The 'Whipping Toms' event in Leicester was an annual tradition celebrated in the Newarke area of Leicester on Shrove Tuesday. Until 1846, a group of men would stand and whip men and boys in the vicinity of the Newarke area as part of an annual game. A plaque in the area marks the point where the 'Toms' would stand.[1][2] The custom is believed to have been a commemoration of the chasing of the Danes out of the city in the 10th century.[1] The tradition was banned whilst Robert Peel was Prime Minister in Parliament through the Leicester Improvement Act in 1846.
Historical background
editThe first occurrence of the event is unknown with the earliest recorded mention in 1744.[3] The custom is believed to precede this date. The tradition was believed by some to be the commemoration of the expulsion of the Danes from Leicester in the 10th century.[1][4] Other suggestions to its background allude to other pagan practices with the pain akin to a form of sacrifice.[5] This suggestion also comes from the timing of the event - it coincided with traditional signs of Spring, an important season in Pagan traditions. It has also be seen as a potential form of penitence in preparation for the Christian season of Lent, a theme of which is penance. Lent would begin on Ash Wednesday, the day which followed the 'Whipping Tom' event.
Practices
editThe day began with a fair in the Newarke area, with music and entertainment, as well as food.[4] The area was described as having a festive mood, and would have been a great source of entertainment for the people of Leicester, with people gathering from across Leicester in the area to celebrate.[4] A hockey-like game was played, with the gates to the Newarke area acting as goals. The hockey game would come to a conclusion shortly after midday, with most women and young children vacating the area at this time. The remaining men and boys would have been those participating in that year's event.
The 'whipping' portion of the day began at around 1:00 PM. At this time, three men would emerge wearing blue clothes, one carrying a bell, and the others carrying a 'large waggon whip' each.[6] The aim of the remaining men and teenage boys in the area would be to try and capture the bell, or at least stop it from being rung, whilst the men clad in blue would try to defend themselves and the bell using their whips.[7] The game would only conclude when the bell was seized and the ringing stopped. This could take as long as several hours.[8]
The whippings were limited to below the knees, and the 'Toms' could not whip anyone who was kneeling.[9] Kneeling was a sign of submission to the 'Toms', and anyone who knelt would not receive a whipping. There was also an option to make a two pence donation instead of being whipped. However, it is believed that this was not always adhered to, depending on the 'Toms' participating that year, with the donation sometimes not acting as the barrier to a whipping that it should. This was introduced as a way to allow people to access the Newarke area who had a need to, without them necessarily taking part in the whippings.[8]
Abolition
editWhilst a number of pitiful safeguards were put in place, such as limits on where on the body people could be whipped, the event was seen as a brutal celebration, resulting in its abolition by an Act of Parliament 1846.[10] The bill, titled the Leicester Improvement Act, was passed on 16 February 1846 to put an end to the practice, but this was met with some fierce opposition from the 'Whipping Toms', who saw the Act as an attack on a way of life and the end of a much-loved local custom and tradition.[9] They did not heed the warnings of the Leicester Improvement Act and carried out the custom the following year in 1847. The press reported the presence of upwards of 150 constables and the arrest and transport to Gaol of "two vans full of prisoners", this proved effective as the custom desisted in 1848 and 1849 with the threat of a substantial £5 fine to be paid by anyone who had carried on their position as a 'Whipping Tom', due to the perceived severity of the whippings given by the 'Toms'.[11][12] The tradition can be seen as dead by 1848.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ a b c Clay, Jeremy (10 March 2019). "The story behind a strange plaque in Leicester City Centre - and 4 other weird traditions". Leicester Mercury. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
- ^ Herrick, Michael (16 October 2018). "The Whipping Toms Historical Marker". The Historical Marker Database.
- ^ Billson, Charles James (2013). County Folklore - Leicestershire and Rutland. Read Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1447491736.
- ^ a b c Maclean, Margaret (27 February 2017). "Evading a flogging by the Whipping Toms". University of Leicester.
- ^ Butt, Stephen (2009). Paranormal Leicester. The Stroud: Amberley Publishing. ISBN 9781848687523.
- ^ Hone, William (1845). The Year Book of Daily Recreation and Information. London.
- ^ Hone, William (1848). The Year Book of Daily Recreation and Information: Concerning Remarkable Men and Manners, Times and Seasons, Solemnities and Merry-makings, Antiquities and Novelties, on the Plan of the Everyday Book and Table Book. W Tepgs.
- ^ a b Kirkup, Thomas. "The Whipping Toms". Leicester Chronicle.
- ^ a b "Custom Demised: the Whipping Toms". In Search of Traditional Customs and Ceremonies. 28 February 2015.
- ^ Fielding Johnson, T (1891). Glimpses of Ancient Leicester in Six Periods. Leicester.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Lawrence, Paul (2011). The New Police in the Nineteenth Century. Ashgate Publisher. ISBN 9780754629450.
- ^ "Leicester". Stamford Mercury. 19 February 1847. p. 3.