Well, Bob, you're entitled to your opinion. but we don't all have to share it.
Nevertheless, I daresay there won't be a lot of street parties around the Three Towns during the upcoming Jubilee . Not sure if there will even have been much in the way of official celebrations at the time of our Queen's silver jubilee back in 1977 ? ; maybe some of you will know about that.
But back at the time of King George V's Silver Jubilee in 1935, people looked at things a bit differently. Not least because in the days before we all had so much entertainment on tap these kinds of events made a good excuse for having a party .
And the article below ,which appears with full acknowledgements once again to The Ardrossan and Saltcoats Herald, describes the celebrations locally that accompanied that Jubilee. Wonder how the tree at Castlecraigs is doing now ?
Susan
THE SILVER JUBILEE
The 1930s were a decade which both at the time and in retrospect contained little of cheer or encouragement. Beginning with a general depression of trade and industry, and ending with the second world war, the middle -years contained such disturbing features as the Abyssinian war, the Spanish war, the abdication of King Edward VIII; so any excuse for celebration was seized upon with perhaps more enthusiasm than the subject might have warranted otherwise.
One such event was the Silver Jubilee of the reign of King George V and Queen Mary which was celebrated on Monday, May 6, 1935.
On that occasion there were interesting breaks with the previous pattern of celebrating national events in this locality. Hitherto there had been somewhat of a concentration on children's sports, with buns and milk, and processions — generally carried out either in drizzling rain or in cold, dull conditions — so in 1935 the organisers decided to show good sense and play safe. They organised instead special film programmes for
children in the local cinemas in both morning and afternoon — the films consisting of cartoons and westerns. These performances were packed to the doors, but as it happened, it was a glorious summer's day.
Each schoolchild in Ardrossan received a shilling and a bar of chocolate; in Saltcoats they received just a bar of chocolate; in Stevenston they don't seem to have received anything although it is fair to remember that there was no town council to provide it.
Flags and bunting decorated the principal streets and there was widespread decoration of houses. On previous occasions, house decoration had been confined to the dwellings of the VIPs in each town, but since the last such jollification the new housing schemes had been built, and it was noticeable that the council house tenants went to town in covering their houses with flags and streamers in patriotic colours.
Ardrossan Town Council planted a tree — a copper beech — in the garden of the council chambers, the provost expressing the hope that the memorial tree would still be in existence when the next jubilee came along, and that they would all be there to see it. (The tree is still there; the next jubilee falls due in 1977: but the council won't be there. )
There were united services in the parish churches; the old people of Saltcoats were entertained to a concert in the Beach Pavilion; and Ardrossan castle ruins were floodlit for the first time; but the particular highlight of the day was the chain of bonfires around the coast.
A large bonfire was built on the Castle Hill, the material being supplied and erected by the Harbour Company, but Ardrossan Scout Troop decided to go one better and build a beacon on the highest hill in the neighbourhood — Knockjargon.
Having received permission to do so from the farmer of Busby, the boys spent every evening after school the previous week, felling trees in the wood near the hill and dragging the timber to the summit... a task which could only be achieved across some swampy ground by boy-power. During the weekend before the great day a party of Scouts camped at the site to ensure that no one set fire to the pile beforehand. On the Monday evening most 4 of the Scouts were accompanied at the hill by a large crowd of parents and friends.
Stevenston Scout Troop did not travel so far, but did distinguish themselves by building at the foreshore one of the largest bonfires in Scotland. It measured 24 feet in diameter and 40 feet in height; was built of pitch pine logs and was estimated to weigh over 100 tons. Eighty gallons of tar and 20 gallons of paraffin were poured over the structure.
The bonfires were lit in sequence from London outwards, and when the Irvine bonfire was seen from Stevenston, the one on the shore was fired in the presence of about 4000 spectators; then the one on Castle Hill, followed by the one on Knockjargon.It was a still, warm, perfect evening, and as the bonfire on Knockjargon blazed, the Scouts sang the National Anthem then led the crowd in community singing which was heard for miles across the valley and had an oddly thrilling and moving effect.
Commenting on this, the editor of this paper, writing in his leading article for the issue of that week, said: "Youths that are indeed the torch-bearers of the future, and let us hope these beacons only betoken cheer and rejoicing. But, if so incursion threatens, it will be youths who are called to carry the fiery cross, and who will be first to be sacrificed in protection of this land." On that summer evening there was a chilly wind arising in Germany.


