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Easter Folktales and Traditions in Wiltshire

Posted by: Blog Administrator

Tagged in: tradition , spring , pagan , new lif , goddess , gift , feast , Eoste , eggs , Easter , countryside

Easter was the feast of the pagan goddess of spring, Eoste. It was a tradition to give a gift of coloured eggs which represented the new life of the countryside.

Hot cross buns were baked on Good Friday and were ‘carefully hung up in the inglenook, and kept for medicinal purposes’! A small piece of the dried bun was grated and mixed with water – it was drunk as a cure for diarrhoea, but to work it must be hand baked on a Good Friday! The provision of hot cross buns on Good Friday is thought to be one of the strongest surviving symbols of pre-reformation England.



Wiltshire Times, March 26th, 1910; front and second page
 

It has been said that to wash clothes on Good Friday was considered an 'awful sin'. A story is told ‘A young woman went a –washing on Good Friday. As she were about it, up comes a gentleman, and he asks the way somewhers, most pleasant like’. While he stands talking, the woman chances to look at his feet, and discovers he has a cloven foot; so she answers him very shortly, and refuses the money he offers her. ‘Whereupon the gentleman, who, of course, is the Devil, walks away, and the woman, in a fright, puts aside her washing’. You should always wear something new on Easter Sunday, ‘for good fortune’. A new pair of gloves was the luckiest item, and these were often given as an Easter present. Told by A. Clark in 1893. To find out about the 16th century Cuckowe King and the 'ales', please 'read more'...





How to banish those February blues...

Posted by: Blog Administrator

Tagged in: wooden building blocks , Women’s Institute and Girls Training Corps , Wiltshire , wedding dress , web page , weather , weather , Warminster Dewey Museum , Warminster , Victorian kitchen , Victor Manley , Valentine’s Day , utility coat and skirt suit , uplifted , Trowbridge Museum http://www.trowbridgemuseum.co.u , taffeta , Stourton , stone memorial , steam , St Denys Church , spring , spirits , south-west Wiltshire , Sir Winston Churchill , scrapbook , school-master’s house , Salute of the Red Army’ , Royal Albert Hall , recipe , poultry , photographs , Pewsey Heritage Centre , pathological testing kit , pancakes , New Year , Museums Advisory Service , Museums Advisory Service , museums , month , Ministry of Information , Mere Temperance Society , Mere Museum , Market Lavington Museum , Luncheon and Supper Dishes , Longleat Restaurant , local history collection , local events , killed , James Lye , Jacqueline Ramsay , inclement , Illustrated London News , http://www.pewsey-heritage-centre.org.uk/ , http://www.meremuseum.org.uk/ , http://www.marketlavingtonmuseum.org.uk/ , http://www.culture24.org.uk/sw000041 , http://www.chippenham.gov.uk/tourist-information/l , Horningsham , historical , historic museum , Helen Burke , grey , gramophone record , gloom , geology , Gardeners Chronicle , fuchsias , Frome Young Farmers , flint , fife and drum , February 1969 , February 1945. On a lighter note , February 1874 , February , entice , Edwin Townsend , dull , drama festivals , donated , Documentation Assistant , display , disinfectant , discover , diet , dance tickets , Dakota , crash , collections , Clarice Culverhouse , Chippenham Town Hall , Chippenham Museum and Heritage Centre , chess match , Charles Street , Castle Combe Museum , bungalow , blue wool , blue hat , blindfold , bell-ringing , Beech Knoll , Barbara Norris , band , arrow-head , ancient , airmen , agricultural machinery , 1999

February. A month which hides between the excitement and liveliness of the New Year and the impending delights of spring. Often grey, rather dull, with only Valentine’s Day to cheer up the lucky few. However, if you are bored with the weather, frustrated with the new diet or already given up that New Year’s resolution, then a visit to one of Wiltshire’s many museums will light up the month for you. Within their varied collections lie many a fascinating item, and with that in mind, I have compiled a ‘February’ list to entice you to discover them.

February does seem to have a historical link with gloom, but how fascinating to travel to Mere Museum in south-west Wiltshire to discover the February 6th souvenir copy of the Illustrated London News commemorating the state lying-in of Sir Winston Churchill, or the photographs showing the stone memorial built by local labour in 1999 and dedicated to the airmen killed in a Dakota crash at Beech Knoll, Stourton, on 19th February 1945. On a lighter note, you may like to read the handwritten rules of the fife and drum band belonging to the Mere Temperance Society, February 1874 and while you are at the museum why not take a look at their six volumes of old local photographs and the local history collection.


Dakota crash memorial 

Dakota crash memorial

Travel northwards to Warminster Dewey Museum and you will discover a wide range of local history material, including the Victor Manley collection of geology, and various Valentine dance tickets, such as the Frome Young Farmers dance (please contact our blog if any romance was found at the Longleat Restaurant, Horningsham, February 1969!). Whilst at the museum you might  be interested in the 78 rpm gramophone record of bell-ringing at St Denys Church, Warminster, 25th February 1960, or the scrapbook donated by Barbara Norris containing details of local events, drama festivals, Women’s Institute and Girls Training Corps, compiled from 20th February 1946 to 8th June 1948. 'Read more' to find out which other Wiltshire museums have items associated with the month of February...








Following the tradition of rock bands everywhere historians from Wiltshire & Swindon History Centre are still touring. In their latest Community Areas Tour they are staging events in the 18 Community Areas of Wiltshire this autumn and in spring 2010. In the next few weeks you can catch;

Find Out Who You Are, steps in the early stages of family history research with Claire Skinner and Michael Marshman at Salisbury Library on Wednesday 25th November. A morning course from 9.30 to 1.00 p.m. with tickets at £10.00 available at Salisbury Library.

Poor Law Records, 1600 – 1833, a talk by Terry Bracher on the old Poor Law and its treatment of ordinary people at Corsham Library on Wednesday 25th November. Starting at 2.30 p.m. tickets are available from Corsham Library at £3.50 (£2.50 concessions).Please 'read more' to find out more about our other events occuring throughout Wiltshire....