On this day … 26 June 1924

A correspondent for the Sydney Sun writing under that date line from London introduced its readers to Wakes Weeks when whole towns shut down for an annual holiday. Preston was chosen as a prime example with the townsfolk taking themselves off to Blackpool. What had especially caught the correspondent’s attention were the charabancs that ferried the Preston holidaymakers to and from the resort:


Article from Sydney Sun June 26 1924

𝐅𝐥𝐞𝐞𝐭𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐚𝐛𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐬

(From Our Special Representative)
LONDON, June 26

Thousands of them are on the road … Look, for instance, at the great Lancashire festival that takes place yearly at Blackpool. Your Lancastrian holds that Blackpool, the watering place on his own coast, has no peer in the world, either for health-giving properties or amusements. And in the latter respect he is probably right — at any rate, in so far as Britain is concerned.

The Blackpool municipality has realised that the only industry of the place is cultivating the holidaymaker. True, nearly all the other resorts have come to the same conclusion, but none of them has laid itself out so to attract the working-class holidaymaker as Blackpool.

Some indeed aim at excluding the workers and attracting only those superior beings who dress for dinner nightly and demand spas and sanatoriums and “hydros” before they will look at a place. But Blackpool has frankly recognised that the worker wants his holidays at the sea as well as his master …

And all the Lancashire cotton operatives and employees in the great shipyards and engineering works make a practice of subscribing a sum throughout the year that will take them to Blackpool, for a week or a fortnight without worrying as to whether they will have enough money properly to enjoy themselves.

As often as not they go down to Blackpool by whole towns at a time. The works in a district close down, and everyone dashes off to the briny, only to give place on the next week-end to a huge batch from another great centre of industry.

The extent to which they patronise charabancs in their journeys is seen by the fact that when, the other Saturday, there came the work of moving the Preston contingent back home, part of it got aboard 1500 charabancs to make the return by road. Now, a Lancastrian will not yield a second of his holiday or pleasure, and nothing could move him to go back in comfort in the morning of the last day of his holidays.

He puts off his return as long as possible, and journeys homeward in a bunch, making the ride a wind-up to his festivity. Consequently this crowd of 1500 motor charabancs accommodated some 50,000 people. In effect it became a huge convoy that blocked all other traffic for eighteen miles while it was getting clear of Blackpool and into the quieter country roads.

And as each of the 50,000 was either cheering or singing his or her hardest, it can well be imagined that Blackpool had a free concert that in volume outdid anything that could be attempted In the Wembley Stadium, albeit there was somewhat less harmony about the proceedings.

An invariable feature of these affairs is a collection of paper caps such as come out of the Christmas cracker, which are worn by everyone … Add to the weird caps the fact that from the sides of the charabanc long streamers of coloured paper float out five, ten, or even twenty yards behind in the wind of the charabancs passage — never less than twenty and more often thirty miles an hour — and one gets some idea of what only part of a day’s outing involves even for the spectator in these times of the motor charabanc.

Blackpool Charabanc - cartoon

𝐀 𝐩𝐮𝐳𝐳𝐥𝐞 …
The correspondent writes that the Prestonians were returning from their annual holidays in June, when the annual Preston shutdown is usually reckoned to have been the last two weeks of July. Any suggestions?


Source and images
The excellent Trove website put on line by the National Library of Australia. It contains a wealth of Preston history that can be found nowhere else: https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/222312250?searchTerm=Preston%20Lancashire%20June%2026


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