Appleton Thorn

Appleton Thorn is a village in the borough of Warrington in Cheshire, England.

Each June, the village hosts the ceremony of "Bawming the Thorn". The current form of the ceremony dates from the Nineteenth century, when it was part of the village’s "walking day". It involved children from Appleton Thorn Primary School walking through the village and holding sports and games at the school. This now takes place at the Village Hall. The ceremony stopped in the 1930s, but was later revived by the then headmaster, Mr. Bob Jones in the early 1970s. "Bawming the Thorn" occurs on the Saturday nearest to Midsummer’s Day. Local schoolchildren dance around the tree.

"Bawming" means "decorating" - during the ceremony the thorn tree is decorated with ribbons and garlands. According to legend, the hawthorn at Appleton Thorn grew from a cutting of the Holy Thorn at Glastonbury, which was itself said to have sprung from the staff of Joseph of Arimathea, the man who arranged for Jesus's burial after the Crucifixion.

Appleton appeared in the Domesday survey as "Epeltune" and means "the tun where the apples grew".

The Appleton Cross near Pepper Street, is a reminder of a Warrington friar, Richard de Apulton who was ordained as the sub-deacon at Colwich in 1365.

Thorn Cross (HM Prison) is in Appleton Thorn, on the site formerly occupied by Royal Naval Air Station HMS Blackcap, a wartime aircrew training and aircraft repair airfield. There are a number of graves of aircrew who died at HMS Blackcap, mainly in flying accidents, in St Cross churchyard known locally as "the war graves"

Famous quotes containing the words appleton and/or thorn:

    Good Americans, when they die, go to Paris.
    —Thomas Appleton (1812–1884)

    So long as I have been here I have not willingly planted a thorn in any man’s bosom.
    Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865)