The Legendary Newbury Coat Made

BOOK BERKSHIRE HOTELS

The Legendary Newbury Coat Made

Newbury, Berkshire The 25th of June 1811 AD

On this day, between five in the morning, and six twenty in the evening, textile magnate John Coxeter oversaw the making of a legendary coat for Sir John Throckmorton starting with the sheering of two sheep, through all the yarn preparation and weaving processes to dyeing and finishing, and tailoring the coat.

Throckmorton won 1000 guineas on a bet it could be done, and Coxeter had the sheep roasted for the crowds gathered to see the fun, throwing in 120 gallons of beer in one of the greatest publicity stunts of the age.

Sometime later the Throckmorton family moved from Berkshire to Warwickshire , where the original coat is displayed at Coughton Court near Alcester . Newbury, however, has its own version of the coat, produced when the feat was repeated in 1991 - knocking a further hour off the record!

More famous dates here

8896 views since 20th January 2009

Brit Quote:
I exist in a state of almost perpetual hysteria. - Sting
More Quotes

On this day:
Benjamin Franklin Arrives in London - 1724, First Bomb Dropped on English Soil - 1914
More dates from British history

click here to view all the British counties

County Pages