual handle cranking. This cut my income but I wasn’t worried as it freed me from regular attendance.

I was then asked to take the collection, either by myself it there was a small attendance or with a partner if we had a ‘full hoose’ which only happened at special festivals. The turned and carved oak platters had a tiny bit of felt in the bottom so the coins landed quietly - good for anyone who had hoyed in a handful of pennies instead of half a crown!

The platters were first handed to the person at the end of the row and they passed it along the row to the next one before its return. You hadn’t to watch how much money folk put on the plate.

After the collection you then took it up to the alter rails, handed it to Daddy and he turned around and held it up high before the alter till presumably God added it up to see if we’d been miserable or generous. You then had to turn around, making sure you didn’t trip down the two steps on your way back to your pew to finish off the hymn.

The choir
You could hardly call it a choir - at best 2-3 of us, struggling to give the impression that we could sing. Daddy had a nice tenor voice and so did Joe Lumley when he was there. Singing was abou the only thing he taught us - but to be fair he did make sure we knew the ten commandments.

Mary Mitchell was a choir on her own, and she loved getting stuck into the high notes and hearing her voice echo through the ancient stone arches of the roof. All I really did was to fill a space, as I sat in the corner seat so could hide from the main congregation.

The Psalms
Hymns were good as they had rhythm, and even if Daddy sprung an unfamiliar one on us, after a few faltering verses we could usually get the hang of it.

But the psalms could be killers, especially if there were only a couple of us in the choir. Daddy must have known this as on such occasions he would declare that we would 'say' the psalm. He he would read one line and we would all read the next. A great idea that in my view should have been standard practice.

What made it hard was having to 'hing on' to one note, while gabbling a whole screed of words before dropping down or rising up to end - and then gasping for air to recover. Mind you this is a skill I still have, and entertain religious friends by singing them a newspaper column and even the ads to a psalm tune.

Good morning’ - Good Evening’ and gone!
The climax was to see Daddy come down from the alter after blessing us and proceed to the door to bid us ‘good morning’ or ‘good evening’ with his very pleasant smile.

I had to make sure I didn’t break into a run until I got past the Town Hall, so as not to show how serious I was te git back inte me aad claes with time to make up before dark!

It was school the next day and back to more regular sinning with Joe Lumley's strap acting on God's behalf to make us good little members of the Church of England.

Pilgrimage to Lindisfarne (Holy Island)
Daddy Flower must have had the idea to give our faith a ' rev up' and organised a Parish bus trip to Lindisfarne - which I thought would be a trip to the seaside like Whitley Bay. There was plenty sea and sand around Holy Island. That was a big mistake as I had underestimated what the word 'pilgrimage' meant, and should have sensed trouble as no buckets and spades were allowed.

We set off with a full bus load from Bellingham and when we got to Beal we de-bussed and after removing shoes and socks to expose our lilly white feet, we set off across the causeway as the tide was out. This must have been well planned. When we got to the island, with footwear back on again, we set off in a long procession with Daddy leading us in his vicar's garb. I can't remember if Mrs Flower was there but I'm sure she would be. It was quite a hike on the road through the village and on to the priory.

This is where I hit trouble, because as we passed one of the big houses (a boarding house), out of the front door came my favourite Aunt Martha and cousins Mary and Chrissie from Winlaton who were having a holiday there. They must have gone to the door to see what all the commotion was. I wanted to leave the throng and stay with them - but no, I had to continue in the procession with mother.

We finally assembled in the ruin of the priory and oh man, the service went on for hours - with no seats, just standing all the time on the grass. There was clergy of all ranks who had to make a long speel - there seemed to be no end to it.

Thinking back now the place was full so there must have been more than us Bellingham folk there. It was the pits for a laddie, to be so near all that sea and sand and not be allowed to 'gan and play'.

All these years later, I can't remember how we got back to the mainland. Maybe we hiked but we could also have paid for one of the ancient rusty taxis that would travel with the water up to the door steps when the tide was not fully out. Their exhausts were all eaten away with the salt water so sounded like tractors.

Mother and I did go back to have a holiday in later years with my aunt and cousins, and they were memorable days with fresh seafood always on the menu. I made sure we didn't spend much time in the priory.

A rare gathering
Daddy's wife was the sister of our local Dr Kirk's wife and this photo, found by Carole Durix is of the Kirk's daughter Pauline's 21st birthday.  Daddy Flower was Carole's grandmother's young half brother.

L to R.  Daddy flower with cigarette, ?. Dr Clements (Kirk's partner and much preferred by all of us to Kirk).  The rest of the ladies unknown.  Seated Dr Kirk, daughter Pauline, Mrs Kirk.


