Today, we will delve into an exciting and relevant topic that has captured the attention of many: Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake. From its origins to its impact on today's society, Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake is a topic that leaves no one indifferent. Throughout this article, we will explore the different aspects related to Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake, from its historical background to its influence on everyday life. Through deep and thoughtful analysis, we will seek to understand the importance and meaning that Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake has today, as well as its potential for the future. In short, we will immerse ourselves in a journey in which we will discover the richness and complexity of Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake, addressing different perspectives and approaches to enrich our knowledge of this fascinating topic.
The Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake is an annual event held on the Spring Bank Holiday at Cooper's Hill, near Gloucester in England. Participants race down the 200-yard (180 m) long hill chasing a wheel of Double Gloucestercheese. The event has a long tradition, held by the people of the local village of Brockworth, but now people from all over the world take part. The Guardian called it a "world-famous event", with winners coming from Canada, Belgium, Egypt, Australia, New Zealand and the United States.
The most recent event was held on 29 May 2023.
For 2024 the event takes place on May 27 and normally takes place on the last Monday in May.
Format
From the top of the hill, a 7–9 pounds (3–4 kilograms) round of Double Gloucestercheese is sent rolling down the hill, which is 200 yards (180 m) long. Competitors then start racing down the hill after the cheese. The first person over the finish line at the bottom of the hill wins the cheese. The competitors aim to catch the cheese; however, it has around a one-second head start and can reach speeds up to 70 miles per hour (110 kilometres per hour), enough to knock over and injure a spectator. Multiple races are held during the day, with separate events for men and women.
In the 2013 competition, a foam replica replaced the cheese for safety reasons.
History
This ceremony originally took place each Whit Monday, but was later moved to the Spring Bank Holiday. The first written evidence of cheese rolling is found in a message written to the Gloucester town crier in 1826; even then it was apparent that the event was an old tradition, and it is believed to be at least six hundred years old.
Two possible origins have been proposed for the ceremony. First, it may have evolved from a requirement for maintaining grazing rights on the common. Second, there may be pagan origins for the custom of rolling objects down the hill. It is thought that bundles of burning brushwood were rolled down the hill to represent the birth of the New Year after winter. Connected with this belief is the traditional scattering of buns, biscuits and sweets at the top of the hill by the Master of Ceremonies. This is said to be a fertility rite to encourage the fruits of harvest.
In 1982, a team of students from the University of Bristol filmed the 31 May event using film cameras, with one camera overcranked to produce slow motion.
In 1993, fifteen people were injured, four of them seriously injured, chasing cheeses down the hill with its one-in-three gradient (18.4 degrees).
In 2009, it was cancelled due to concerns over health and safety. In 2010, a group of journalists and local residents threw a smaller version, keeping in with tradition, to keep grazing rights.
In 2011, the event was officially cancelled due to safety concerns over the number of people visiting the event, resulting in the 'Save the Cheese Roll' campaign. Despite the cancellation, the event continued unofficially with around 500 people attending.
"No-one's going to stop us doing it. They say it's not official, but we are all Brockworth people, and we're running cheese today, so it is official. We strongly believe in it."
— Former winner Helen Thorpe in May 2011.
The event is traditional and takes its name from the steep hill on which it occurs. Until recent years, it was managed in a quasi-official manner by nominated locals, but since 2010 the event has taken place without any management. This has led to concerns over the safety of the event.
The cheese-rolling event was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The cheese-rolling event returned on Sunday 5 June 2022, ending a two-year absence. The spring bank holiday was moved to June 2, followed by an additional bank holiday, to create a four-day jubilee weekend in celebration of Elizabeth II's 70 years of reign.
Cheese
The cheese currently used in the event is 7–9-pound (3–4-kilogram) Double Gloucester, a hard cheese traditionally made in a circular shape. Each is protected for the rolling by a wooden casing round the side, and is decorated with ribbons at the start of the race. Formerly, three cheeses were presented by parishioners, and the cheeses were usually rolled by them. A collection is usually made now to purchase them, as well as sweets, and also to provide prize money.
