The "Dry Village"

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The "Dry Village"

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Details

Location

Bessbrook, Camlough

Year

1964

Date

Production

Length

05min 18sec

Audio

sound

Format

16mm

black and white

Source

Digitised as part of the BFI's Unlocking Film Heritage project

Courtesy

British Film Institute, UTV

Rights Holder

ITV

It is illegal to download, copy, print or otherwise utilise in any other form this material, without written consent from the copyright holder.

Description

The village of the crooked lake brags six pubs for 98 people but the model village boasts neither pawn shop nor police station. Which will you choose? Enjoy James Boyce’s cautionary tale of two villages, one with no pub the other with no newsagents. Hear what the residents of Bessbrook think of their founder John Grubb Richardson’s social experiment. He believed that the absence of a pub would remove the need for both the police and pawn brokers. But are the beautiful surroundings compensation enough for the lack of drink? And would the residents of Camlough be willing to give up their six pubs to find out? 

Notes

Bessbrook is one of many Quaker model villages, it was founded more than 30 years before Bournville, the well-known model town founded by the Cadbury family. Despite Grubb's philosophy of the “three P’s” there is now a police station in Bessbrook however you will still not find any pubs or pawn shops. The reporter James Boyce was a French teacher by trade and his teaching methods were as unconventional as his broadcasts. He rarely failed to entertain viewers by becoming immersed in the subjects he covered and often poking fun at himself in the process. His reports are a treasure trove of the eccentric and strange aspects of Northern Ireland’s people and history. This material is Courtesy of the UTV Archive.

Credits

Broadcaster: UTV

Programme: Parade

James Boyce: Presenter

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