The cancellation of this year’s Mid-Lent Fairs in Grantham and Stamford also means that one of the traditions associated with the annual events cannot take place.
Although a Royal Charter for the fairs was granted in 1484 under the reign of King Richard III, they open with the Mayor reading a proclamation relating to the charter confirmed by King William IV, the monarch from 1789 to 1830, which sets out the rules governing the event and the behaviour expected of those attending.
The Showmen’s Guild of Great Britain, which organises the fairs, says that under the charter terms the proclamation should be read every year and they wanted to draw attention to it because that had not been possible due to lockdown restrictions.
Included in the proclamation are rules governing the sale of livestock and a command for all people at the fair to keep the peace “upon pain for every assault or affray made twenty shillings and for every bloodshed forty shillings.”
The fairs would originally have been more like a market where people traded their wares and had to “pay all such duties of toll for goods and chattels bought and sold.”
This year’s fairs were due in Stamford from Monday (15 March) to Saturday (20 March), and in Grantham from Sunday (21 March) to Wednesday (24 March) but have been called off because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The cancellation decision was taken jointly by South Kesteven District Council, working in association with the Showmen’s Guild of Great Britain.
Councillor Kelham Cooke, said: “The Mid-Lent fairs are a longstanding tradition and there is a lot of history associated with them.
“Under the circumstances it is right that they have been cancelled, but it is also right that we acknowledge their place among the traditions of Grantham and Stamford.”