logo
Traveller youth take the reins as crowds visit Appleby Horse Fair

Traveller youth take the reins as crowds visit Appleby Horse Fair

Irish Times08-06-2025
From nowhere the atmosphere shifted from serene to slightly edgy.
It was a sunny Friday at the Appleby Horse Fair and there had been a collision on the Flashing Lane, a stretch outside the Cumbrian village where
Travellers
show-off and 'flash' horses for sale by running them at speed up and down the lane.
One man had run his horse and cart into the back of another – a yellow cart – and broken its wheels. A row brewed. A crowd gawked as the angry owner of the yellow cart demanded compensation from the other man, who denied blame.
'Queensbury rules,' said an observer, as tempers threatened to flare. A third man, a Traveller like the others, stepped in. He ushered them towards a nearby field, telling the yellow cart owner: 'You're a big man. We'll sort it out.'
READ MORE
The crowd of mostly younger men, excited at the possibility of a scrap, flowed behind and formed a ring around them. The protagonist trio – the cart owners and their impromptu mediator – disappeared behind a camper van. Minutes later they emerged arm-in-arm like old friends. Clearly a deal was struck.
Irish Travellers watching on were heard to make phone calls telling others all was solved. Calm resumed. The crowd went back to the flashing in the lane, where horses hurtled beneath the dappled sunlight streaming in between the leaves above.
[
Racism seen as permeating all aspects of Roma and Traveller lives in Ireland, European report finds
Opens in new window
]
Appleby fair: Horses are walked through the town centre. Photograph: Adam Vaughan/EPA
A procession of carts go through Appleby village. Photograph: Mark Paul
This all took place under the noses of Cumbria police, who stayed well back from the field to let those involved sort it out themselves. It illustrated the unique and sometimes flexible approach of authorities to managing the Appleby Horse Fair.
The event finishes this week. It attracts 10,000 Travellers and Romany Gypsies from
Ireland
,
Britain
and further afield to this small town in bucolic northwest England over several days at the beginning of each June. An estimated 20-30,000 other visitors also attended in recent days, but the atmosphere was led by Traveller culture.
There was no central organisation in overall control when The Irish Times visited over the weekend. Billy Welch, the Shera Rom – Head Gypsy – of the Romani community organised toilets and other facilities in fields on Fair Hill outside the village. But much of the rest operated autonomously. Two bars were set up in an adjacent field, where Traveller men gambled on tossed coins late into the evening.
The cacophonous Appleby fair, a mixture of stalls, camping and equine-related activities, is billed as the largest gathering of Travellers in Europe. It is a mainstay of the community, which remains one of the most disadvantaged in the UK as it is in Ireland.
People washing horses in river Eden during the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA Wire
British census statistics show Travellers in Britain face the same social problems as their kin across the Irish Sea: lower education, poorer health, higher deprivation. They also experience discrimination.
The 250-year old fair an annual demonstration of pride, an unabashed display of Traveller and Gypsy culture, especially by its youth. They lead the ancient tradition of riding horses bareback into the river Eden in the town centre to wash the animals before and after they are flashed and possibly traded.
Some in Britain have always viewed the fair with a critical eye. Leading up to this year's event, English tabloids were filled with stories of Irish Travellers and Romany Gypsies 'descending' on Cumbria, bringing an alleged crime wave. Locals, coverage said, had 'battened down the hatches'.
Police reported about 30 arrests in the week or so leading up to the event last Thursday. Last year's fair recorded about 450 police 'incidents' in total, roughly comparable to a typical music festival of the same size.
People attending the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
Dozens of officers were around Appleby town at the weekend, more on the outskirts. Some used automatic number plate recognition technology to check vehicles against police records. Police said they might deploy facial recognition technology in future.
'If Cumbria Police can use it to identify criminality and troublemakers and keep them away from the fair, then I would support it,' said Welch.
