Whilst many people record the first Gala day as taking place  on Saturday 19th June 1948 it  has came to light through public newspaper archive searches by James Monie who found the following newspaper cutting which records a gala day being held in 1930 and  organised by the Stonehouse Miners Welfare Society.

 

The Gala Queen during the late 1940’s was called the ‘Queen of the Roses’. The first Queen recorded in 1948 was Anne Elliot and her Champion was James Aitken. The venue of the crowning ceremony was the bandstand in the public park.  Following the ceremony the Queen and Court would  visit Stonehouse Hospital, a tradition still upheld today although this now incorporates the nursing homes.   On Gala day, inscribed commemorative medals were presented to the Queen and Court. Food rationing was still in force so application to the food office was essential to produce supplies for the large gathering of people attending the event.

Stonehouse Merchants’ Association presented the committee with a cheque for £50 (reckoned at the time to be a magnificent sum) to set in motion an annual Gala Day as the initial one was deemed a great success.

Gala Days from 1949-1953 followed more or less the same format, lapsing between 1954 to 1958. In 1959 a meeting was called to revive the event, to be held in May, changing the name of the ‘Queen of the Roses’, to the ‘May Queen’, and the ‘Boy Attendant’ to ‘Herald’.

Mr Jack McEwan was chairman from 1959-1964. A horse drawn open Landau was hired from the Co-op to transport the May Queen to the park.  Stonehouse Silver Band and Larkhall Silver Band were regulars at the Gala days whilst  Stonehouse Pipe Band had only a few members during this period  and were not regulars.

During this period the Tilework Park in Union Street was used for the Crowning Ceremony drainage problems with the park  caused it to be waterlogged on occasion.  Its also recorded that  on at least  one occasion Guy Hamilton’s field off  Udston Mill Road had to be used in an emergency.

Before 1963 the boys had worn Elizabethan type costumes, but by 1964 they had converted to kilts.

Between 1965 – 1974  the Gala Day  lapsed, however from  from 1974 -1992 the Gala Day was held in the public park before returning once again to the Tilework Park. During some of these years a festival committee under the umbrella of the Community council took the gala day forward. The Gala committee devolved its  self from  being a subcommittee under the community council when it was learned that if a community council failed to be formed all monies held would revert to the council and this included the gala committee.  The gala committee  was chaired by the late Fred McDermid for ten years.

The gala committee continue to struggle for membership and its only through hard working individuals that the gala day has taken place over the years since 1974.

The heritage group has collated a number of photographs and gala day programmes. Listed below are some pictures related to years 1948-1965.

Details of the Gala courts can be found in the following document which was compilled by John Young.  Gala_Courts

  • Gala Days