Sunday, May 07, 2006

The Garlinge's wild flowers, Mantel ornaments frankly from Birmingham

Following correspondence with Jen Garlinge- a little research on wildflower categories at English flower shows :
‘ The schoolchildren spend hours gathering wild flowers to compete for the prize given that little one who shall show the greatest variety arranged with the best taste.’
from ‘Among English Inns’ by American Josephine Tozier writing in 1904
This confirms that the prizewinner at the fateful flower show was a child:one of the younger Garlinges, Doug, Fred or Henry
At some shows species count alone won.Alternatively, a competitor reminiscing from the 1850’s said He (his rival)generally beat me in tasteful arrangement while I had the pull in my knowledge of the botanical names and the power to arrange them in scientific order. ) But this maybe unusual – upper class speaker (Sir James Murray), and flower shows were very much working class. (But local dignatories judged- his Dad, maybe?)
Usually sponsored by the gentry- perhaps as a method of encouraging the worthy poor (patronage didn’t stop at wild flower appreciation!)-

See the Keevil village Site

“To the Cottager living within the Parish of Keevil, whose cottage shall be kept in the neatest and cleanest manner during the past year, the number of the family and state of the building being considered.
First Prize 15.0 shillings
Second Prize 10.0 shillings”

Plus prizes for darning, knitting, hemming and such like

Back to the Garlinge boys who would have hard searching for wild flowers in August; most shows were in June or early July. I wonder if there was a reason for the lateness of the show that year?Further, they would have had to avoid the gamekeepers, armed farmers, constables, pea and potato rustlers, drinkers, poachers, hayrick burners, sheep molesters and homicidal dogs that ran amok in Kent that week.


Finally,
Josephine Tozier (her Among English Inns can be found at books online here) is a scream

How about

“The mantel ornaments are frankly from Birmingham, and bear the stamp of the peddler's pack; all ugly and useless.”
Or
"The sweet simplicity of English cooking probably had its origin when salt was highly taxed,”



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