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Mining - Deer Stalking - The Fell Pony Society - The harness cupboard - Driving - Riding and Driving for the Disabled - Writers' Comments - WW1 - The Museum - Appleby & Brough Fairs

Appleby Fair Hill.

Appleby is famed around the world for its ancient Horse Fair and for the throng of colourful characters who gather on Gallows Hill (Fair Hill) every June. The date used to be fixed by the date of the Derby at Epsom; Fair Hill week began on the Sunday following the mid-week Classic race which is held in the first week of June. This Sunday is known as Visitors' Day, when people can walk between the rows of caravans, watch the horses being washed in the River Eden or "flashed" up and down the road, have their fortunes told, or buy cheap goods from the many side stalls.

The real selling of the Fair takes place in the following three days. Wednesday used to be the sale day, but in recent years, especially if the weather has been very wet, many of the travelling people pull off the Hill early, so the timetable is less predictable.

Appleby town itself prepares for the onslaught in different ways. The public houses take up the carpets and brace themselves to accept the cash and the mud and spilt beer from large numbers of drinking strangers. Extra police and RSPCA men are on duty and everyone works longer hours than normal. It is probably the largest influx of people into the Eden Valley each year.

Appleby is particularly associated with the striking "gipsy cobs", coloured horses and ponies: black and white, or brown and white, with heavy bone and feather. Staggering sums of money are asked for these animals which apparently can change hands several times during the Fair. The price asked often seems to have less to do the horse's real quality than its owner's opinion of it, and his own pride. Yet there have been some famous horses sold through the Fair which were real bargains. It takes a horseman to know which are worth buying and which should be passed by. Ann Brown, who bred ponies at Shap (including my mare Coppyhill Suzanne, aka Ruby) and who regularly bought animals from the Fair, said that it would take several weeks to find out what temper of horse or pony you had really bought from Appleby: "they're shell-shocked."

Standardbred trotters and pacers are often shown off at high speed up and down the roads, with the drivers crying "Mind yer back!" to the unwary who stroll into their path. Many are also brought to Appleby to compete in the official harness races which are associated with the Fair. The only Fell or Dales ponies that are likely to be seen there are those which are unregistered or crossbred, though many of the smaller coloured cobs will have a Fell or Dales as mother, or grandmother, or somewhere in their background.

Not all the people who come to Appleby are true gipsies. There are still some, but their strict code of behaviour is being overshadowed by the larger numbers of "travellers" who are neither reared nor educated in the Romany traditions.

THE HERALD, SATURDAY, 28th AUGUST 2004

Fined for 1847 offence of "driving a carriage furiously" during horse fair

Obey Coates (37), Watchgate, Dartford, was not present when a charge against him of driving a carriage furiously on 7th June came before Eden magistrates at Penrith on Friday. However, it was proved in his absence and he was fined £400 with £42 costs. The offence dates from 1847.

Brough Hill Fair.

There had been a Fair at Brough since 1330. Originally it was over 4 days, the two before St Matthew, St Matthew's day itself and the day following (September 21st). From 1752 it was shortened and moved to September 30th and October 1st, with slight variations if one of these was a Sunday.

Fell ponies were often referred to around the turn of the 19th/20th centuries as either "Fell Galloways" or "Brough Hill ponies" because most of the young stock were sold off at this "back-end" sale. Other fairs were held during the year at Penrith, Wigton, Rosley (near Wigton), Appleby, Kirkby Stephen and Meaburn, but Brough Hill was acknowledged as "the" sale for the hill ponies.

The "Herald", the Penrith newspaper, printed this dialect tale in 1900 :

Jacky gahs ta Brough Hill Fair

horses tied to a fence at Brough Hill Fair

Jacky hed niver seen now't like't afooar. He'd bin ta Peerith an' Kirby, an' Appleby an' Shap an' Meaburn; but nowt ta come up wi' Brough Hill. They come frae o' ower t' country side wi' o' macks an' manners of stuff ta sell. Nags o' o' sooarts. Young 'uns an' auld 'uns, t'nags 'at kick, an' nags, if it wasn't fer 't laal bit o' ginger, 'at cud hardly stand up ta be selt. (ref)

horsedrawn gipsy vans at Brough Hill Fair

A report from the "Herald" in the first week of October 1902 shows that Brough Hill Fair did well: "Brough Hill Fair was thronged with horses, cattle and sheep and, with the benefit of fine weather, trade was good, as much as £65 being obtained for broken horses. A fair trade was done in Highland cattle."

Brough Hill Fair; canvas roofed caravans and fairground ride

In 1907 the "Herald"'s report included these remarks:

The annual Brough Hill Fair brought the usual crowds of gypsy horse dealers to Brough for two days. There was a larger attendance than usual, including train loads of visitors from the industrial centres of Yorkshire and Lancashire. Fell Galloway horses were the feature of the fair, with large numbers of these from Hawes and the other fell districts. An exceptionally good trade was experienced for cart horses, good animals changing hands at from £40 to £70 and one animal was sold for £94 10s.

Garnett (1910) describes the fair as "one of the largest if not the largest fair in the North of England, and immense numbers of cattle, sheep and horses, especially unbroken ones, fell ponies and merchandise of every description were shown ... Scotch dealers ... with ... droves of Highland black cattle, sheep and Galloway ponies. Now ... [it is] much reduced in size, scarcely any cattle and but few sheep ... it still retains its prestige for unbroken colts and fillies and fell ponies."

It is at Brough Hill and at Appleby Fair where nearly all the small breeders of Fell and Dales ponies take their stags to be sold. A stag is a three-and-a-half-year-old pony, that has been bred on the wild fells of the English Lake District, and has been driven loose-headed as one of a herd of such young ponies from places like Bampton, Dufton, Hardendale, or Ravenstonedale, or other districts of Westmorland, where unlimited grazing is to be had by all farmers who have eatage rights on the open fells. Neighbours go to the high fells and help each other to collect the ponies. The older mares know what is wanted and give a lead down to the “outgans” the little rough lanes leading up onto the open fells) and from there to the farmyard, and there the stags are divided off to go the following morning in one big drove to the fair-ground, where again they are divided, each man penning his own ponies and standing by for customers. ... ( R B Charlton , 1952)

Brough Hill Fair was known for its cold, clashy (wet and windy) weather! "Reet backendish - real Brough Hill weather." A report from the "Herald" in 1952 says: "Brough Hill Fair took place in typical weather, with tents blown down by an icy wind. The coconut stall had to be dismantled before the gale ripped the canvas to shreds." Sadly, by this date the fair's decline was very evident: "There was almost as much interest in car sales as in horses."