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ON EPSOM DOWNS.

GIPSY ENCAMPMENTS. EJECTMENT FAILS. 1*173. CCSSISPOSDE.* - LONDON, May o. Gipsies defied thv edict of the Epsom Grand Stand Association refusing them permission to camp on Epsom Downs during the Soring Meeting. On the eve of the meeting the caravans began to arrive. The Grand Association guards. complete wlth badges, "were in readiness _ with a powerful tractor. The gipsies drove straight on the green. The tractors promptly hitched them to a caain and hauled them off again. The gipsies drove on again. The tractor hauled them off. Then it _ grey dark and the tractor retired. leaving roar or five caravans to make a nigtit of it as t:iey liked. One gipsy placed himseit between the wheels of his caravan. "Over my body first, whichever way you haul," fte cried. The tractor dri\ er was nonplussed. Hauling caravans off the grass may or may not be legal, but deliberately running over a human being is quite another matter. The tractor abandoned this particular job and wheeled off to the road.

Then the gipsy had a brain wave. He dashed into the road. "Where's your license?" he asked the tractor man. "Where's your name plate and number ? ; ' He did not stop at asking questions. He promptly put the police on the track. They, too, wanted the same information. The tractor, it was alleged, is licensed for farm use only, and here it was travelling on the high road! Out came a policeman's notebook. License? Name plate and number? Alas for the tractor! Particulars were taken and the tractor was ignominously ordered home. There was great movement in the countryside then, and from all roads the caravans advanced to their camping grounds, and, under the eyes of the ground caretaker and the police about thirty caravans settled down. Horses were loosed to graze, camp fires were lighted, and the camp looked as if it "had been settled there for weeks.

A sequel was a case which came before the Epsom Bench. Five gipsies pleaded "Not Guilty." After some argument, the Chairman said the Bench had, by a majority, come to the conclusion that there must be a eonviction. They were unanimously of the opinion that it was not a case for the infliction of a fine, and they proposed to bind the defendants over in the sum of £5 to be of good behaviour for a period of six months. The Bench desired him to express the hope that there might be some modus vivendi arrived at before the next race meeting. There would be no order as to costs.

The First Bound Won.

Commander O. Locker-Lampson, M.P., writing to the "Daily Mail,"' said: "The gipsies have won the first round in the fight for freedom. They intend to win the rest. Meanwhile, it has became clear that if helpless gipsies are persecuted to-day, other enjoyers of immemorial rights on the Epsom Downs are in equal peril. "At an early opportunity it is the intention, therefore, of those who support the gipsies to test the general right of the Epsom authorities to enclose common land and exclude the public. "Also, early next week I propose introducing a Bill in - the House o£ Commons to amend the 1925 Law of Property Act in as far as it permits the expropriation of the poorest without redress."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19290612.2.136

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19643, 12 June 1929, Page 14

Word Count
553

ON EPSOM DOWNS. Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19643, 12 June 1929, Page 14

ON EPSOM DOWNS. Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19643, 12 June 1929, Page 14

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