Photo provided by Carole Durix - a great

November 19, 2009

North Tyne community is booming on the Web

Well, to be fair I knew they were - Google Analytics gives me a lovely picture of the woolshed1 blog heading up and down the valley from time to time.

But here's a few other cracking little websites that came to me via the Bellingham Heritage Centre.

Bellingham and District Trade and Tourism Association http://bdtta.co.uk/










The Northumberland Naturalist, Emma Anderson of Redesdale's wonderful wildlife photography blog http://northumberlandnaturalist.blogspot.com/

Bellingham Bulletin - a North Tyne 'must read'

I got my hands on a copy of this email newsletter put together by the North Tyne and Redesdale Community Partnership. Cracking read to catch up on what is going on in the neighbourhood.

You can get your copy by emailing adminbct@btconnect.com or phoning Rachel on 220714

September 26, 2009

Northumberland Border Shows - Bellingham and Falstone 2009

North Tyne Agricultural Shows

The Agricultural Show has been a highlight of Northumberland village life for well over 100 years, and two of the best examples of these events in the county are the Bellingham Show and the Falstone Border Shepherd's Show.

Village folk used to plan and record events as happening before or after 'The Show"! If you couldn't recall the actual date of an event, then the show was the best reference point that everyone could relate to.

These events have changed dramatically over the years as society has changed, and to many 'owld folk', the modern shows are nothing like the events of the past when there were more folk, more animals and a greater diversity of events.

But the shows are still a great valley event enjoyed by many, and Don Clegg's photos from the 2009 shows are testimony to this.

More about Bellingham Show can be found on:

http://woolshed1.blogspot.com/2008/12/bellingham-show-by-clive-dalton-part-1.html
http://woolshed1.blogspot.com/2008/12/bellingham-show-by-clive-dalton-part-2.html

Slideshow of Bellingham Show
by Don Clegg





Slideshow of Falstone Show by Don Clegg




Other Good Show resources on the web

Falstone Show: http://www.falstoneshow.co.uk/

Bellingham Show: http://www.bellinghamshow.com/

Good website with background about Bellingham: http://communities.northumberland.gov.uk/Bellingham.htm

The photos on that website are here http://communities.northumberland.gov.uk/Bellingham.htm

Another blog that talks about the show is: http://blog.tarset.co.uk/2009/08/falstone-show-what-day.html

The Northumberland local government communities website with background about Falstone has a few show references: http://communities.northumberland.gov.uk/Falstone.htm with lots of great pictures under the picture link here http://communities.northumberland.gov.uk/Falstone_C4.htm

August 31, 2009

The Last Sheep Sale at Bellingham Mart

New Video and Book Launched at 2009 Bellingham Show

The Bellingham Heritage Centre launched their first DVD The Last Sheep Sale, about the former Bellingham Mart, at the 2009 Bellingham Show.

Bellingham Mart closed in 2004.

The DVD has been produced through the co-operation and sponsorship of the Northumberland National Park Authority, and a donation from Hexham and Northern Marts.

The DVD will be on sale at £12.99. Postage and packing extra.




DVD review by Clive Dalton
For a former 'village laddie' who couldn't wait for mart day to be part of the action, the DVD is a magic journey back into Northumbrian farming and social history.

To anyone interested in the traditions and history of Northumberland, and to relive the great gatherings of sheep and country folk from both sides of the Border and beyond, this DVD is essential viewing. To many it's guaranteed to bring a tear to the eye.

Collier's old historical photos of farming and local folk set the scene so well, and veteran auctioneer Maurice Reed gives a great account of how marketing the thousands of sheep sold at Bellingham for over a century, developed through the ups and downs of farming. Bellingham was clearly the hub of a massive agricultural business.

Northumberland has always farmed record sheep numbers and the DVD highlights so well, the pride farmers and shepherds took in their presentation for sale.

It was wonderful to see the DVD dedication to the late Matthew (Potter) Wood, and to hear him talking about what he liked in a sheep. Potter was an icon of Northumbrian sheep farming and a master of their preparation for show or sale. His comments are priceless.

The last mart at Bellingham may have gone, but you can still be there, and even maybe get a last bid in on the Brieredge gimmers by watching this great video. The music by another great Northumbrian Harry Pearson, goes well with the wonderful atmosphere created by the auctioneers' patter, folk having a crack leaning on the pens, or struggling to carry their pies and peas to an empty space at the cafe table.

You'll also hear the wonderful sound of the real Northumbrian dialect, and you can admire the shepherds' beautifully-crafted 'mart sticks'. Everyone involved in the DVD production needs to be congratulated on 'a grrand job weel dun'. The DVD should be on the shelf of everyone who has had any association with Northumberland.