The fair attracts the attention animal rights groups, concerned over the welfare of horses. Many Travellers whom The Irish Times spoke to argued these concerns were overplayed.
A traditional horse-drawn caravan makes its way to the annual Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph:The RSPCA looks on as people go by in horse-drawn carriage during the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys
Liam Hamilton, an English-born Traveller of Irish descent from Doncaster, who caught a lift with The Irish Times to Fair Hill on Saturday, said the majority of Travellers knew not to over-whip horses. He was also critical of what he saw as excessive policing.
An RSPCA inspector near Flashing Lane on Friday evening said just four horses had been seized by that stage of this year's event. In 2007, one horse infamously drowned in deep water while being washed in the Eden. In more recent years, a few horses died from overwork.
A group of Dublin men at the fair, non-Travellers who said they kept horses in their working class communities including Coolock and Finglas, said welfare standards had improved in recent years. They welcomed the strong RSPCA presence.
One horse was seized late on Thursday evening. Three crestfallen young Irish Traveller boys were seen walking to a police barrier pulling an empty cart. 'Where is the horse?' asked an officer. They said the RSPCA seized it to treat an injured eye. Another horse headbutted it, they said, and they couldn't get it back.
People riding horses in water during the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
A family in their traditional horse-drawn caravan make their way to the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph:Away from the equine areas, many retail stalls were manned by Romany immigrants from eastern Europe, as well as native Rominchal from Britain. One Roma man, who did not want to be named, was doing a roaring trade selling water pistols. Asked where he was from, he replied 'Galway' in a half-Irish accent.
'The Irish Travellers, they don't consider us Irish,' he said. 'But that's where I grew up.'
British tabloids ran stories in recent years of alcohol-fuelled fighting between gangs at the fair. After Thursday, most pubs were shut in Appleby last weekend, along with the majority of shops. There were few locals around; many houses looked deserted. The Irish Times witnessed no real trouble over several days.
A person in a horse-drawn carriage during the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
Religious organisations were prominent at the fair. Irish Travellers and their English kin are mostly Catholic, while some Romany are Protestants and evangelicals.
'Apostle' Des Pilling, a plasterer from Wigan, was on the bridge promoting his vision of religion for CLMI Street Evangelists UK. Most Irish Travellers were Catholic, he said, and needed to be 'born again' to reach heaven. Many passing Travellers just smiled at him.
Another man, who did not want to be identified, spoke to The Irish Times at the Catholic Traveller Renewal stand on Fair Hill. He said it was easier to be a Traveller in Britain than Ireland.: 'Even a man with no ar*e in his trousers in Ireland will come up and call you a k****er. But not here.'
People in horse-drawn carriages during the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
People racing in a horse-drawn carriage during the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
He had a perfect Irish Traveller accent, but was born and raised in London and lived there all his life. 'Your accent comes from who you mix with,' he said.
Yet most talk in Appleby was not of accents or trouble or discrimination. It was simply of horses, especially among excited young people.
Some of the most striking images of the weekend were of Traveller teenagers – girls as well as boys – riding huge horses bareback into the Eden and down the Flashing Lane.
Lucy Smith, a young Traveller from Morecambe, with her horse Comanche at the Flashing Lane at the Appleby Horse Fair. Photograph: Mark Paul
Lucy Smith, an English-born young Traveller from Morecambe, but who once lived in Ireland, seemed delighted to be told that she seemed like one of the best riders on the lane.
She appeared to handle her horse, Comanche, with ease riding without a saddle: 'He's really a driving horse [for carts]. But I just love riding him here.'
Then she took off down the lane, through the dust and crowds.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michael McDowell pushed for British amnesty for IRA members without trial, UK files reveal
Michael McDowell pushed for British amnesty for IRA members without trial, UK files reveal

