Frances Burgess Explained

Frances Burgess
Birth Name:Frances Lockett
Birth Place:Hyde, Greater Manchester, England
Death Place:Hyde
Occupation:Weaver
Known For:The United Kingdom's first Cotton Queen

Frances Burgess (; 1910–1993) was an English woman and the first person to be crowned the national Cotton Queen in 1930. She held the position for one year, travelling the country to promote business and meeting high-ranking politicians. After her term, she returned to her job as a weaver in a cotton mill.

Biography

Burgess was born Frances Lockett in 1910 in Hyde, Greater Manchester.[1] Her father was a policeman.[2] She left school aged 14 and started work as a weaver at Newton Mill in Hyde.[3] In 1930 she was selected to be Hyde's first Cotton Queen; later the same year she became the first national Cotton Queen and was crowned in Blackpool.[4] On her return to Hyde, after being crowned, she was greeted by a crowd of 20,000 people. The town was decorated for this procession and the parade included Lockett in an open carriage, mounted police, Morris dancers, the Kingston Mill Band, Hyde Borough Brass Band, and over 300 workers from Newton Mill.

In the year after she was crowned, Lockett undertook a tour attending events to boost the reputation of the cotton industry. As part of this she met politicians Stanley Baldwin, Ramsay MacDonald, Lloyd George and Margaret Bondfield.[5] Lloyd George reportedly touched her dress and inquired where he could buy some of the same material it was made from for his daughter.[6] She also travelled the country visiting department stores to encourage sales of cotton, often chaperoned by her employer's wife.[7] Lockett recalled in later life that she knew Cotton Queen "wasn’t going to be just like a Rose Queen; you were going to be kind of an ambassador for cotton".

After her year as Cotton Queen finished, Lockett returned to Hyde and continued to work as a weaver at J & J Ashton's Mill. In 1937 she married policeman, James Burgess. They had no children.

Lockett died in 1993. She was a local celebrity until her death.[8]

Legacy

Lockett's success as Cotton Queen was commemorated in the popular song "Waltz of the Cotton Queen". There was also merchandise produced to mark her time as queen, including postcards and handkerchiefs made from "Queenetta" fabric.

On 13 March 2007, a blue plaque was unveiled in Hyde, dedicated to her life. Lockett's story was one of several to feature in an exhibition at Leeds Industrial Museum in 2017.

References

  1. Web site: Plaques. Open. Frances Lockett blue plaque. 30 November 2020. openplaques.org. en-GB.
  2. Web site: Cornes. Rachel. 2018-01-18. The story of Frances Lockett, Britain's first Cotton Queen. 30 November 2020. Museum Crush. en-GB.
  3. Web site: Frances Burgess (née Lockett) (1910-1993). live. https://web.archive.org/web/20201218134000/https://www.tameside.gov.uk/TouristInformationCentre/Blue-Plaque-Frances-Burgess-%28nee-Lockett%29. 18 December 2020. Tameside Council.
  4. Web site: Photograph of Frances Lockett. 30 November 2020. Google Arts & Culture. en.
  5. Web site: New exhibition in Leeds will honour Yorkshire's queens of the industrial age. 30 November 2020. www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk. https://web.archive.org/web/20201218133728/https://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/new-exhibition-leeds-will-honour-yorkshires-queens-industrial-age-1779596. 18 December 2020. en.
  6. Web site: 3 November 2017. Coalpit pin-ups: Leeds museum pays tribute to queens of industrial age. 30 November 2020. The Guardian. en.
  7. Conway. R.. 1 December 2013. Making the Mill Girl Modern?: Beauty, Industry, and the Popular Newspaper in 1930s' England. Twentieth Century British History. en. 24. 4. 518–541. 10.1093/tcbh/hwt004. 0955-2359. free.
  8. Web site: Barlow. Nigel. 9 February 2014. Cotton Queen. 30 November 2020. About Manchester. https://web.archive.org/web/20201218133603/https://aboutmanchester.co.uk/cotton-queen/. 18 December 2020. en-GB.