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Tony Worrall Foto (a group admin) says:
10 Feb 12 - Preston Guild is now here, it's 2012. Please try and submit as many pictures as you can. This is the time the World will be looking

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Title Author Replies Latest Post
2012 images Tony Worrall Foto 3 5 weeks ago
CW Shufflebottom earthernware and glass merchants deeceeem 5 2 months ago
Research about Winckley Square wanted! Nathalie Boobis 0 2 months ago
Procession floats 240 Gardner 6 2 months ago
Guild Goal Preston Digital Archive 2 27 months ago

About Preston Guild (past and present)

The Preston Guild Merchant comes about every 20 years. The next one is in 2012. It is normally a year full of celebration. Prestonians from all over the world return to their home town to take part in the festivities.

From Wikipedia: 'The right to hold a Guild Merchant was conferred upon the Burgesses of Preston by a charter of 1179.

Before 1328 a celebration had been held on an irregular basis, but at the Guild of that year it was decreed that subsequent Guilds should be held every twenty years. After this there were breaks in the pattern for various reasons, but an unbroken series were held from 1542 to 1922. A full 400 year sequence was frustrated by the cancellation of the 1942 Guild due to World War II, but the cycle resumed in 1952. The expression '(Once) every Preston Guild', meaning 'very infrequently', has passed into fairly common use, especially in Lancashire.

Guild week is always started by the opening of the Guild Court, which since the Sixteenth century has traditionally been on the first Monday after the feast of the decollation (the beheading) of St John the Baptist. As well as concerts and other exhibitions, the main events are a series of processions through the city. Numerous street parties are typically also held in the locality.

In 1952, the emphasis was on the bright new world emerging after World War II. The major event held in the city's Avenham Park had every school participating, and hundreds of children, from toddlers to teenagers, demonstrated different aspects of physical education in the natural amphitheatre of the park.'

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