Helen Brown, shepherd and photographer from Tarset, has also launched her new book of photographs The Last Mart. It is over 80 pages with 200+ photographs and a must-have reference book for future generations.

You can buy it from the innovative online publishing company blurb.com here: http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/806982 for only 17GBP in softcover or a special presentation hardcover at only 25GBP.


Book review by Clive Dalton
The book is brilliant - and it's a 'must buy' for anyone with connections or an interest in Northumberland, marts, sheep, shepherds, country folk, and a wonderful but sadly long-gone way of life. It's photo journalism at its best.

Helen Brown has gone to great effort to name the folk in most of the shots, and that alone is important agricultural history for those who follow. The fact that she got lifted up in a bucket to get the panorama views among the 190 pictures in the book, shows her dedication to the mighty task of documenting the event.

Every picture is a gem - you can almost smell the sheep and hear the crack going on in the photos! As a shepherd and a skilled photographer, Helen was the person for the job, as she has added so much extra information such as the prices various lots made and which farm they were from.

After over 100 years, Bellingham mart has maybe gone for ever but Helen Brown's book has 'given hor a grrand sendoff'!


Daft Laddies book (Clive Dalton and Don Clegg)
Our own Daft Laddies tale of the Bellingham mart (on this blog) can be found here.

May 7, 2009

Northumberland. Bellingham photographer: Walter Percy Collier

Photographer: W.P. Collier

By Dr Clive Dalton

A wonderful self portrait of W.P. Collier made into a post card. The halfpenny stamp clearly shows it was received at the Post Office at 4.15pm on 1 August, Year ??

Walter Percy Collier was born in Newcastle in 1875, and moved to Liverpool after his father's death in 1891 where he lived with the younger of his two sisters. He then went back to Newcastle to work for the industrial photographer, Harry Ord Thompson. After his wife died in 1910 Walter went to set up a photographic business in Bellingham around 1913, serving the last year of the war in 1914 as an aerial photographer with the Royal Flying Corps.

Postcards were very popular between 1900-1935 as a means of keeping in touch, and then as collectors’ items, and Collier was able to base his business on this, travelling around the county with his large camera on his back, and tripod fastened on the back of his Raleigh motor bike. He had a great interest in the wide open spaces and farms of the North Tyne, Rede valley and the Coquet, all within reach of his shop in Lock-up Lane in Bellingham, which also sold, sweets, chocolate, writing paper, tobacco and cigarettes.

Collier's original shop sign

He did some wedding photos and groups, but preferred rural scenes including local people. He took sample photo albums around with him calling in at local shops, and he then delivered orders on his motorbike in all weathers.


Information from Edie Lyons of Bellingham who worked for W.P. Collier in the introduction to ‘Northumbrian Heritage, 1912-1937. The photographs of W.P.Collier of Bellingham. Selected by S.F. Owen’. 1996. Keepdate Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-899506-25-X.






The companion book is ‘North Tyne Traveller, 1912-1937. The photographs of W.P.Collier of Bellingham. Selected by S.F. Owen’. 1998. Keepdate Publishing Ltd. No ISBN number.



The Bellingham Heritage Centre holds the Collier collection of photos and has a permanent display of his work, including a reconstruction of his shop and an exhibition of photographs. Some photos can be accessed via their website www.bellingham-heritage.org.uk.

Collier’s photos can be identified by their clarity, and those printed as postcards usually carried the caption on the bottom in his characteristic backhand hand writing with an identifcation number. His business closed around the start of the 1939 war.

April 21, 2009

Bill Charlton: Bellingham ladies c 1954

I think the photo was taken in the Bellingham Black Bull around 1954 - and judging by their dress, it was after a fairly formal gathering or meeting, and not a night out! What Adam Dodd was doing as the sole male among them is intriguing. Adam served as a postman in Bellingham for many years along with Billy Beattie.

Photographer:  It would have been nice to know who the photographer was, as he/she certainly knew their job as the group is professionally composed. 

Back Row (L to R): Ellen Daley, Doreen Appleton, Mary Basford, Adam Dodd, Mrs Norman, Kathleen Thompson, Unknown.

Seated (L to R): Violet Robson, Gertie Hardy, Mrs Oliver, Ursula Davidson.

Help! We would like to know who the person is we could not name.

