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Horne, Thomas, Reverend, c1850 - 1918

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: c1850 - 1918

Biography

The Reverend Thomas Horne was born during the middle of the nineteenth century to a fairground family that travelled the north-west of England. His childhood was hard, he appeared on a show-front at the age of three and by the time he was ten he was working to support the family following his father's desertion.

As a young man he achieved success as a partner in a ghost illusion show as well as performing in portable theatres. He was, however, a deeply religious man who attended church regularly. Inspired by a Leeds clergyman he greatly admired, Thomas Horne left the fairgrounds to join a missionary brotherhood at Oxford. After four years there he returned to Leeds where he acted as Sacristan at the parish church. In 1884 he was offered a curacy at Hunslet and was ordained the following year.

Upon hearing about the Moveable Dwelling Bill put forward by George Smith in 1889, Thomas Horne started a vigorous campaign in the press against Smith's proposed legislation. He continued to work on behalf of travelling showmen and became chaplain to the United Kingdom Van Dwellers' Association, the organisation set up to oppose the Moveable Dwellings Bill. In 1899 he was invited to become the Association's official Organiser and General Secretary.

Despite their success in defeating the bill, they were not a strong organisation. Membership had declined and they were weakened by the existence of rival bodies within the fairground community. Thomas Horne travelled throughout the country, preaching to the showmen, and devoting time and attention to getting new members from the travelling fraternity; in one year alone he travelled over 12,000 miles, visiting fairs as far apart as Penzance in Cornwall to Ayr in Scotland.

In 1909 he was joined by the great Walsall showman Pat Collins, who had been elected president of the Association that year in succession to Lord George Sanger. Collins was to remain in that office for the next twenty years, a record that has never been surpassed. Their work together had an immediate impact on the Association. Within a year or so the organisation had changed its name to the Showmen's Guild (the subtitle to its original name) and it had been recognised as having the right to defend its members' interest. During the following years the organisation and management of the Guild was significantly altered to assume the shape it still has today. Prominent among these changes was the establishment of regional bodies known as Sections formed in 1917, through which the affairs of the Guild would be administered.

Until his death in 1918, Thomas Horne was the main spokesman for the fairground community. With his education, training as a priest, and family association with the fairground, he became the ideal representative of the travelling showmen. He did much to safeguard the future of the old Van Dwellers Association and presented a respectable image of the fairground to its negaters.

The Reverend Thomas Horne was a leading campaigner in the fight against the Movable Dwelings Bill of 1888 and in favour of the fairground families.

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

O'Connor-Toulmin Family Collection

 Fonds
Reference code: NFA0025
Scope and Contents

The collection contains photographs, including early family photographs of the O'Connor family, contemporary research, journal articles and books written by Vanessa Toulmin. Also included in the collection are manuscripts and newspaper cuttings.

Dates: c1900 - 2001