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Blaydon Races Centenary Celebrations

Tyneside celebrates the Blaydon Races Centenary in raucous style.

Amateur film 1962 10 mins Silent

From the collection of:

Logo for North East Film Archive

Overview

The Blaydon Races Centenary of 1962 was a spectacular week of street parties, beauty queens, cycle, road and sulky racing, sing-alongs, folk dance, juvenile jazz bands and fireworks - crowned by a 3 mile long parade to Blaydon from the legendary Balmbras Music Hall in Newcastle. Amongst the colourful and eccentric floats pictured, a jockey rides triumphantly through the street on a giant bottle of Newcastle Brown Ale.

This amateur film shot by Ron Harper captures the celebrations initiated by T. Dan Smith, Labour leader of Newcastle City Council, who harnessed the recent folk revival and media interest in the North Easts vernacular culture to encourage business and promote his big plans for a cultural renaissance in the region. Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell was the VIP guest. The centenary marked George Ridleys first Balmbras Music Hall performance of The Blaydon Races, long known as Tynesides national anthem, which tells in dialect the story of a mad-cap omnibus journey (filled with local characters) to the original horse race and fair on 9 June 1862.