March 20, 2009

North Tyne memories: Bellingham bairns - Reed's school kids

North Tyne memories: Bellingham bairns - Reed's school kids


By Dr Clive Dalton


These historic pictures of the kids at the Reed's school exist because in Bellingham, North Tyne, there was an early photographic pioneer called W.P Collier. He was a man who clearly had an eye for 'news', and could predict which photos would sell as postcards in his village shop in Lockup Lane. Today he would be called a 'photojournalist' who knew where to go for a good story, and then take pictures to tell it, without any words other than a caption.

To do this he traveled widely up the Tyne, the Rede and the Coquet valleys - and beyond on his motorbike over rough roads. The mahogany and brass cameras of the time were massive, and they used heavy glass plate negatives which needed a solid wooden tripod for stability. What a great effort that must have been. Imagine what he could have collected with a modern digital camera in his pocket. You can tell from the clarity of his photos that they were taken on very large negatives.

His photographs of farming and the railway are especially valuable,(now lodged in the Bellingham Heritage Centre) but he obviously was called in regularly by the headmaster at the Reed's School, and by the vicar at St Cuthbert's church next door to snap the infants' classes and the Sunday School.

These photos are wonderful records of history, and fortunately there are enough class members still alive with good memories to be able to put names to faces. All of us old Reed's School kids need to pay tribute to WPC. When I started Reed's School in 1939, Mr Collier must have retired as we never had our photos taken. In any case the war had started.

If you can name any of the unknown kids, or make any corrections, then let me know.


Reed's School 1935
Back row (L to R): Goodwin Armstrong, Jim Bell, Ian Scott, Fenwick Daley, Tommy Thompson, Doney Burns, Billy Lamb, Kenneth Shields, Clifford Charlton, Teacher (Miss Turnbull).

Middle row (L to R): Teacher seated (Mr Greener), Robert Hodgson, Billy Charlton, Geoffrey Dalton, Ivy Little, Lilly Burns, Robert Dunwoodie, Walter Smith.

Front row (L to R): Robert Richardson (kneeling), Joan Coulson, Betty Coulson, Reenie Little, Bryan Richardson, Betty Rome, Unknown??, Edith Turnbull, Walter Turnbull (kneeling).


Reed's School 1933
Back row (L to R): Teacher (Miss Turnbull), Eric Coulson, Ian Scott, Bobby Dodd, John Reed, Grace Catimole, Olive Lamb, Mary Dodd.

Middle row (L to R): Ada Burns, Joan Coulson, Evelyn Catimole, Lilly Burns, Mary Armstrong, Eileen Thompson, Betty Rome, Betty Armstrong, Violet Reed.

Front row (L to R): Billy Charlton, Walter Smith, Kenneth Shields, Unknown ??, Ian Scott, Doney Burns.

Reed's School 1934 ?

Teachers (L to R): Miss Turnbull & Mr Greener. Terrier's name unknown!

Back row (L to R): Edith Turnbull, Geoffrey Dalton, ?????, Fenwick Daley, Lily Burn, Robert Hodgings, Violet Reed, Tommy Thompson.

Middle row (L to R): Marnie Thompson, Tom Forster, Bill Forster, Lilie Coulson, Mary Coulson, Ken Shield, Winnie Hindmarsh, Brian Richardson, Betty Armstrong.

Front row kneeling (L to R): Jim Bell, Rene Little, Billy Lamb, Goodwin Armstrong, Walter Turnbull, Cliff Charlton, Betty Southern, Joan Coulson.


Reed's School, Sunday School - 1935?

Back row (L to R): Billy Lamb, Brian Richardson, Geoffrey Dalton, Robert Dunwoodie, Jimmie Beattie, Gordon Richardson, Marnie Thompson, Margie Burn, Rene Little, Betty Southern, Sheila Southern.

Middle row (L to R):
Three adults - Beth Telfer, Miss Fenwick, Jean Chilman.
Children: Mary Dodd, Olive Lamb, Doney Burn, Rosemary Howarth, Adult - Mona Lamb.


Front row (L to R):
Unknown ?, Winnie Hindmarsh, Willie Burn, John Howarth, Aynsley Glass, Betty Armstrong, Isobel Armstrong, Lily Burn, Rev W.J. Flower (called 'Daddy Flower' behind his back!).

If we showed good regular attendance at Sunday School, as well as the annual trip to Whitley Bay - which included the sins of the Spanish City, we all got a book of 'good literature'!

Acknowledgements
Thanks to Bill Charlton who got two of these photos from his cousin Eileen Thompson and who could provide the names of all the kids except two or three - 70+ years on. Thanks to Don Clegg and his wife Sylvia (nee Armstrong) for the other two.
Copies of these pictures will be available in the Bellingham Heritage Centre collection where WPCollier's old photographer's shop has been set up.