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Michael McDowell pushed for British amnesty for IRA members without trial, UK files reveal

Michael McDowell argued as attorney general in 2000 that the British government could avoid a struggle to pass Westminster legislation to give 'on-the-run' IRA members an amnesty. Instead, Mr McDowell, who is now a member of Seanad Éireann, repeatedly suggested that the British could use a centuries-old law to grant pardons without prosecuting any of them. This seems to have been met with astonishment by British officials. The difficulties posed by Sinn Féin's demands for 'on-the-run' IRA members – some of whom were sought for offences such as murder – to be given guarantees features in British archive files released on Tuesday. The treatment of the IRA 'on the runs', better known simply as 'OTRs', became a major controversy in 2014 when it was revealed that nearly 300 IRA members had been given so-called 'comfort letters' saying they were not then wanted by British police. READ MORE The issue emerged in February 2014 when John Downey, an alleged IRA member, faced trial in London for the July 1982 Hyde Park bombing, which killed four British soldiers and seven horses. His Old Bailey trial collapsed when it emerged that he had received his comfort letter in 2007 even though there was an active warrant for his arrest. The trial judge halted the trial after ruling this was an abuse of process. Under Mr McDowell's proposal in 2000, which went farther than the comfort letter tactic later used, the British government would have been able, he said, to avoid bringing strongly opposed immunity legislation before Westminster. The idea 'first surfaced' at a meeting between Irish and British officials in Dublin in early November 2000 when the British side was told Mr McDowell believed London could grant 'pardons before convictions' to IRA members. The proposal was outlined in greater depth to the British side in November 2000 at 'a hastily arranged' meeting, where Mr McDowell was described in a British note as being 'quite a student of the English legal system, and admired its flexibility'. However, British officials doubted the idea from the off, saying a royal pardon could be used only after sentence, while a free pardon could expunge the effects of a conviction. Mr McDowell came back to his idea when he was included in the Irish delegation, which included Bertie Ahern , then taoiseach, which travelled from London with British prime minister Tony Blair for an EU meeting in Zagreb, Croatia, shortly afterwards. Here, Mr McDowell again argued that wanted IRA members could be given 'a prosecution amnesty', citing the decision by the British not to prosecute Soviet spy Anthony Blunt for treachery. 'His basic thesis seemed to be that our legal system was sufficiently flexible to allow immunity to be granted without the need for primary legislation,' the Northern Ireland Office's political director, Bill Jeffreys, told an official in the British attorney general's office. He said he had told Mr McDowell his proposal ran counter to the views of the British attorney general, who was 'unwilling' to give immunity to individuals on general public interest grounds. However, if Mr McDowell was arguing that the Northern Ireland secretary of state could 'pre-empt prosecution in a whole class of cases' then that would be 'an entirely new departure'. Widening the grounds for immunity 'seemed to me to run entirely against the trend, and would be very difficult to justify in today's conditions, when we would be expected to seek the necessary powers from parliament', Mr Jeffreys also said. Separately, the files also show the efforts Sinn Féin made to ensure leading IRA figures in the United States such as Gabriel Megahey would not be deported. Now, 25 years later, they are now facing fresh expulsion attempts by Donald Trump's administration. Bill Clinton , US president at the time, had wanted to 'tie off the loose end' created by the six men's issues before he left office, fearing the incoming George W Bush presidency would be less sympathetic. In 1997, US secretary of state Madeleine Albright 'persuaded the US attorney general to suspend deportation action' against the men on 'the foreign policy grounds that it would contribute to the NI political process'. The importance of the OTR issue to Sinn Féin is evident throughout the files, with the party's Gerry Kelly 'grumbling' to Northern Ireland Office officials 'that the lack of movement was causing Sinn Féin great difficulties'.

Convicted soldiers' return to service showed it was ‘all right to kill a Paddy', Sinn Féin figure complained
Convicted soldiers' return to service showed it was ‘all right to kill a Paddy', Sinn Féin figure complained

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Convicted soldiers' return to service showed it was ‘all right to kill a Paddy', Sinn Féin figure complained

