Oak Apple Day

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Oak Apple Day
Also called Shick-Shack Day
Arbor Day
Type Historical
Date 29 May
Observances Wearing of sprigs of oak leaves.

Oak Apple Day was celebrated in England on 29 May. It commemorated the restoration of the monarchy in Britain and Ireland, in May 1660. In some parts of the country, the day was also known as Shick-Shack Day or Arbor Day.

In 1660, Parliament declared 29th May a public holiday:

"Parliament had ordered the 29 of May, the King's birthday, to be for ever kept as a day of thanksgiving for our redemption from tyranny and the King's return to his Government, he entering London that day." (Samuel Pepys, Diary June 1, 1660)

Though the holiday, Oak Apple Day, was formally abolished in 1859, a 1915 film clip of Col Lyttleton inspecting the Chelsea pensioners on Oak Apple Day is preserved at the British Film Institute [1].

Traditional celebrations to commemorate the event often entailed the wearing of oak apples (a type of plant gall, possibly known in some parts of the country as a shick-shack, but see the article on its etymology in the external links) or sprigs of oak leaves, in reference to the occasion after the Battle of Worcester in October 1651, when the future Charles II of England escaped the Roundhead army by hiding in an oak tree near Boscobel House. (See also Escape of Charles II).

It is widely believed that these ceremonies, which have now largely died out, are continuations of pre-Christian nature worship. The Garland King who rides through the streets of Castleton, Derbyshire, at the head of a procession, completely disguised in greenery, which is affixed to a pinnacle on the parish churchtower, can have little connection with the Restoration. Events still take place at Upton-upon-Severn, Northampton, Aston on Clun in Shropshire, Marsh Gibbon in Buckinghamshire, and Great Wishford in Wiltshire.

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