Friday, 7 May 2021

The Festival of Britain and the Loughborough connections

The Festival of Britain, 3 May 1951 – 30 September 1951 

So here goes, and I find myself on an ill-informed journey back to 1951 and the Festival of Britain, a topic about which I know very little, but something that I’m sure must have had a big impact on Loughborough, whose population at the time was nearly 35,000, this being more than triple the number of 100 years earlier. Closer investigation doesn’t quite lead me down the path I was expecting to go, so I have little information about the involvement in the event of Loughborough industries, which is what I’d expected to find, rather like the involvement in the Great Exhibition of 1851. Instead, I’ve discovered a variety of connections which I’ll outline below and in the following blogpost.

First, what exactly was the Festival of Britain? (1)

Like the Great Exhibition in 1851, which had been a celebration of the progress of the nation, and the new industrial society, the Festival of Britain was again a celebration on a national scale, and the buildings created especially for the event were a stunning setting where British scientists, technologists and designers could showcase their genius and inventiveness.

Remains of the William Cotton factory on Baxter Gate, 2014

The idea for the Festival began around 1943, as a way of commemorating the centenary of the Great Exhibition, and like the event it was celebrating, it was several years in the planning.  Of course, it was recognised that much of London needed to be rebuilt after the Second World War, as did the people of Britain, following the hardships encountered during the 1940s and beyond. The Festival also aimed to boost post-war optimism and confidence in all that was new. Unlike the Great Exhibition, the Festival focused on Britain itself, and did not involve the Empire.

The Festival was opened on 3 May 1951, by King George VI, and ran until the end of September. Significant parts of the Festival were held in the South Bank area where new buildings had been constructed, including the Royal Festival Hall. Notable things included the Dome of Discovery and the Skylon, and a 400-seat, state-of-the-art cinema, showing 3D films on a large screen television.

Alongside the venues on the South Bank, there was also a Festival Pleasure Park created in the northern area of the Battersea Park, which included new features like a water garden with fountains, and a tree-walk. There was also a miniature railway in the park, and of course, the famous Battersea Fun Fair, the main attraction of which was the roller coaster, the Big Dipper!

As well as events in London, arts festivals were held across the country, there were also travelling exhibitions – the land travelling exhibition which landed at Birmingham, Leeds, Manchester, and Nottingham - and even a Festival ship, the Campania, a former Royal Navy escort carrier, which visited various UK ports between 4 May and 6 October. Many, many other events were held locally in towns and cities across the UK: in Glasgow they held an Exhibition of Power, which ran for some time, while other places held one-day pageants.   

The festival was a huge success at the time, and it is reported that over half the UK’s population (more than 25 million of the c50 million people) attended. This compares to the Great Exhibition attendance figures of over 6 million people which represented about one-third of the country’s population at the time.

The Arts at the exhibition

The exhibition held at the South Bank was also a showcase for artists of the time, and the new buildings and new housing estates built in the area were a showcase for contemporary architects. Interestingly, the Royal Festival Hall was designed by Sir John Leslie Martin, who was a leading advocate of the International Style of architecture, and it was he who designed the Loughborough Estate at Brixton in South London.

Art installations including works by Victor Pasmore and John Piper, and sculptures by Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, and Jacob Epstein. If you are familiar with the campus of Loughborough University, you may know of the Cedar of Lebanon, which sits in the square between the EHB (Edward Herbert Building) and what used to be the library, now the Herbert Manzoni Building. This beautiful tree hides a series of three sculptures called ‘The Watchers’ which were created by Lynn Chadwick in the mid-1960s. There are two other sets of companion sculptures, one in Denmark and the other in the London Borough of Wansdworth. Lynn Chadwick was one of the sculptors who exhibited at the Festival of Britain.

The ancient Cedar of Lebanon on the university campus being watched over

Wilhelm Josef Soukop, more usually know as Willi, was born in Austria, came to work in England in 1934. He exhibited his work in 1949 and 1950 at the ‘Sculpture in the Open Air’ and in 1951 he exhibited ‘Oak Tree’ at the Festival of Britain. In 1957 Soukop not only created ‘Signs of the Zodiac’ for Guthlaxton Community College in Wigston, and Martin High School in Anstey, he also created a set that can still be found today on what is now Charnwood College. 

Soukop's Sagittarius at Charnwood College

Soukop's Scorpio at Charnwood College

Slightly further away from home, on Oaks Road, Vincent Eley had established a pottery workshop. He studied at Loughborough School of Art, and created pots in the style of mediaeval ware, as well as creating the sculptures that sit atop the Calvary. Some of Father Vincent’s work was exhibited at the Festival of Britain.

Mount St Bernard Abbey from the Calvary

The Calvary at Mount St Bernard Abbey

Visitors to the Festival from our area

Boys from the Middle and Upper School of the Loughborough Grammar School were taken to visit the Festival of Britain Exhibition on the South Bank during the Whitsun holidays by their teacher, Mr D. G. Williams. Another teacher, Mr Trowbridge took other students later in the term. The Tower, at the centre of the school campus, was floodlit in celebration of Loughborough Festival Week, and photographed by Mr George Morgan. And, some of the boys wrote poems related to the Festival of Britain. H. D. West of class IIIa, penned an amusing 24 lines, a la Wordsworth, and C. Dyment wrote a script for the BBC for one of the films in a series of four which featured life in Britain.

Grammar School tower in 2020

By 1945, William Cottons, the company that had produced the steam-powered knitting machine, was part of the Bentley Engineering Company, and in 1951 members of the Bentley Group visited the Festival of Britain, on London’s South Bank.

Evidence of Cottons on Baxter Gate in 2014

A little way from Loughborough, but slightly closer to London, over in Leicester, staff from Montfort Knitting Mills, from British Waste, and from George Oliver Shoes all went along to visit the Festival of Britain.

Sadly, that’s all I’ve got space for in this post, but do pop back next time for more tales of Loughborough firms’ activity, and for the events that took place in Loughborough itself.  

Notes

(1) There's reams and reams of information out there on the internet about the Festival of Britain, so what I am presenting is a very, very potted story of the event. If you want more detail, you could do worse than start with searching Wikipedia! 

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 9 May 2021

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Dyer, Lynne (2021). The Festival of Britain and the Loughborough connections. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/05/the-festival-of-britain-and.html [Accessed 9 May 2021]

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