REWIND: A brief history of the Warwick Mop
Warwick Mop Fair began when King Edward III granted a legal charter for it to be held in the town center, at a time when the stone version of the castle was being built and before Lord Leycester was even born.
Many significant towns in the area have similar charters, including Stratford upon Avon, Southam, Banbury, Tewkesbury, Alcester, Evesham, Abingdon, and so on. Each year, these towns have fairground attractions in their town centers and surrounding streets.
Warwick Mop is held every year on the Friday and Saturday following the 12th day of October, with the 'Runaway Mop' held the following Friday and Saturday.
The 12 is the date for calculating when many of the local mop fairs happen.
It is believed to be linked to a date when the harvesting was completed in olden days.
Stratford's Mop is held on the 12, Southam the Monday after the 12, and so on.
When the Mop first started nearly seven hundred years ago, the event was a hiring fair for local laborers and employers to meet in a social setting.
Workers would be hired for a trial period of a week; hence the Runaway Mop the following weekend, allowing either party to back out if they were unhappy with the arrangement.
Once the formalities were over, the laborers could spend their token wage (given by the new employers) at the stalls gathered for the occasion or the local pubs!
The title 'Mop' has been a subject of debate by historians for a number of years. The most likely link is that laborers wore a symbol (a badge almost) to identify their trade.
This meant employers would instantly recognize those wanting work in their industry. These symbols were believed to have been known as mops.
The pig roast, or ox roast as it used to be, provided food for the visiting crowds and a nice fire to warm by on a cold winter's evening.
Today, the pig roast remains and is one of a number of ways the Mop fairs raise money for the Mayor's charity. The first slice of meat is auctioned, and Councillors, Showmen, and residents of Warwick bid on the meat, which is often re-auctioned several times to increase the charity donation.
Then, the rest is sold in batches with apple sauce and crackling—great!
As the industrial revolution came along, rides became a feature of the Mops around the Midlands.
From primitive beginnings pedaled by the riders themselves, to steam-powered, electrically lit roundabouts, and on to the high-tech, state-of-the-art rides of today.
One of the Mop's unique features is how it constantly adapts in line with modern life yet still retains the traditional value of entertainment for the whole family, from children to grandparents.
Showmen at the fair have allotted pitches on which their rides and stalls are built up; these are passed through generations, resulting in a close link between the showmen and the town.
The grandparents and great-grandparents of today's show people will have been entertaining the grandparents and great-grandparents of local residents.
Archive photographs of the Mop reveal just how similar the layout remains today to those held early last century.
The Town Mayor officially opens the Mop at 12 noon on the first Saturday, supported by the Town Crier and representatives of the council in their traditional attire.
The Mop Charter is read aloud, and then the mayor takes a tour of the fair, granting free rides to anyone present at the time.
Warwick Mop is arguably the town's oldest tradition, predating even the Saturday market and centuries before the Victorian Evening and Warwick Folk Festival.
Over the years, it has brought joy and amusement to thousands of Warwick residents and many from further afield. Local shops used to stay open into the evening and hold special Mop promotions to cash in on the extra customers the event attracted.
The Mop is an event that can be enjoyed by all ages, from young children getting their first glimpse of a fairground to the grandparents still eating the candy floss!
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