SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Racecourse.
Horse-racing on Westwood evidently began in 1690, when the corporation gave
permission for a course to be made where it had
been 'now lately used', (fn. 69) and in 1712 the race
days were 9-11 September. (fn. 70) The town's M.P.s
were said in 1730 to have contributed 'largely'
towards the expenses of the races and it was
decided that innkeepers setting up booths should
pay the race managers for the privilege; that
became the normal practice. (fn. 71) In 1733 racing was
prohibited until the week before Midsummer
because the pasture had been damaged the previous year. (fn. 72) Whitsun week was chosen in 1749
at the request of the innkeepers and although
there was some variation three days at Whitsun
became the usual race time. (fn. 73) Hurn was first
mentioned as the venue in 1765 (fn. 74) and the next
year Lord Rockingham was asked to solicit a
king's plate to be run for on the new course. (fn. 75)
The race stewards were given a lease of ground
on which to erect a grandstand in 1767, a
subscription was raised for the purpose the same
year, (fn. 76) and the stand was in use in 1768. (fn. 77) The
stewards were also licensed in 1769 to build a
stand for the 'tryers', presumably the judges. In
1772 the corporation subscribed to the improvement of 'the stand', (fn. 78) and the course itself was
improved by the purchase of nearly 1 a. in
Bishop Burton in 1769 and the exchange of a
similar area there in 1787. (fn. 79) The corporation
subscribed to the races several times in the 1820s
and 1830s. (fn. 80)
The Holderness Hunt was said to have begun
a one-day meeting at Beverley in March 1828
which ten years later was moved to Burton Constable, where its success resulted in a lapse of
the Whitsun meeting at Beverley. (fn. 81) After three
years in abeyance the Beverley races were revived
in 1848 (fn. 82) and the Whitsun or summer meeting
was thereafter held on two days in June. (fn. 83) In
addition a spring meeting in April was held from
1865 to 1875, (fn. 84) and an autumn meeting at various
dates between August and November was held
from 1886 to 1901. (fn. 85) A new grandstand was built
in 1887 and afterwards enlarged, (fn. 86) but it and the
original stand were later demolished.
The Beverley and East Riding Race Co. Ltd.
was formed in 1902 to manage the races at a time
when the tenancy agreement with the pasture
masters was in doubt; the matter was resolved,
however, and proposals to build a new course at
Walkington were scrapped. (fn. 87) The course was
used as an airfield during the First World War,
but racing was resumed in 1920 (fn. 88) after the course
had been improved the previous year by the
exchange of nearly 5 a. in Bishop Burton. (fn. 89) The
course was enclosed and an entrance charge
made for the first time in 1935. (fn. 90) An additional
meeting was begun in 1938 and a new grandstand
was built in 1939. (fn. 91) The course was again in
military occupation during the Second World
War, but the traditional two-day summer meeting was revived in 1946 and spring and autumn
meetings were introduced the next year. (fn. 92) New
stands were built in 1959 and 1967. (fn. 93) By 1987
racing had been increased to about 15 days
a year. A training course, the tan gallop, on
Westwood was made c. 1870 (fn. 94) and was still used
for horses from local racing stables in 1988.
Assembly Rooms.
There were assembly rooms in
North Bar Within by 1745. (fn. 95) A site in Norwood
was bought in 1761 and new rooms, designed
by John Carr of York, were built in 1761-2; the
cost was met by the sale of 44 shares at £25
each and a loan of £250. (fn. 96) The rooms had a
symmetrical front with a two-storeyed centre,
behind which was a ballroom flanked by singlestoreyed wings housing card and tea rooms. (fn. 97)
From the beginning twelve assemblies were held
fortnightly during the winter, later two in race
week as well. (fn. 98) A large new hall, designed by
H. F. Lockwood of Hull and having a highly
ornamental interior, was built behind the assembly rooms in 1840-2, and the old and new
buildings were named the Beverley and East
Riding Public Rooms. (fn. 99) The new hall was said
to have been intended for meetings of the Beverley and East Riding Agricultural Association
and the Beverley and East Riding Floral and
Horticultural Society, but those bodies were
soon defunct and the rooms were used for a wide
variety of events. (fn. 1) Moving pictures were shown
there in 1897 and 1912. (fn. 2) A roller skating rink
was opened there in 1909 and again in 1929. (fn. 3)
The rooms were sold in 1934 and converted to
the Regal cinema the next year, when the older
part was demolished and the newer completely
altered inside. (fn. 4)
Theatres.
