Histon Feast 1902
An extract from A History of Histon Feast by J. Whitmore.

It is early July. In Histon the schools have closed for the long Summer holidays
and the children and their parents are looking forward to the most important days
of the summer. Histon Feast is about to begin and for the next four days there
will be many events to attend. Some have managed to earn some extra spending money
by fruit picking, others have been saving for months. The houses have been cleaned
from top to bottom and all round the Green the walls of the thatched cottages
have been freshly lime washed. Special meals are being prepared for all the relatives
and friends who are visiting the village for the celebrations. Many work in service
or on the land in other towns and villages and this is one of the few times of
the year they can return home. They arrive by every means of transport: train,
bus, brake, pony and trap, bicycle or even on foot.
Some new clothes have been purchased or made for all the family, and these
will be worn for the first time at the special church and chapel services held
on Feast Sunday morning. After the family roast dinner, everyone hurries out to
see the Friendly Societys Parade, a new event this year, which has been
arranged to raise money for Addenbrookes Hospital. The Band from Cambridge
leads the procession which finishes on the Green. There a service is held and
the children fidget while many long speeches are made by the speakers on the platform.
Then home for a special strawberry tea and out again to promenade the village
and meet old friends. The village streets are crowded with people all in their
Sunday best swapping news and gossip. Then on to the Green for the Sacred Band
Concert where another collection is taken for the hospital.
Many of the fair wagons have now arrived pulled by horses or steam traction
engines; they are lined up in Station Road and Impington Lane. They should wait
until 6am on Monday morning when they are officially allowed onto the Green; but
as soon as the concert ends there is a rush of vehicles and much jockeying by
the stall-holders to get the best pitches on both sides of the road. There is
a complete transformation of the site in about two hours.
Thurstons Fair opens on Monday afternoon and is patronised by
Families of the elite, who wish to avoid the rough and tumble of the evening.!
All want a chance to ride the steam gallopers and ostriches and here the popular
tunes of the day played on the steam organ.
Those that work for Chivers have the afternoon off on Tuesday; and the crowds
are largest at the second of three cricket matches in Park Lane and at the fair
that day as many come out from Cambridge and from the surrounding villages. Special
buses and trains run to and from Histon each evening and these are packed with
visitors.
In the new schoolroom on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, a soiree organised
by the Philo-Union is held. Up to a hundred couples trip the light fantastic,
from nine until the early hours of the morning, to the music of Smith and Drings
String Band. The public houses are doing a roaring trade and extra bars have been
set up so all can be served.
Young men purchase water squirts, confetti paper teasers and use them to great
effect on the eligible girls in the crowd. The roadway is red, white and
blue with little paper discs. Worst of all the more frivolous girls pick out their
favourites and empty a tube of water down their necks. Many a love match
has started this way.
Having given pleasure to many, the fair closes at midnight on Tuesday; but
not before Arthur Claydon of Newmarket Road has fallen out of a swing boat and
been taken to Addenbrookes Hospital and detained with a severely cut head.
There is another cricket match on Wednesday afternoon. But the fair is smaller,
as some of the stall holders have already left for Linton Flower Show. At a quarter
to midnight the fair steam organ plays God Save The King and the Feast
is over for another year.
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