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Published: Thursday, 05 December 2024 at 10:27 AM


The tradition of going from house to house carol singing has an uncertain heritage, but may have its origins in medieval times, when watches – which included musicians – patrolled England’s towns and cities to keep order. The cathedral city of Lincoln, for example, had a group of watches, or Waits, until around 1850.

In his short story The Seven Poor Travellers (1854), Charles Dickens describes a group of musicians performing in a town one winter’s evening: ‘As I passed along the High Street, I heard the Waits at a distance, and struck off to find them. They were playing near one of the old gates of the City, at the corner of a wonderfully quaint row of red-brick tenements.’

However, carol singing really came into its own in Victorian times, with the advent of the Victorian Christmas. This was when Christmas became a holiday that families could enjoy, and celebrate, and music in the home was a big part of these celebrations. The tradition of singing carols after the Christmas meal quickly grew in popularity.