Thomas Keregan's company from
York performed in Beverley c. 1730 (fn. 5) but the
venue is not known. Beverley remained in the
York circuit and Joseph Baker's company played
at the theatre in Walkergate. A site there was
bought in 1754 by Thomas Wrightson and by
1759 he had built a playhouse. (fn. 6) In 1771, when
Tate Wilkinson's lease of the theatre had nearly
expired, he was ordered out of the town by the
mayor, who would not countenance a breach of
the law 'by suffering a naughty play at Beverley';
perhaps the theatre was unlicensed. (fn. 7) The theatre
was disused by 1776 (fn. 8) and was converted by
Wrightson (d. 1781) to two houses (now nos.
90-2 Walkergate). (fn. 9) The Walkergate building was
soon replaced by another in Register Square
(later Cross Street), built by Edward Rushworth
on a site which he bought in 1772. Samuel Butler
was playing in it as part of the Richmond circuit
in 1788 and he evidently continued to use it until
1804. (fn. 10) After its closure it was sold to Graves's
charity trustees in 1814 and used as a school. (fn. 11)
The next theatre was built in Lairgate by Abraham Peacock in 1804 on a site which he acquired
in 1799; (fn. 12) it was opened in May 1805. (fn. 13) The
building held over 600 people and the season
was usually from May to July; it was said to be
generally well attended in race week. (fn. 14) Butler
died at Beverley in 1812 and the theatre was lost
from the Richmond circuit in 1816, (fn. 15) the year
after Peacock had sold it to James Walker. (fn. 16) It
was later used successively by companies from
Sunderland, Chester, and Sheffield. (fn. 17) It was
closed in 1840 (fn. 18) and an attempt to have it
reopened in 1844 met with opposition. (fn. 19) It was
said to have been demolished by Lady Walker
at the instigation of Anthony Atkinson. (fn. 20)
Several other buildings and temporary structures were later used for theatrical and other
performances. A wooden building on the site
later occupied by the Mechanics' Institute, Cross
Street, was used by James Cooke's circus in
1841; (fn. 21) the institute itself and the assembly
rooms, Norwood, both housed theatres in the
1850s; (fn. 22) a theatre in 'Mortle' (presumably Morton) Lane, Walkergate, was advertised in 1856; (fn. 23)
a temporary theatre was later built by a Mr.
Jones in Hall Garth and another theatre there
belonged to H. M. Straker in the 1880s; and yet
another temporary building was in use in 1904. (fn. 24)
Cinemas.
Moving pictures were first shown in
Beverley at the assembly rooms, Norwood, in
1897 (fn. 25) and those rooms briefly accommodated
the Electric Cinema Picture Palace in 1912. (fn. 26)
Pictures were shown in the corn exchange, Saturday Market, early in 1911 and the Picture Playhouse was opened there later that year. (fn. 27) From
the first the Playhouse was operated by Ernest
F. Symmons (d. 1957). (fn. 28) Its earliest rival was
the Marble Arch cinema in Butcher Row, built
in 1916; it seated 1,100 people and included a
cafe. (fn. 29) In 1935 the assembly rooms were converted to the Regal cinema, the older part of the
rooms being replaced but the large hall behind
retained; the Regal included a ballroom and
cafe. (fn. 30)
Film performances at the Playhouse ended in
1963, a year after the introduction of bingo. (fn. 31) At
the Marble Arch bingo was begun in 1961 and
films were last shown in 1964; the building was
closed in 1967 (fn. 32) and demolished. At the Regal
films were replaced by bingo in 1968. (fn. 33) In the
1970s the town was without a commercial cinema
except for the years 1971-2, when the Memorial
Hall, Lairgate, served in that capacity. (fn. 34) A film
society was formed at the Playhouse in 1972 but
was wound up in 1981. (fn. 35) The Playhouse was
reopened as a cinema, however, in 1982. (fn. 36)
Libraries.
The earliest circulating library in Beverley was evidently that begun by John Munby
in 1740, (fn. 37) and other circulating and subscription
libraries were established in the 19th century. (fn. 38)
The longest lived was Green's library, in Saturday Market, which was said to have been started
in 1793 and continued into the 20th century. (fn. 39)
A public library, given by J. E. Champney
and designed by John Cash, was built in Well
Lane (later Champney Road) in 1906 on a site
given by William Spencer. (fn. 40) It is of red brick
with stone dressings in the Queen Anne style.
The lending library was opened the next year
with a stock of 2,500 books. (fn. 41) A new wing to
house the reference library, designed by H. W.
Cash, was opened in 1928; it, too, was given by
Champney together with his collection of 5,000
books. (fn. 42) In 1971 the lending library was enlarged
and a junior library and gramophone record
room added. (fn. 43) The total lending and reference
stock was increased from 5,300 in 1910 to 27,800
in 1953. (fn. 44) In 1985 it was 112,700. (fn. 45)
Art Gallery and Museums.