August 2014 from Frank Greener


Hi Clive,
Reference the 1934 Photograph on the above web-site.
The Border terrier's name is Flint.
The headmaster Mr Francis [ Frank ] Greener is my Father.
He was appointed Head in 1933 while only 25 and still a bachelor.
He married Mary Louise Stephenson [also a teacher] in Jesmond Parish Church in 1934.
Tragically she died soon after their first child was still-born in 1935.
My father subsequently moved away to Sleaford in Lincs, and re-married.
The attached photo [kindly supplied by the late Miss Jean Milburn ] is of my father and a group of Reed's School kids on an outing with Flint in 1920. 
I hope this is of interest to you.
Yours
Francis [ Frank ] Greener








February 28, 2009

Bellingham reminiscences - trip to Cairnglastenhope

By Archie Mason


Reprinted from the Bellingham Heritage Centre Newsletter, Autumn 2009.
See the contacts for the Heritage Centre on the blog for more information.

We left the village by the road over the Tyne bridge then up to the cemetery at the Croft, where we turned right to go as far as Dunterley farm. There we made a left turn to the road to that goes over Dunterley fell into Warksburn, and headed for the remote farm of Pundershaw.

It was there that we had to leave our transport - usually it was a bicycle but sometimes we had the luxury of the a family car, or a bumpy ride on one of the cattle wagons of a local contractor - but there the road ended and all the vehicles had to be parked at Pundershaw. The thought of walking didn't discourage us as we were all full of energy and raring to go - of course this was still early in the day.

From the farm we went walking over the moorland going west and following the course of the Pundershaw burn or the Blackburn stream (different maps have used different names) for a distance of about two miles, where we arrive at the objective of our trek this day, which was, (again depending on which map was in use) Cairnglastenhope or Blackburn Lough.

The Lough was a mysterious and remote little lake, maybe a bit bigger than a couple of football pitches, that suddenly appeared for no reason at all in the middle of the moor. I can't recall being able to see signs of habitation in any direction so it was a lonely place to be.

I said 'suddenly appeared' because it did just that - for as we were climbing a slight slope towards the lake we could not see the water until we were about ten or twelve yards from it when it appeared at eye level. Of course anyone who was not deaf or blind would know something odd was near because of the raucous screaming of the gulls being disturbed, as the little lake was a nesting place and breeding area for seabirds.

I don't know how the birds found this place, as you couldn't get much further away from the sea than this part of the country; but find it they did. There were many different species of seas birds, some small and others were quite large, but all of them were very aggressive - and who could blame them when their breeding grounds were being invaded.

There were hundreds of them, all very possessive of their nests and in the reeds and rushes all round the lake, and we all had to be wary of the mock attacks from any direction. Most nests were near the water but some eggs were just laid in the moorland grass, yards away from the side of the lake - it was getting a bit crowed near the waters edge.

Near the lower end of the lake, there was an area where the reeds and rushes had grown then died, and had formed a thick mat of rotting material that floated on the surface of the water. It was so thick that it was possible to walk on it which was an eerie sensation feeling it bouncing up and down as we walked across it to get out towards the edge. We did this to reach the furthest nests, because part of our reason for our visit to the lake was to collect gull eggs.

We must have had some unconscious sense of preservation of the environment even in those days , as the rule was to take only one egg per nest from the usual four that hand been laid. There was a little test to check its condition - dropped in water the good egg sank, but if it floated it was not a 'good egg'. We had all brought sandwiches and a drink to sustain us throughout the day, so the collected eggs were carefully packed in handfuls of grass ain the now empty haversacks we had brought with us, and taken back home where they were fried and eaten.

The strange part was that from what I remember, the eggs were not very palatable at all. The yholks wer a brilliant orange, almost red, and when cooked, the white of the egg just turned into milky- 'see-through' consistency and all had a very unpleasant taste of fish. So it was hardly with the trouble of collecting the eggs but the main reason for the whole trip was the adventure of going to the little hidden lake - the eggs were not a very welcome bonus and excuse.

The return journey home would be more subdued, We would be tired and hungry and possibly uncomfortable with wet feet - if you visited a little lake in the wilds then you were expected to end up with wet feet - that was part of the exercise. However on the plus side, we would all be glowing with health and the satisfaction of spending a day out in the open air and already planning our next adventure.

I have used the past tense all along because its seventy years since I visited the lake and, if it is still there, it will be a different place.

Archie was brought up in Bellingham and on leaving school he joined the Royal Navy in which he spent his career. He is now retired and lives in Portsmouth.

