 |
|
 |
May 1st has long been an important part of the
annual Calendar. It is the start of summer in these latitudes
and as such has always been a day for celebration: the Celts celebrated
May Day as Beltane; The Romans dedicated the day to the Goddess
Flora and would go to the woods to cut a tree and decorate it
with ribbons and flowers, this is the origin of the May Pole.
In the 16th and 17th centuries in England people would make garlands
of flowers and leaves for the May Day celebration, they became
increasingly elaborate. Works Guilds would try to outdo each other,
in the late 18th century this became a matter for competition,
milkmaids in London carried garlands on their heads with silver
objects on them, but the crown had to go to the chimney sweeps.
Their garland was so big it covered the entire man. It became
known as Jack in the Green.
|
|
In Hastings there were at least two groups who
paraded a Jack in the Green until about 1889. By the turn of the
century the custom was seen no more. The reasons were twofold:
the Act which stopped boys climbing chimneys had been passed and
these had been the main performers; secondly the Victorians had
a different attitude to such customs, the prettification of customs
took place, no more the giant maypoles with drunken and promiscuous
behaviour, replaced by small poles imported from Germany with
happy skipping children around them. The Lord and Lady of the
May with their practical joking were replaced by a pretty May
Queen. Certainly there was no place for the drunken noisy Jack
in the Green.
|
 |
|
 |
The custom was revived in Hastings by Mad Jacks
Morris Dancers in 1983. We do not say we are following exactly
what happened, this is a custom for now, not a fossil. Jack is
returned, he is not the property of a small group of dancers,
but belongs to us all. Long may he dance!
|
|
Further information about the Jack in the Green
in Hastings can be obtained by reading the excellent booklet "The
Hastings Jack in the Green" written by Keith Leech (ISBN 0 9514498
0 X). Keith, a long time member of Mad Jacks Morris was instrumental
in reviving the tradition in Hastings and is a usually seen dressed
as a "bogie" or green man, one of Jacks' attendants, during the
procession on the May Bank Holiday.
|
|
|
|
|
|