| Bellringing History celebrated at Bath Abbey |
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Last February the Mayor of Kaposvár and the visiting Civic Party came up to see the bells of the Abbey and to watch them being rung for the Sunday Service of Choral Matins, which they then attended. The following report of a special piece of ringing in memory of one of the founders of Bath's fortunes, Beau Nash, the arbiter of good manners for the Bath Season, will perhaps bring back memories of those mighty bells and of those who sound them out over the city week by week to proclaim that the Abbey is there to serve all its citizens and their visitors. This year is the 250th anniversary of the death of Richard "Beau" Nash. He died on the night of 12/13 February 1761, and was buried in the Abbey on the 17th. After the funeral (on the grandest scale imaginable) the Bath ringers "to shew their Gratitude and Respect to their worthy Benefactor, rung (sic) a Funeral Peal of Grandsire Triples, consisting of 1260 Changes; the Clappers of the Bells being muffled on one Side". (This is an exceptionally early reference to half-muffled ringing, and possibly the first ever recorded quarter-peal.) As far as we know, this was the only event commemorating the anniversary.
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