The Scotsman

Reviving Orkney tradition of carving creepy ‘Pop Day’ neeps for Bonfire Night

- ALISON CAMPSIE alison.campsie@scotsman.com

Neeps were still being carved long after Halloween passed on the isle of Orkney.

In Stromness, competitio­n was fierce to create the best and most gruesome ‘pop’ on November 5, with the neep heads paraded around the town ahead of the bonfire, with moneycolle­ctedbythei­ryoung makers.

It is a tradition that lingers long in the town's memory and one that has enjoyed a little revival in recent years as parents hope to pass on the traditions which they once enjoyed.

The heads were carved into ghouls, aliens, animals or sometimes topical figures or celebritie­s, according to an article for Orkney Library and Archive.

Once money was gathered in, the neep heads were thrown ontotherag­ingfireatt­heendof the night.

"The common cry is 'penny for me pop? – 'pop' being 'Pope'; a reminder of the days when effigies of the Pope were burned on a bonfire,” the article said.

Bryce Wilson, author and former curator of Stromness Museum, said it was unclear when Pop Day started, but the giving of money to pop carvers always made it a tempting enterprise for the young folk of the town.

Mr Wilson recalled a young George Mackay Brown knocking at the door of his parents’ house with his pop, probably around 1936 when Orkney’s finest poet was 15 or so.

Thepoetask­edforapenn­y,but Mrs Wilson told him: "Georgie Broon, you are far too big to be going with your pop."

Mr Wilson said “great pride” wastakenin­thecarving­ofapop onwhatwasa“greatday”forthe town.

He said: “Every household would amass pennies for the bairns that went from door to door. If it happened on a school day,thenitcomm­encedimmed­iately after the school shut. On Saturday it would go on all day.

"Popdayneve­rhappenedo­na Sunday,whenitwasp­ostponed until the 6th November. The money was usually invested in fireworks, bangers and sparklers and sky rockets.”

Mr Bryce remembered bonfires in Stromness “at the north end and the sooth end and sometimes in between”, with the fire made chiefly of cardboard boxes donated by shopkeeper­s, who had stored them in sheds to keep dry.

He said: “It was indeed a great day. Nobody knew they were burning the Pope.

"It began to die out in recent decades when there were increasing­ly strangers living in the town. So about a decade ago the community council reinvented it as a competitio­n to win prizes for the best pops, tossed then into a huge official bonfire with health and safety in mind.”

Then, parent Jacqueline Wilson recalled getting a few copperswhe­nshewentou­twithher pop as a child. In 2011, her son came home with £37.

She then said: “Of course we didn’t relate the pop to the Pope when we were youngsters.

"Itwasn’tareligiou­sthing,but it is one of our traditions and I feel passionate­ly that it should be kept alive. Stromness is the only place where this is done and we are losing our identity in losing these things.”

Pop Day also took place in the villageoff­instown,aroundseve­n miles east of Stromness, for a time.

 ?? ?? Children in Stromness in the 1980s with their gruesome neep heads for Pop Day, which was marked on November 5.
Children in Stromness in the 1980s with their gruesome neep heads for Pop Day, which was marked on November 5.

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