February 25, 2009

The Charltons; Family history, Noted Scottish Border Reivers


Northumberland, history, Hesleyside Hall, Bellingham, North Tyne


By Clive Dalton

Hesleyside Hall viewed from the road and the front park - the seat of the North Tyne Charlton grayne (clan)



The Charltons

For more information on the Charltons, and the history of the English- Scottish feuds that they were actively involved in and went on for nearly 400 years, the best source is the following brilliant book:

The Steel Bonnets- the story of the Anglo-Scottish Border Reivers.
By George MacDonald Fraser. 1971
Published by Collins Harvill 1989
ISBN 0-00-272746-3



Notes from book:


CHARLTON (Carleton)

English, although in its alternative form the name appears in south west Scotland, also Tynedale.

The Charltons were one of the hardiest and most intractable families on the English side, and were alternatively allied to and at feud with other Scottish tribe in the west.



Latterly they were engaged in bitter vendetta with the Scotts of Bucleugh. Although Carleton is another form of the name, the Cumbrian Carletons had no alliance or association with the Tynedale Charltons.

Notable family members:
  • Lionel of Thornburgh
  • Hector of the Bower (reputed to be the greatest thief of the region)
  • Thomas of Hawcop
Family are still in Northumberland.


Garden party at Hesleyside Hall in 1939.
From L to R: Eileen Thompson, Ursula Davidson, Cliff Charlton, Lilly Charlton



The picture shows the back door to the Hall. The family still have the famous spur which was brought to the table to indicate they were out of meat. It was a discreet way of indicating that somebody had better get mounted and spurred and get across to the 'Scotch Side' to do some reiving (stealing).

In today's world they would be classed as terrorists!

And they would have left on their forays via this, the front gate - but before the beautiful ironwork was in plac. Who was the blacksmith who made this?

December 20, 2008

Bellingham Show - Part 2

By Clive Dalton

Poems and songs

Bellingham Show was such an important annual event, not only up the North Tyne valley but and on both sides of the Border, and especially in industrial Tyneside where 'toon folk' could have a day out by train in the fresh air of rural Northumberland.

It wasn't surprising then that local bards got busy telling tales about the various predicaments of folk who went to the show. The most famous was Billy Bell. Research by Susanne Ellingham of The Old Goal Border Library in Hexham shows that he was born at Riccarton in 1862. His mother was Scottish and may have gone home for her first birth because William says that in a later census. that he was born at Riccarton but brought up in Byrness and went to school in Rochester.

He worked as a roadman for the upper Redesdale Road Board and then the County Council from about 1883 to 1933. He died in 1941. All the three versions of the story of Bellinham show are by Billy. Over his lifetime, he wrote more than 350 poems in lined exercise books. When his widow died these notebooks were rescued by a neighbour Mrs S. Rogerson.


Susan says the Old Gaol has the typewritten copies made in 1968. His original exercise books were loaned at that time to Bill Butler of the Northumberland Tourist office, by a Mrs S Rogerson and returned to her. Bill Butler gave the typed copies to the Border library in the 1980s and these are what I are currently being digitised.


The late Will Elliott of Greystead, Tarset, gave me this first version of “Bellingham Show” which he recited, and it's sung to a very traditional tune used for many folks songs.

The first Bellingham Show was held in 1842, and the Show can boast the longest continuous Northumbrian Piping competition in the world!

BELLINGHAM SHOW - Version 1
Aa am an aad heord and aa live far oot bye
Aa seldom see owt but the sheep and the kye
So Aa says tu wor Betsy Aa think Aa will go
Te hev a bit leuk at Bellingham Show.

Ah weel, says the auld wife, if the money’s tu spare
Aa doot it’s a lang time since ye ha bin there.
Wor pack lambs hev seld weel, they’ve a lang time been low
So Aa think ye might gan te Bellingham Show.

So Aa gits misell drest in me braw Sunday claes
In me brass nailed shoes polished as black as two slaes,
A big high stand up collar, n’ me tie in a bow
Aa looks quite a masher at Bellingham Show.

Weel Aa got the to the showfield, Aa managed forst rate
N’ Aa paid me bit shilling to get in the gate.
Aa met wi some freens whae claried oot, Oh, Ho!
Hes thoo really gitten te Bellingham Show.

As was feelin gay dry so in we aal went
Just for a wee drap an a crack i the tent,
Aa sayed mine’s was a haaf ‘n, the rest aal cried Ho!
There’s tu be nee haafs at Bellingham Show.

Weel we aal hed a glass or it might hev been twee
Or tu tell yu thi truth, it might hev bin three,
Thi drop that we got set wor heeds in a glow
As we taaked ower aad times at Bellingham Show.

