Whatever happens elsewhere this weekend regarding our unelected head of state, any true citizen of the republic of Saddleworth – and I regard myself as one, despite my extended and ongoing exile – will be right here on this, the most important day of the year.
It’s lovely to come home at any time. The Christmas Messiah features friendly faces.
The Rushcart offers sozzled morrismen heaving a quickly-sobering mate
atop a cart of reeds. And the morneful factory horn breaking the Remembrance Sunday on Pots and Pans was always as poignant as any Last Post.
But this weekend is when all prodigal sons return come rain
or just showers. As local poet Ammon
Wrigley explains: It’s good to be in Saddleworth, o’er the green
miles and the grey, There’s no better earth for roaming, and no better folks I
say; Up and o’er the top of Wharmton, in
the keen life-giving air, For whoever tramps in Saddleworth, says good-bye to
every care.
Whit Friday starts carefully enough. By ten in the morning, crowds gather in the larger
of the dozen or so Pennine villages. For
one blissful day the streets are reclaimed from brutalising cars. Led by the band, churches and scouts brandish
banners, and the village people tramp after them. Everyone joins in: from pram- to daisy-pushers; the lapsed to
the happy clappers; residents and returnees.
The band marches past to Hail
Smiling Morn; we all know this is where we belong.
After morning walks, children’s sports. Previously run by churches, my local Village
Association and Mountain Rescue now keep the afternoon races alive. To those of you familiar with my own
busy-body tendencies, it’s no surprise to find my parents at the thick of it, along
with village stalwart Jill and expert marshals Janet and Morris (who called his
first-ever false start!). This year, the
chaotic ‘wheelbarrows’ and three-legged melee were eased by Katja’s teutonic
efficiency and my loudly hailed, rapidly-flattening vowels. Stickers and lollies were presented, adult
competitiveness contained, an important tradition sustained.
And so to the evening.
Anyone who knows the north understands the importance of brass bands, the
very fabric of many post-industrial communities. And if you’ve seen Brassed Off you’ll know that the Saddleworth Whit Friday contests
are a highlight of the banding calendar.
Brighouse and Rastrick. Black
Dyke Mills. Grimethorpe Colliery, of
course. Plus bands from as far away as
Switzerland and Germany. As we reach the
top of Lark Hill wisps of Senator, Ravenswood and Knight Templar reach us from three
separate villages nestling below. Nick
turns to us and states, without exaggeration, “that experience will always be
unique to Saddleworth”.
But not everything has stayed the same: my brother reminds me of trying to hit the
bass drum with black peas, but now there’s not a peashooter in sight. Not that I’d risk it – on one famous
occasion an enthusiastic joker got a little too close to the quickstep and the
drummer swiped him out of the way with his stick on the upstroke, without even
missing a beat!
Gone too is the morning after’s Beer Walk – it was good for
charity, but more than enough beer is consumed by the audience (and the bands) on
the Friday. These days the weekend
proceeds with a more sedate ‘scarecrow trail’ (this year with a royal theme),
and Sunday’s school duck race.
But Whit Friday is the core of the celebrations.
So pass on the pageant, snub your street-party, jilt the
jubilee.
Rather, to almost quote our local bard: Come
out along the hilltops and stretch your legs with me; Where northern winds are
longing to blow the dust off thee; Give me the gipsy moorland in ragged heather
shawl, And you can keep your pageant and your fancy barge and all!
From Mary-Louise Priest:
ReplyDeleteHere, here! I miss Whit Friday every year nowadays due to work, but have the fondest memories of pea shooting antics in Delph.