08/01/2026
...and we continue to be part of the fabric of what makes this proud city what it is.
In 1752, people in Hull genuinely believed something precious had been taken from them.
Not land. Not money. Time.
That year, Britain changed its calendar. Eleven days were wiped from September. One day it was the 2nd, the next it was suddenly the 14th. On paper it was a correction, a tidy solution to a long-standing problem. On the streets, it felt like daylight robbery. Days of work, pay, plans and tradition appeared to vanish without warning.
In Hull, that shock hit harder than most places, because of Hull Fair.
By then, Hull Fair was already ancient. It wasn’t a treat or a novelty you could do without. It was something people depended on. Traders made their living there. Families saved for it. Showmen travelled miles for it. It was part of the city’s heartbeat. The thought that days could simply be removed from the year sparked a fear that the fair might be shortened, damaged, or slowly lost altogether.
And once something that old starts being interfered with, people know it rarely comes back the same.
That fear turned into anger very quickly. Not confusion. Not misunderstanding. Fear.
Fear that people in power could change time with a pen stroke and that Hull Fair, one of the city’s most important traditions, could be quietly chipped away without Hull having any say in it. Fewer days meant fewer visitors. Fewer visitors meant less money. Less money meant no guarantee the fair would survive as it always had.
Word spread fast. People gathered in the streets, tense and angry. They believed their eleven days had been taken, and with them the future of Hull Fair. They demanded those days back.
The unrest couldn’t be ignored. The missing days were never returned, but Hull refused to lose its fair. A compromise was reached. From that point on, Hull Fair would be held in October, starting around the 11th, fixed and protected so it could never be quietly shortened or weakened again by changes to the calendar.
That decision changed everything.
Every October, when the lights blaze and the rides return, Hull Fair carries that moment with it. It stands as proof that it didn’t survive by accident or luck. It survived because people cared enough to stand up, shout, and protect something that mattered to them.
Hull Fair didn’t end up in October by chance.
It ended up there because Hull refused to risk losing it.