Invoice from Cook & Boggis, 1923
- BCA - 2022.3456
- Item
- 1923
Invoice from Cook & Boggis, 1923
Nik Stanbridge
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Invoice from Cook & Boggis, 1923
Invoice from Cook & Boggis, 1923
Nik Stanbridge
Horse Fair taken outside the Wheat Sheaf Inn in Bridge Street 1925
Horse Fair pre-WW I outside the Wheat Sheaf inn. Boys are collecting horse manure for vegetable gardens. Note the windows are quite different in what is now the HSBC bank and the butchers. The Wheat Sheaf became the Post Office about 1971 and became a private house in 2010 when the post office moved to the Town Hall and it became a private house.
Nik Stanbridge
Dora Townsend sitting on a pig
Dora Townsend as a child sitting on a pig, 1927 when she lived at the Elephant and Castle. Her parents were Albert and Mary Elizabeth Townsend and she had older sister Ethel and Gladys and a brother Albert who was always known as either Son or Sonner
Nik Stanbridge
Newspaper August 29th 1930. Report on Fair with Horse Fair
Newspaper August 29th 1930. Report on Fair with Horse Fair
Nik Stanbridge
Nik Stanbridge
Cards from Jack Townsend to his mother and sister Dora 20-6-1942
Nik Stanbridge
Jack Langley Townsend on left in Egypt c1943 in RASC
Jack Langley Townsend on left in Egypt c1943 in RASC
Nik Stanbridge
Leaflet regarding wild birds (1947)
Leaflet produced January 1st 1947 regarding wild birds
Nik Stanbridge
Sam Bennett from Ilmington in Warwickshire
Sam Bennett. He moved to Warwickshire but walked to Bampton to fiddle for the Morris at Whitsun. He would arrive at Mr & Mrs Townsend's Castle Farm on Bridge St and announce 'I be 'ere'. To earn his keep, he'd stay on for a few weeks doing farm work for Mr Townsend.
"The war took away many of the young men, and for the first time in recorded history the Whit Monday performances were suspended during 1917 and 1918. However, Wells had recently taught the dances to a group of men at Alvescot, and on the Whit Monday 1919 two of these stepped into the reformed Bampton set. One stayed only that year, but the older, William Flux, had married a daughter of long-time lead dancer Thomas Tanner, and became the organiser of the team.
This brought him into conflict with Wells - Flux wanted them to dance more at Pubs, Wells at the private houses - and this reached crisis point in 1925. The following year Wells refused to play for them, so both Bertie Clark from Alvescot and Sam Bennett from Ilmington were drafted in to provide music.
In 1927, for the first time in recorded history, two teams appeared on the streets: the old side under Tanner and Flux, and a young side recently raised by Wells. They continued in relatively peaceful co-existence for some years, but by the mid 1930s performances by the Tanner side were more sporadic, with only Wells fielding a team most Whit Mondays.
The final appearance by the Tanner team was in 1941, and it was left to Wells to keep it going during the war, and beyond." Keith Chandler
Nik Stanbridge