Traditionally Hastings held three fairs: one on Whit-Tuesday; the second on the 26th and 27th of July, called Rock Fair; and the third on the 23d of November. Rock Fair was by far the largest and the best but, as with all good things, it finally came to an end probably around 1861. By this time the better-off Victorians had been trying to quash it for many years and were pious and snobbish enough to complain about ‘its common air’. Rock Fair in its heyday was a riotous, blustery, cacophony of an event. William Latham, in1798, wrote ‘the great annual fair, called Rockfair, attracts multitudes from the neighbouring places’. Held on the road behind White Rock, curious sea-side visitors would have mixed with the locals, a high proportion being fishermen, to view the goods being offered by numerous peddlers. Despite Stell complaining in 1804 that the fair ‘has fallen off considerably within the last twenty years’ by 1817 it was still a thoroughbred affair since Storer maintained that it was ‘in general a scene of drunkenness, riot, and debauchery’. However its downhill spiral to such a depraved state must have been rapid because within Adelaide, a novel in 5 volumes, written by Catherine Cuthbertson and published in 1813, the characters muse:
‘Heavens! What a beautiful mouth and teeth that lovely creature, Mrs Bouverie, has got!’
‘Why, Eleanora, her teeth outdazzle those of out next door neighbours at Hastings, who arrived just in time to grin for husbands at Rock Fair.’
Eleanore and her companion do not appear to be the debauched type although they show undoubted interested in flirtatious interludes. During the Regency, it appears Rock Fair meant different things to different people.
Games were an integral part of the Fair with ‘pitch-and-toss, hockey, and other games’. What were the other games? Certainly Stool Ball was one. This ancient game was the prerogative of females, and although no one has the faintest idea how it was played, it has left some literature of sorts. This song is from1824:
‘Down in the vale, on a summer’s day
All the lads and lasses met to be merry;
A match for kisses at stool-ball play
And for cakes, and ale, and cider, and perry.
(Chorus)
Come all,
Great, small,
Short, tall,
Away to stool-ball.’
This is even earlier, from 1677:
‘Young men and maids
Now vey brisk
At Barley-break and
Stool-ball frisk.’
Perhaps Stool-ball was not such an innocent a pastime as it might have been!
Sherlock Holmes, the famous Victorian detective, has also given us a glimpse into Rock Fair. The recently published, Juvenile Excursion, gives an account of Holmes’ holiday in Sussex in 1866 when he was about 12 years old, and, although it is predominantly about bee keeping and the Sussex dialect, it also includes, as would be expected, some reference to the criminal and low life of the county. He alludes to Rock Fair ‘as having presented a dreadful record of sin’ but gives no more details except two curious lines as examples of Sussex dialect
‘At Rock-fair gimsy dollops, with dem wapse waists and dem boco windmills showing dentical deals peg-away at pudding-cake and hard dick at de standings.’
and,
‘A kellick with a mushmalt, crummy dollop in a dark twittern makes you beazled’
A ‘dollop’, in Sussex dialect, is a trollop and Rock Fair would have certainly attracted many due to the easy pickings particularly because many of their clients would be ‘tight’ on the local ale.
Rock Fair must have been a dazzling experience with two days of raucous entertainment and the opportunity to purchase infrequently seen items along with lashings of food and drink. A time for all concerned to ‘let their hair down’ and enjoy themselves but to be cautious not to be taken in by the ‘higglers’, ‘dollops’ or belles with ‘flashing teeth’.