| Though most of the items in the possession of the Society
are concerned with the history of Leeds, no Librarian is going
to turn away material of real interest from nearby. Such was
the case with the documents relating to the Ripon Millenary
of 1886. This remarkable collection in our Archives consists
of all kinds of detailed records of the event, from the initial
moves to the final reckoning.
The Ripon Millenary was a huge enterprise. It sprang from an
old (unfounded) tradition that the city had been granted its
first charter by King Alfred in 886, so the start of the year
1886 provided an ideal moment for the city to consider celebrating
its own history. The Provisional Committee came up with a series
of proposals on 26 March, amongst which were a procession through
the city to a service in the Cathedral on the first day, ‘The
Festival to be devoted to the performance of Old English Sports
and Pastimes at Fountains’ on days two and three, the
striking of a ‘Commemoration Medal’, and that ‘any
profits which may be derived from the Festival be equally divided
between the Ripon Dispensary and Jepson’s Hospital for
Orphan Boys in Ripon’.
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D’Arcy Ferris proclaimed himself ‘Ye Master of Ye
Revells’ in the Market Place on 26 August at some length,
and also announced the ‘great and gorgeous pageant’
and ‘ye merrie geste of Robyn Hoode and ye Curtall Fryer’
for the coming Friday and Saturday, ‘at the beauteous
grounds of Fountains Abbay’.
The pageant and play, complete with musical numbers, were duly
performed on the 27 and 28 August and according to most reports
were a resounding success – though there were hitches.
The Ripon Gazette reported that ‘some numbers were not
as well rehearsed as could have been desired, the difficulty
being further increased by the carriage conveying the Lancers’
Band having broken down on the journey to Studley, which prevented
any rehearsals of the choruses with the band taking place at
all’. D’Arcy Ferris and the writer of the play,
Augustin Dawtrey, together shouldered much of the labour of
creating music and texts: ‘The words of the Festal March,
the music of which was composed for the occasion by Mr. Ferris,
were from the pen of Mr. Dawtrey, the whole fitly echoing in
both music and song, the sentiments of our fellow citizens in
their expressions of joy.’ The choice of music was eclectic:
some was composed by Ferris and Dawtrey, one was ‘an arrangement
of an ancient Jewish melody still sung by the Jews in Germany’,
and the ‘first and last choruses were taken from Hatton’s
cantata “Robin Hood”’.
The
final account for the Millenary did show a small profit, so
that the organisers were able to present £89 2s 10d to
Jepson’s Orphan Boys and £89 2s 9d to the Dispensary.
The whole event had cost £1776 1s 11d. Of this, £53
10s 0d went to Mr Ferris, which he certainly seems to have earned
– as the committee obviously felt, since they voted him
a £15 gratuity in addition. ‘Mr. A. Dawtrey’
received £10 10s for the play, £1 17s 2d for music
and railway fares from Nottingham (only £1 was for music),
and £5 for Newspaper articles – were some of the
enthusiastic reviews in-house creations? This compares with
£37 10s paid to Messrs Collinson and Lickley simply for
transporting ‘Foresters, etc.’ to Fountains for
rehearsals – and possibly breaking down on occasion.
The final account for the Millenary did show a small profit,
so that the organisers were able to present £89 2s 10d
to Jepson’s Orphan Boys and £89 2s 9d to the Dispensary.
The whole event had cost £1776 1s 11d. Of this, £53
10s 0d went to Mr Ferris, which he certainly seems to have earned
– as the committee obviously felt, since they voted him
a £15 gratuity in addition. ‘Mr. A. Dawtrey’
received £10 10s for the play, £1 17s 2d for music
and railway fares from Nottingham (only £1 was for music),
and £5 for Newspaper articles – were some of the
enthusiastic reviews in-house creations? This compares with
£37 10s paid to Messrs Collinson and Lickley simply for
transporting ‘Foresters, etc.’ to Fountains for
rehearsals – and possibly breaking down on occasion.
Much can be read about the Millenary in the voluminous printed
account of the festival: Ripon Millenary, a Record of the Festival;
Also a History of the City arranged under its Wakemen and Mayors
from the year 1400, (W.Harrison Printer, & Publisher, Ripon.
Imprinted in the Year 1892. (The copy in the Thoresby Library
was that presented to Mr F.M. Walbran, a relation of one of
the key contributors on the history of Ripon.) What the Thoresby
Library can provide is contact with the actual material that
was handed out, sent, handed in, sung from, and no doubt cursed
over, but in any case handled.. It should perhaps be said that
we possess no manuscript material. There are invitation cards,
tickets for the play (one made out to ‘Maistresse Hargrave’),
the final printed accounts, a text of the play, a photograph
of one of the leading actors (Mark Landon); there are four newspapers:
one separate Gazette supplement (26 August 1886), two copies
of the Ripon Gazette, one with and one without Supplement (2
and 9 September respectively), and one copy of the Ripon Observer
(4 September 1886). All contain accounts of the celebrations.
There are also the printed decisions of committees, ‘Ye
Bille of Fare’ for the refreshments at Fountains, advertisements
for the Millenary Record, short histories of Ripon prepared
for the occasion, programmes of the pageant, etc.
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I have to confess an interest in writing about the Ripon Millenary:
my
Grandmother was one of the Flower Girls in the Pageant (Edith
Tattersall – with her friend, Lily Nobbs). That, of course
is one of the excitements of a celebration of such magnitude,
it embraces so many families. But it also reaches out to a wider
world of scholarship. One of the best articles on D’Arcy
Ferris and the Ripon Millenary is by John Marshall, in an academic
study of Robin Hood (’Riding with Robin Hood: English
Pageantry and the Making of a Legend’, in The Making of
the Middle Ages: Liverpool Essays, ed. by M. Costambeys, A.
Hamer & M. Heale, Liverpool University Press, 2007).
Local history is never just local.
A sketch of D’Arcy Ferris, by himself, expecting a
long wait for the Millenary Record.
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