MISCELLANIES1850
Spur Money
By EAST WINCH.
Two or three years since, a party of sappers and miners was stationed at Peterborough, engaged in the trigonometrical survey, when the officer entered the cathedral with his spurs on, and was immediately beset by the choristers, who demanded money of him for treading the sacred floor with armed heels. Does any one know the origin of this singular custom? I inquired of some of the dignitaries of the Cathedral, but they were not aware even of its existence. The boys, however, have more tenacious memories, at least where their interest is concerned; but we must not look to them for the origin of…
Topics: Historical Customs, Spur Money, Cathedral Traditions, Royal History
Locations: Peterborough, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Stilton, Windsor, St. Paul's, Westminster Abbey