Golden Mile (Blackpool)53°48′54″N 3°03′18″W / 53.815°N 3.055°W The Golden Mile is the name given to the stretch of Promenade between the North and South piers in Blackpool, England. The area is actually 1.7 miles (2.7 kilometres) in length. BackgroundIn 1897 Blackpool Corporation imposed by-laws where "no trading would be permitted on the beach" aside from "donkeys, camels and boatmen".[1] Backlash to the decision included from tradesmen and the press with the Fleetwood Chronicle commenting:
The Corporation compromised by allowing traders such as ventriloquists, Punch and Judy shows and ice cream sellers to remain while "phrenologists, "quack" doctors, palmists, mock auctions and cheap jacks" were prohibited. The ban found the outliers move onto Central Promenade where they erected stalls in front gardens. The stretch became known as the Golden Mile.[citation needed] SideshowsOne of the Golden Mile's key features until the 1960s would become sideshows.[3] In 1889 The Gazette wrote:
In 1933 the Lancashire Evening Post described witnessing "Starving brides and glass coffins, men with no legs or arms, men with 'cork-screw' bodies and three legs, skeletons and pigmies, 'tombs of death,' and 'dusky dancing beauties’."[4] Luke Gannon, who occupied premises on the south corner of Brunswick Street, was responsible for the ‘Starving Bride’ sideshows as well as displaying the disgraced Rector of Stiffkey[5] in a barrel to protest his innocence following a conviction of immorality by a church court.[3] References
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