The British army's decision to readmit two soldiers convicted for murder showed it was 'all right to kill a Paddy', a senior Sinn Féin figure furiously complained in 2000. Eighteen-year-old Peter McBride was shot in the back by Scots guardsmen Mark Wright and James Fisher in 1992 after he ran away from an army patrol that had searched his home in north Belfast . The two soldiers were convicted of murder in 1995 and sentenced to life imprisonment. However, they served only three years before they were given early release under the 1998 Belfast Agreement . Later, a British army board ruled they could return to military service, but this decision was overturned by a British court. A second board then ruled they could continue as soldiers, but this decision was kept secret for nearly two years. READ MORE Once it became public, it provoked a public outcry. Sinn Féin's Gerry Kelly complained furiously in a phone call with the Northern Ireland Office's political director, Bill Jeffrey. In a note of Mr Kelly's remarks later, Mr Jeffrey quoted him as saying: 'The decision was a disgrace and had been greeted with incredulity, even by people who had expected nothing of the British. 'The army dismissed large numbers of soldiers every year for smoking dope, but it was all right to kill a Paddy. We were dragging our heels over OTRs (on-the-runs), but murderers were taken back into the British army,' he said. Denying involvement, Mr Jeffrey said the British army operated independently 'in matters of this kind'. Replying, Mr Kelly said: 'In that case, the prime minister should take the matter out of their hands.' Mr Kelly remains a Sinn Féin Assembly member for North Belfast. In 1983, Mr Kelly – a convicted IRA bomber – was part of a mass breakout of prisoners from the Maze/Long Kesh prison outside Belfast, during which one prison officer died and another was shot. He is a former hunger striker and was part of Sinn Féin's negotiating team during the years leading up to the Belfast Agreement.

Tony Blair's letter saying sorry to Guildford Four was not meant as apology
Tony Blair's letter saying sorry to Guildford Four was not meant as apology

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Tony Blair's letter saying sorry to Guildford Four was not meant as apology

A widely reported letter from UK prime minister Tony Blair to one of the Guildford Four, where he was understood to have said sorry for them being wrongly convicted, was never meant as an apology. New cabinet documents released by the National Archives in London show it was intended that Mr Blair would stop short of an apology and instead just express regret that they went through a miscarriage of justice. A letter sent by Mr Blair to Courtney Kennedy Hill, the wife of Paul Hill, one of the Guildford Four, was reported to have been the first time that a British leader had apologised for the wrongful conviction. Mr Hill, Gerry Conlon, Patrick Armstrong and Carole Richardson were given life sentences for bombing public houses in Guildford, Surrey, and each spent 15 years in prison. Their convictions were overturned by the court of appeal in 1989. READ MORE In a letter to John Sawers, foreign policy adviser to Mr Blair, Stephen Harrison of the Home Office wrote: 'The prime minister said ... that he was very sorry indeed that there were miscarriages of justice in Paul Hill's case and the cases of those convicted with him. 'This was not intended to be an apology: rather, the prime minister was acknowledging that the four were victims of miscarriages of justice, and expressing his regret that this should have happened. 'However, in June this year, the letter was publicised for the first time and was widely reported in the media as an apology.' Ms Kennedy Hill wrote to Mr Blair in April 1999 to query her husband's compensation for the 15 'stolen years' he had spent in prison. 'For this terrible miscarriage of justice Paul Hill has received no apology,' she wrote. When Mr Blair replied the next month, he said: 'I believe that it is an indictment of our system of justice and a matter for the greatest regret when anyone suffers punishment as a result of a miscarriage of justice. There were miscarriages of justice in your husband's case and the cases of those convicted with him. I am very sorry indeed that this should have happened.' [ Blair apologises to the Guildford Four Opens in new window ] The letter Mr Blair sent used a similar form of words that was used by the home secretary in a letter to one of the Birmingham Six, said Mr Harrison. Details of the letter to Ms Kennedy Hill emerged in an edition of BBC Northern Ireland's Spotlight programme which told Mr Hill's story in 2000. The human rights solicitor Gareth Peirce, who was acting for one of the other members of the Guildford Four, complained about the fact the letter had only been sent to Ms Kennedy Hill and said it had caused additional hurt to the other three. Home secretary Jack Straw suggested Mr Blair write to the other members. The following year, 2001, Anne Maguire of the Maguire Seven wrote to Mr Blair asking for an apology for herself, her husband and her sons for their wrongful conviction for the unlawful possession of explosions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store