The public library
included a picture gallery where an exhibition
was staged at the opening of the building in
1906; the art gallery as such was not opened,
however, until 1910. (fn. 46) The reference library
extension of 1928 included a first-floor lecture
room intended to relieve pressure on the art
gallery. (fn. 47) A local artists' exhibition was held in
1911 and 1912, from 1934 to 1939, and annually
after the war. (fn. 48) The gallery houses a collection
of paintings by the Beverley artist F. W. Elwell
(d. 1958). (fn. 49)
A museum of local antiquities and natural
history was formed by the corporation in 1908
but was not opened, in the public library, until
1910. (fn. 50) By the early 1950s some of the exhibits
were stored at the municipal offices and the
library room occupied by the museum was
needed for other purposes. It was consequently
decided to dispose of exhibits of a general character and to concentrate on local material. (fn. 51) In
1985 some exhibits were in store and others were
shown in the art gallery, where a heritage centre
was opened in 1984.
An East Yorkshire Regimental Museum was
begun at Victoria Barracks in 1920 and rebuilt
in 1956. (fn. 52) After the closure of the barracks it
was moved to a house in Butcher Row, and in
1984 it was transferred to York, except for
exhibits relating to the local volunteer forces
which were then placed in the art gallery in
Champney Road. (fn. 53) A national Museum of Army
Transport was built and opened in Flemingate
in 1983. (fn. 54)
Literary Institutes and Newsrooms.
The Beverley
and East Riding Mechanics' Institute was established in 1832 and at first held its meetings in
the schoolroom in Minister Yard. (fn. 55) In 1837 it
bought a site in Register Square (later Cross
Street) (fn. 56) and plans were prepared by Henry
Farrah for a lecture hall and other rooms. (fn. 57) The
hall was built in 1841-2 (fn. 58) and by 1844 a reading
room accommodating a library and museum had
been added. (fn. 59) Because of inadequate funds a
projected classroom may never have been provided. The library had 396 volumes in 1832 and
1,000 by 1852, and the reading room contained
local and national newspapers. There were 163
members in 1832, rising to a peak of 360 in 1847
and then falling to c. 200 in the later 1850s.
Competition from rival institutions was one
reason for the decline. The institute joined the
Yorkshire Union of Mechanics' Institutes in
1846 but sent no reports to it after 1864 and,
evidently virtually defunct, was excluded from
it in 1868. The building was used intermittently
for other purposes and was demolished c. 1890. (fn. 60)
Several other institutions shared the aims
of the Mechanics' Institute. Early newsrooms
existing in Beverley included a subscription
room in Saturday Market by 1823 and another
in Cross Street built in 1830. The latter is a
single-storeyed stuccoed building with a Doric
porch in antis. (fn. 61) In 1853 one of the two principal
rooms was used for billiards. (fn. 62) Conservative
Association and Reform Association newsrooms
were both formed in or about 1837. (fn. 63) A Mutual
Improvement Society was founded by the 1860s
and there were several denominational societies
for the instruction of young people. (fn. 64) In 1857
the Working Men's Conservative Association
newsroom was opened. (fn. 65) The Church Institute
was formed in 1866, opening its rooms the next
year, (fn. 66) and the Christian and Literary Institute
held its first meeting in 1873. (fn. 67) Few of those
institutions survived into the 20th century, but
the Church Institute existed until c. 1905 (fn. 68) and
the subscription newsroom in Cross Street until
1935; (fn. 69) the latter was replaced by a newsroom
club in the former Temperance Hall, Champney
Road, which existed from 1940 to 1963. (fn. 70) One
new body, the Literary and Scientific Society,
was formed in 1904 and wound up in 1926. (fn. 71)
Memorial Hall.
In 1950 the former St. John's
chapel of ease, Lairgate, was acquired (fn. 72) for
conversion to a hall as a memorial to those who
fell in the Second World War. Shortage of funds
caused many delays but the hall was eventually
opened in 1959 after enlargement and much
internal alteration. (fn. 73) It was still used for a wide
variety of meetings and activities in 1988.
Newspapers.
The town has enjoyed two long
surviving newspapers, both weeklies: the Beverley Recorder, a Liberal organ, was published
from 1855 to 1921 and the Beverley Guardian,
which was Conservative, was begun in 1856 and
still existed in 1988. The only other papers to
last more than a few years were the Beverley
Echo and the Beverley Independent, and there
were several more ephemeral publications.