Aa then had a leuk at the tups and the hoggs
The horses, the coos, the fat pigs n’ the dogs,
N aal ower the showfield Aa went tu and fro
Determined tu miss nowt at Bellingham Show.

Aa waas hevin’ a leuk at the butter’n eggs
N Aa sat doon on some boxes tu rest me aad legs,
Up come n’ aad lady fat, forty ‘n slow
Contented ‘n jolly at Bellingham Show.

Excuse me she sayed but Aa do hate mistakes
But which are the duck’s eggs and which are the drake’s,
Aa hev just been wondering, I thowt ye might know
There’s intelligent people at Bellingham Show.

Aa can tell ye that missus, it’s quite plain tu be seen
The duck eggs is white n’ the drakes eggs is green,
O hoo simple, she cried, hoo wise yen can grow
By makin enquiries at Bellingham Show.

Aa steps up tu a chep what waas shaved tu the lips
Says Aa, canny man, a pennorth o’ chips.
He cursed ‘n sent me tu the pigeons below
He was a motor car driver at Bellingham Show.

Excuse me, cries Aa, but Aa doot Aa am green
Aa thowt ye wor mindin a fried chip machine,
Whey man that’s a motor belongin’ lord so and so
‘N wor here for thi day at Bellingham Show.

So Aa dodged away roond bi thi edge o’ the crood
N Aa smoked me aad pipe in a nice happy mood,
When up cums a young queen ‘n cries Uncle Joe
Aa’m so glad to hev met yu at Bellingham Show.

She gav a bit scream ‘n Aa thowt she waad faint
But Aa’s sometimes jelus o’ women what use paint.
Oh excuse me says she, ‘n your pardon bestow
Mistakes sometimes happen at Bellingham Show.

It’s aal reet noo hinney it’s aal reet Aa cried
While Aa stooped doon a minit me shoelace tu tie.
When Aa leuked up again ‘n me eyes roon did thro’
Me relation hed vanished at Bellingham Show.

Me heart begen jumpin n’Aa felt fairly spent
So aa thowt Aa’d hev a bit glass in the tent,
So inside Aa gets, felt me pockets ‘n lo!
That fly jade had robbed us at Bellingham Show.

So Aa went tu the Bobby an telt him me tale
But he saaid Aa waas nowt but a silly aad feul,
Tis time ye knew better as aad men shud know
Not tu meddle wi lasses at Bellingham Show.

Aa got see excited ‘n lood aa did yell
That thi Bobby teuk me right off tu the cell,
Throo the door he did send me wi’ the tip o’ his toe
Saying “Keep yoursell quiet at Bellingham Show”.



BELLINGHAM SHOW - Version 2

An old shepherd's adventure at Bellingham Show 15th September 1905
A thick veil of mist, the Tyne valley did fill
As I crested the top of the high Hareshaw hill,
Aa’ heard musical strains in the vale far below
As onward Aa headed for Bellingham Show.

As up through the town me owld bike Aa did drive
The crowd was as thick as brown bees round a hive,
The rich and the poor, the high, great and low
All had come for enjoyment at Bellingham Show.

They were there from the banks of the Tyne and the Rede
The Coquet and Wansbeck and clear silvery Tweed,
All jumpin with glee, full of dash, fun and go
Mekkin’ haste to be in at Bellingham Show.

There were horses and cattle, bull stirks, calves and cows
There was old tups and gimmers, young dinmonts and yowes,
They were there from the uplands and lands lyin’ low.
The flower of the Cheviots at Bellingham Show.

There were dogs of all classes, both red and white cakes
There were cats, cocks and hens, chickens, white ducks and drakes,
There were pigs in salt butter, but salted also
Dressed sticks and hen eggs at Bellingham Show

The farmers looked happy, the wools had a rise
The lambs have selled weel, the yowes hev likewise,
Their bright smiling faces as they wandered to and fro
Bespoke of contentment at Bellingham Show.

Brave Robson and go forth at dawn the next morn
Just after the smile of the sweet sun is born,
Man the cry of his hounds and his loud tallyho
Near eclipsed all the joys of Bellingham Show.

BELLINGHAM SHOW - Version 3
This is an interesting version, given to me by Tom Aynsley, a Northumbrian who used to farm in North Northumberland and now lives at Synton Parkhead, Ashkirk, Selkirk.

An a'd maid's adventure at Bellingham Show in search of a husband. c 1906
Am an old maid and my name is Mary Anne
And long have I been on the look oot for a man
And I've oft heard it said if you wanted a beau
The best place tae gan was Bellingham Show

So a week past Thursday, I went to the toon
And bought a new bonnet and a fine flash up goon
Of the very latest fashion begox it was stunning
Just like the gentry all wear up in Lunnin

The show morning arrived I got up with the lark
And fixed up my new dress right up to the mark
It had tean me two hoors when I came to my bonnet
And I'd sung oor a hundred love laden sonnets.

