Yorkshire Post

SHOW’S HISTORY BROUGHT TO LIFE

How things have changed – and stayed the same

- BEN BARNETT AGRICULTUR­AL CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ben.barnett@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @benbthewri­ter

BRITAIN WAS still in the grip of the Industrial Revolution, Queen Victoria was on the throne and the fashion of the day dictated that some men would wear two waistcoats at a time to achieve the tightly cinched waistline that was all the rage.

In 1838, agricultur­e looked considerab­ly different too, though perhaps not all of the founding fathers of the Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society, main

picture, were the sort to rigidly obey the fashion prescripti­ons of the time.

For them, it was a galvanisin­g period of revolution as well. Agricultur­e was changing apace. Horse-powered threshing machines had displaced workers, new fertiliser­s were coming to the market and more farmland was being given over for livestock grazing than ever before.

In this same year, the Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society held its first ever Great Yorkshire Show, staged at Fulford in York.

The show, just as the industry it depicts to this day, has evolved ever since and that story of great change will be shared with visitors when the Great Yorkshire Show opens for a historic 160th time next month. To celebrate the three-day event’s anniversar­y, two historical projects have been under way to chart how Yorkshire’s premier agricultur­al showcase and farming has altered over the years.

In a first for the Great Yorkshire Show, a big screen on the President’s Lawn will show film footage put together by the Yorkshire Film Archive of past shows. A series of specially curated short films will also be broadcast on a big screen in the Main Ring and in the Exhibition Room at the on-site Yorkshire Event Centre.

Snippets of the archived footage are being shared on social media every Monday – having started last night – until the show returns on July 10 in order to tease the full clips.

Graham Relton, the manager of the Yorkshire Film Archive, said: “We scoured the millions of feet in our vaults to uncover the really iconic and most engaging material on both Yorkshire agricultur­e and the Great Yorkshire Show over the last 100 years.

“Using both profession­al and amateur footage shot we have created a number of packages. As a regional charity it is brilliant to bring back this film heritage to one of the places where it was originally shot.”

Mr Relton added: “The show has changed massively over the years but captured in the frames of celluloid preserved at the Yorkshire Film Archive are images that remind us how in some ways it has remained very much the same and I am sure these images will really resonate with the audience at the show.”

As part of the nostalgic trip an exhibition of historical farming scenes and interpreti­ve panels on farming in the Washburn Valley and the Great Yorkshire Show will be on display in the Yorkshire Event Centre.

Compiled by a team from the Washburn Heritage Centre at Fewston near Harrogate, the exhibition will explore themes such as agricultur­al machinery through the years, drystone walls and the role of women in farming to mark the centenary of female emancipati­on.

Deborah Power, the centre’s archive leader, said her favourite image was of straw being stooked in a field. “We spent many hours on research, including talking to experts and reading old newspaper reports to gather as much informatio­n as possible and we have been able to draw on the Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society’s own archives of pictures. For example, the idea to feature women’s emancipati­on in the exhibition came from a photo of the Women’s Electrical Associatio­n exhibiting at the show.”

The Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society’s show director Charles Mills hailed the historical contributi­ons to the 160th show, and said: “It would be marvellous if visitors to the show recognise relatives, events or places that mean a lot to them.”

The Great Yorkshire Show will be held at the Harrogate Showground on July 10 to 12.

I am sure these images will really resonate with the audience. Graham Relton, manager of the Yorkshire Film Archive.

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 ??  ?? Archive photograph­s and footage of the Great Yorkshire Show, including an image of its founding fathers and the Queen’s visit in 1957, are to go on show to marks its 160th year. LOOK BACK:
Archive photograph­s and footage of the Great Yorkshire Show, including an image of its founding fathers and the Queen’s visit in 1957, are to go on show to marks its 160th year. LOOK BACK:

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