The Beverley Recorder was founded in July
1855 as the Beverley Weekly Recorder and General, Domestic, Foreign, and Historical Register
and appeared on Saturday. It contained 8 pages,
cost 1d., and was printed and published in
Butcher Row by John Ward. At the end of that
year the name was changed to the Beverley
Weekly Recorder and General Advertiser and the
number of pages was reduced to four. From
1857 it was known as the Beverley Recorder
and General Advertiser and was produced in
Wednesday Market. It was enlarged to 8 pages
in 1865 but in 1867, when 'Weekly' was restored
to the title, it was reduced again to four. In 1879
H. W. Ward, son of the founder, became the
proprietor and the size was increased to 8 pages
once more. In 1884 'Weekly' was again dropped
from the title. The Recorder incorporated the
Beverley Echo from 1903 and the Beverley Independent from 1911. In 1915 H. M. Ward became
the proprietor and in 1916 W. I. Watson. The
paper was renamed the Beverley and East Riding
Recorder in 1917 and the addition 'and Holderness, Buckrose, and Howdenshire Advertiser' was
made to the title in 1918, when the price was
increased to 1½d. and the size reduced to 6 pages.
In 1919 the number of pages was reduced to 4
and the price to 1d. The title was changed in
1920 to the East Riding County Recorder and
Holderness, Buckrose, and Howdenshire Advertiser, the size increased to 8 pages and the price
to 2d., and the day of publication changed to
Friday; the paper was printed and published in
Hull, still by Watson. The size was reduced to
6 pages in 1921 and publication ended later that
year. (fn. 74)
The Beverley Guardian and East Riding Advertiser was founded in January 1856 and appeared
on Saturday. It contained 4 pages, cost 1d., and
was printed and published in Saturday Market
by John Green. From 1882 the proprietors were
Green and his son William. The pages had been
enlarged in 1857 and 1880 and the number was
increased to 8 in 1882 and to 10 occasionally in
1895 and regularly in 1907. In 1903 the Guardian
incorporated the East Riding Telegraph. (fn. 75) During the First World War the paper was reduced
first to 8 and then to 6 pages, and in 1917 the
price was increased to 1½d. (fn. 76) After the war the
size was unchanged, but during the Second
World War there were often only 4 pages, of a
smaller size. In 1962 the paper was taken over
from Green & Son Ltd. by East Yorkshire
Printers Ltd. and was printed and published at
Driffield. At the same time it was increased to
10 pages of a larger size and the price was raised
to 2d. (fn. 77) The size and price later fluctuated. From
1984 the Guardian was published at Driffield by
East Yorkshire Newspapers Ltd. and printed at
Scarborough. (fn. 78)
The Beverley Echo was said to have been
founded in 1877 by Tom Turner in support of
the Liberals. (fn. 79) The first surviving copy, dated
12 February 1878, was printed by the Express
Company and published for the proprietor by
William Tilson; it contained 4 pages and cost
½d. By 1880 the paper was printed and published
by Turner, and by 1884 it was produced by the
East Riding Printing and Publishing Co. and
appeared on Wednesday, with larger pages. In
1885 it was taken over by H. W. Ward and
printed in Wednesday Market; the pages were
reduced in size and the day of publication was
changed to Tuesday. By 1887 it was published
on Wednesday and by 1901 the pages were
again larger. It was incorporated in the Beverley
Recorder in 1903. (fn. 80)
The Beverley Independent was founded in
April 1888 and appeared on Saturday. It contained 4 pages, cost 1d., and was printed and
published by Francis Hall, at first in Holme
Church Lane but from 1890 in Walkergate. The
size was increased to 8 pages in 1891. Hall
continued to produce the paper until 1911, when
it was incorporated in the Beverley Recorder. (fn. 81)
Of the short-lived publications the monthly
Beverley Chronicle was said to have been founded
by John Ward in support of the Liberals. (fn. 82) The
only surviving copy (vol. I, no. 10) is dated June
1855 and suggests a starting date in September
1854. The surviving copy has the full title of
the Beverley Chronicle, General Advertiser, and
Miscellany of Literature, contains 8 pages, and
cost 1d. (fn. 83) The Beverley Express was said to have
been published from c. 1856 to 1859 by John
Kemp in support of the Conservatives. (fn. 84) The
Beverley Argus and Freemen's Journal was
founded in October 1875 and published weekly
by John H. Hind in Toll Gavel. (fn. 85) No more is
known of it. The Beverley Freeman was said to
have been published in 1881-2 by Joseph Hind
as a Radical organ. (fn. 86) The Beverley Chronicle was
said to have been published for a few weeks in
1884 by Robert Eadie and to have been a
pamphlet of scurrilous tendencies. (fn. 87) The Beverley and East Riding Telegraph was started in May
1895. The title was changed to the East Riding
Telegraph in 1898 and the paper was incorporated in the Beverley Guardian in 1903. (fn. 88)