Showing posts with label Butlin's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butlin's. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 October 2016

Skegness




What images are conjured up by the name of ‘Skegness’?

A queue of traffic stretching towards Lincolnshire’s most popular seaside resort?… More fish and chip shops than you can count on 6 hands?… the numerous caravan parks?… or Butlin’s holiday camp?

The railways made Skegness, just as they did so many other British seaside resorts. The familiar picture of a fisherman bounding along with the slogan ‘Skegness is so bracing!’ was originally a railway poster by John Hassall (1908) and has become an enduring emblem of the town.



Billy Butlin was the next individual that should take credit for Skegness’s tourism industry. After making his fortune by opening a chain of seaside amusement parks in resorts such as Mablethorpe, Hayling Island and Bognor, Butlin opened his first holiday camp at Skegness in Easter 1936, with admissions rising from 500 per week to 1,000 per week by June of that year (Butlin, 1982: 107). This holiday camp still survives whereas other Butlin camps at Filey and Clacton have folded.



The other most popular way to holiday in Skegness is in a caravan. As Walton argues, Skegness saw a decrease in ‘serviced bedspaces’ between 1950 and 1998, but ‘gained more than 15,000 caravans over the same period’, and saw a boom due to second holidays, and self-catering at the turn of the 80s and 90s. (Walton, 2000: 69).

Like Blackpool, Skegness appears to be a resort that acknowledges the working-class tastes of its consumers. The visitors guide usually has the resort’s nickname ‘Skeggy’ unpretentiously emblazoned across its front cover. Comic T-shirts refer to the town as 'Skeg Vegas'.
In summer 2016 I returned to Skegness after an interval of many years. I found that very little had changed since childhood. The sands were still reassuringly crowded with families, there were still plenty of places to buy fish and chips, and the delicious egg custards that aunty enjoyed were still bigger in the Skeggy bakeries than anywhere else on earth.






A Hillbilly shooting gallery that I’d last played in the 1990s was still here, firing water back at those sure-shots who managed to hit a target. One thing which did stand out as being new were the stalls openly selling alcoholic slush! This is a beverage which will cool you off and send you tipsy after sunbathing on the sands all day. 

Slush, fish and chips, donuts and the midday sun will force you to retire to your caravan for a much needed late afternoon nap... 






Further reading:

Butlin, Billy, 1982, The Billy Butlin Story, A Showman to the End, London: Robson Books.
Kerry, Matthew, 2012, The Holiday and British Film, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan


Walton, John K., 2000, The British Seaside, Holidays and Resorts in the Twentieth Century, Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Why I Reckon Whitby Folk Week is Like Butlin's, Circa 1946


Whitby Folk Week is like a folkies' take on the old fashioned holiday camps.

This is meant in good fun and it may seem controversial to most lovers of folk music and dance(!), but on my first ever visit to Whitby Folk Week this August I couldn't help seeing the comparisons with J.A.R Pimlott's visit to Butlin's at Clacton in 1946.
Part of the schedule Pimlott noted in 1946

With so many activities and entertainments on throughout the week, everything has to be kept to a tight schedule. After purchasing my programme I was able to browse carefully through the itinerary and get an idea of what was on. It was then that the comparison with Butlin's struck me.

Part of the Whitby Folk Week programme
Butlin's 1946: 10am Games and Exercises.

Whitby 2015: 10am Dance workshop.


I took part in a few Longsword workshops. Not a style of dance I'm used to, so it was refreshing to not only get some exercise, but also to focus on learning something new for 90 minutes in the morning.

Butlin's 1946: 11.15am Kiddies' fun.
Whitby 2015: 10am Playtime for children.

Butlin's 1946: 8.30pm Campers' concert.
Whitby 2015: 8pm Concert / or Marathon singaround.

Butlin's 1946: 9pm Ballroom dancing.
Whitby 2015: Evening ceilidhs.

Some of the latter are 'themed' at Whitby Folk Week and fancy dress is encouraged, adding to the raucous seaside atmosphere. This years theme was 'gold'.


Visitors to the Gold Ceilidh
Butlin's 1946: Knobbly Knees contest.

Whitby 2015: A close competition between some of the North West and rapper teams in 2015!

Newcastle Kingsmen
The location by the North Yorkshire coast also gives festival goers the opportunity for time out to take a paddle, a moorland walk (not unlike the organised amble at Butlin's in 1946), and to take part in the cultural practices of the British seaside, such as eating ice creams and fish and chips.

One of the teams pretended to be on a roller coaster ride during the parade
The Whitby hotel, Rosa, has the Butlin's motto hanging in the cafe (also a Shakespeare quote!)
On the Thursday there was an hilariously lighthearted North West dance contest in which four teams competed to raise their knees the highest, dance in straight lines and race a relay, wolfing down a pork pie between runs. The winning side (the Newcastle Kingsmen) won a golden clog for their efforts and performed a victory dance for the watching crowds. It was pure holiday camp. 

Here's a link to a video of the North West Contest

Further reading:

Pimlott, J.A.R (1975 reprint), The Englishman's Seaside.

Atkinson, Sally, (2015) Whitby Folk Week, 50 Years and Counting.