Since 1988, the cheese has been supplied by local cheesemaker Diana Smart and her son Rod from their Churcham farm, although Diana Smart has now retired. In May 2013, a police inspector warned the 86-year-old Smart that she could be held responsible for injuries. Chief Superintendent Nigel Avron of Gloucestershire Constabulary also made these comments: "If you are an organiser in some way or some capacity you could potentially be held liable for something that took place at that event". In recent years, organisers of the event have felt compelled to use a lightweight foam version for safety reasons. In the second race of 2013, Australian Caleb Stalder managed to catch the fake cheese and claim victory despite being some way behind the leaders.
Injuries
Due to the steepness and uneven surface of Cooper's Hill, there are usually several injuries each year. St John Ambulance have previously provided first aid cover at the event, however this stopped in 2012 when the event was no longer being officially managed.
Canadian competitor Delaney Irving won the ladies race in 2023, despite finishing unconscious, and only learning of her victory in the medical enclosure. A total of 6 competetors were transported to hospital by Ambulance treatment following the event.
Cooper's Hill Cheese Rolling has been summarised by a previous participant as "twenty young men chasing a cheese off a cliff and tumbling 200 yards to the bottom, where they are scraped up by paramedics and packed off to hospital".
There is no official medical provision on site, leading to concerns from the Local resilience forum about the safety of the event.
Results
Winners of the Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling & Wake
Year
Race 1
Race 2
Race 3 (Women's race)
Race 4
Race 5 (from 2006)
Notes/Reference
1985
Stephen Gyde
Stephen Gyde
Leticia Burns
Costas Logothetis
1986
Stephen Brain
Stephen Brain
Leticia Burns
Stephen Gyde
1987
Stephen Brain
Stephen Gyde
Rebecca Haines
Stephen Brain
1988
Stephen Gyde
Stephen Gyde
Rebecca Haines
Stephen Brain
1989
Paul Andres
Lawrence Farlow
Kathleen Underwood
Julian Pritchard
1990
Stephen Brain
Stephen Gyde
Jacqueline McGinn
Stephen Brain
1991
Stephen Gyde
Stephen Gyde
Christie Sweeney
Stephen Gyde
1992
Terry Sawczuk
Stuart Heggs
-
Rob Preece
Star Royles
1993
Rob Preece
Rob Preece
-
Jamie Barnes
Andrew Deveson
1994
Rob Preece
Andrew Deveson
-
Star Royles
Craig Carter
1995
Stephen Brain
Jonathan Smith
Claire Carter
Darren Yates
1996
Stephen Brain
Harry Hancy
Marie Andow
John Shelton
1997
Stephen Brain
Stephen Brain
Tina Rimmer
Craig Carter
1998
Peter Astman
—
Amelia Hardwick
—
2 races abandoned for safety, due to 33 injuries the previous year
1999
Stephen Brain
Stephen Brain
Helen Thorpe
Stephen Brain
2000
Stephen Brain
Stephen Brain
Kirby Shepherd
Craig Brown
2001
Event abandoned due to foot-and-mouth disease; however, a single cheese was still rolled down the hill to maintain tradition.
2002
Simon Fowler
Craig Brown
Saskia Thomas
Jack Williams
Event took place on Tuesday due to Queen's Jubilee celebrations
2003
Event abandoned due to volunteer safety team being diverted to Algeria following their earthquake; a solitary cheese was rolled by the committee a few days later to retain tradition.
An annual cheese-rolling event has taken place in Chester since about 2002, to promote the town's food and drink festival. The rolling takes place on the flat down an obstacle course.