As proud as a peacock I looked in the glass
Says aye I'm no such a bad looking lass
And I certainly feel sure that there's many a man
Would like to be mated to thee Mary Anne

To cut a long story short I got to the show
And there I began my quest for a beau
I thought it was best at the entrance to wait
To see all the men as they came through the gate

At the exhibits to look at I felt not inclined
Something far more important was searching my mind
What a plague did I care for a game cock or hen
My only great interest was in watching the men

I watched and I waited till the toon clock struck three
Says I Mary Anne this winnae dee
But just as my hopes were beginning to sink
A chap came along and guid me a wink

He didn't look taking as my eyes did him scan
Says I they's no beauty but still they's me man
So I shoved my arm through his in the old fashioned way
And over the showground we happily did stray

He was dressed up quite smart in a loud checked coat
And wore a beard neath his chin like and old billy goat
I little wee mannie with his legs very sma'
But his feet were the biggest that ever I saw

Now hinnie he says will ye gan into the tent
Just to hae a wee toothful and I gave my consent
With his arm round me waist, he stole a bit kiss
The first time I had ever tasted such bliss

How hinnie he says what hast to be thine
Will you have a small glass of lemon or a drop of sherry wine
I was kind of excited and maybe it was risky
But I said I would just have a small glass of whiskey
Of course I made faces like what a woman should do
Then they quick sup it over with a smack of the lips
Oh we women folk we're gay fond of our nips.

An hour slipped away for time will not wait
An just as we were gan oot at the entrance gate
Suddenly me lover turned awe queer and white
Just like a chap who had gotten a fright

I looked around about us and there I saw comin
Taken two steps at once a big old fat woman
She flew at me lover and with a squeal and a yelp
And brought on his poor head her big umbrella.

For a second attack the poor chap didn't wait
But shot like an arrow oot through the show gate
And ower the brig he did quick take his course
With the fire and mettle of a runaway horse.

To me the old wife turned her attention
And said sweary words that I here must not mention
But to sum up her story as short as I can
She said that I'd been trying to get off with her man.

I was fairly dumbfounded, what else could I be
I telled the old wife she was telling a lee
Her eyes shone with hate, her monkey arose
Before I knew what had happened she had twisted me nose.

At the very first meeting away went my bonnet
And then the old wife put her great feet upon it
And next at me hair, she made a great rive
Lord save me I thought she will skelp me alive.

Says I Mary Anne but this winnae dee
If thou doesn't do better all will be up
Says I it's gai funny if I cannot summon
A likely plan to punish this woman.

At last the great secret I solved in my mind
Though as strong as Diana she was short in the wind
So I dodged round about her till I had her well blown
I hadn't nae doubt the day was my own.

To work I now got, the folks crying gan on same yin
Gan on Mary Anne
As I planted in her great full moon face
A punch just like the great Johnny Mace.

In the hue of my victory I heard a great crack
As something gave way in the sma' of my back
They new fangled thing with the rose cheeked name
To call them owt else I would fairly think shame.

And doon roond my ankles they caem in dure course
I was fairly well shackled like a Boswells fair horse
As I kicked and struggled it was all of nae use
They would not tear off and wouldnae come loose.

The boys gave three cheers and begox they were ringers
And all the young lassies looked through their fingers
When up came two Bobbies and disturbance to quell
And said we were both tae gan to the cell.

Says I cannie chaps it's alright for thee to talk
But how the mischief do you think I'm going to walk
The sergeant turned round and spoke to his marra
Who quickly went off and came back with a barrow.

I was placed in the front with my legs over the wheels
While the old wife at the back quickly did reel.

There was such a procession as never was seen
You would have thought I was a duchess or even a queen
There were motors and carriages and footfolk who ran
Crying there's the old wife who's gone daft for a man.

At last we arrived at the sergeant's old house
An angel of mercy the sergeant's dear wife
Who cut off me hopples with a big carving knife
And what do you know, preserve us and bless us
The young Bobbie said Mary Anne will kiss us
I couldn't says no as my case was so urgent
I gave one to the young chap and two to the sergeant.

The let us both oot in time for the train
Twas at the station I saw my old sweetheart again
Looking gay scared and white o' the mug
As his old missus led him along by the lug.

Now all you young maidens
What ere you decree
I hope you'll take warning by what befell me
I pray you bide single there's
No shame avo than to seek for
A husband at Bellingham Show.