Cheese-rolling in popular culture
A pub called ‘The Cheese Rollers Bar & Restaurant’ located in the neighbouring village of Shurdington is named after the event. The pub has a collection of previous cheese casings along with photos and articles about the event. It has also been used as a filming location for multiple TV programs on the event.
The game Animal Crossing: New Horizons has a special item called Double Gloucester cheese that is only available from May 22 to May 31, the period when this event takes place.
1948: ‘Cheese Rolling on Cooper’s Hill’ is a painting by Charles March Gere, is part of the Museum of Gloucester Collection, and depicts a live action scene of the event.
1982: A short documentary film ‘Cheese Rolling Day May 31, 1982’, written and directed by James Hartzell, and filmed by University of Bristol students and friends, analyses the event happening that day.
1997: The cheese rolling event appears in episode 16 of the novel Mason & Dixon by author Thomas Pynchon. In the scene, Charles Mason himself is nearly struck by a large cheese-wheel rolling down the hill.
2005: A children's computer game from Neopets named "Cheeseroller", involves different varieties of outlandish cheeses, rolled down a 120-metre hill in under 60 seconds, negotiating obstacles on route. Points are awarded for grade of cheese difficulty and speed of descent.
2007: Cheese rolling appeared in the television series ER, Season 14 Episode 8, "Coming Home", where a motley bunch of cheese rolling enthusiasts (with accents of dubious accuracy) have a dispute, allowing Morris to demonstrate the Judgement of Solomon.
2008: Cheese rolling was prominently featured in the first episode of the UK television channel Five series: Rory & Paddy's Great British Adventure, broadcast on 13 August 2008, and was described as "the grandaddy of weird sports" by the titular Rory McGrath and Paddy McGuinness.
2011: Cheese rolling footage from SoGlos was used in Off the Air at the end of the series premiere episode "Animals".
2018: The contest was the subject of the BBC One programme The Great Cheese Chase. The contest was part of the German reality show Joko gegen Klaas - Das Duell um die Welt, where German former football Thorsten Legat was supposed to participate, but at the end refused to do so.
2019: The race was parodied in Disney Junior series Mickey and the Roadster Racers S2.E18 "Super-Charged: The Big Cheesy". Clarabelle Cow’s gift of jeweled dog collars for the queen gets stuck on the cheese wheel and Goofy and the gang chase it around London.
2019: Let's Roll is a short film directed by Chris Thomas about a teenage girl Antonia (Amy Bowden) attempting to emulate her brother's successes in the cheese rolling. The film was screened at BAFTA-qualifying film festivals: Norwich and Edinburgh.
2020: Netflix released a documentary We are the Champions, covers six bizarre events and competitions from across the world, starting with Cheese-Rolling at Cooper's Hill. The Cheese-Rolling follows Flo Early in her preparations for 2019 and her attempt to win the ladies race for the fourth time, which had never been achieved before.
2020: Channel 4 reality show Gogglebox featured the Netflix documentary named We are the Champions, following Flo Early's historical achievement in the 2019 ladies cheese rolling race.
2020: The Spanish folk metal band Saurom released a song about the cheese rolling called El Queso Rodante on their album Música.
2023 : The folk bands The Longest Johns and El Pony Pisador wrote a song about the cheese rolling called Wheels of Glory on their album The Longest Pony.
2023 :Seize the Cheese! A New Musical, performed at New Wimbledon Theatre in November 2023, a poignant comedy about cheese rollers, written and directed by Mike Stocks with songs by Patrick Steed. The Cheese was played by Travis Wood, and the Keeper of the Cheese by Cathy McManamon.
^Jamie Hartzell, Barbara Wyatt, Frank Passingham, Jonathan Fisher, Mike Dorrell, Michael Hicks, John Adams, Keesian Pender, Pru McEwen, Deborah Perkin, Nick Ferguson, Steve Lewis, Jo Moss, Roger Wilson (19 May 2020) . Cheese Rolling Day May 31, 1982. Brockworth: Barbara Wyatt.