50 years
ago the nation was shocked by violence which accompanied our first true youth
culture. One man at the notorious Brighton brawl looks back on the chaos
The bank
holiday began with tourists flocking to the coast but ended with them fleeing
for their lives as Mods and Rockers turned beaches into battlefields.
Fifty
years ago, in the spring of 1964, simmering rivalry between the groups reached
a flashpoint as they clashed repeatedly on seaside piers and promenades across
the country.
But the
worst of the violence was seen in Brighton, as families were trapped in a
shocking showdown which sparked moral panic about the state of British youth.
Tony
Edwards was 18 and one of the first band of Mods to arrive on the Sussex coast
that day. He says: “The Rockers had outnumbered us for years but leading up to
1964 we’d grown in numbers – now it was payback time.
“When we
arrived on the beach there were just a few Mods and a big group of Rockers in
the middle. Within about 90 minutes the beach filled up with hundreds of Mods.
“Then
someone on our side threw a pebble at them and within a few seconds they were
just being blitzed. I saw one guy who’d been cut on the head with blood running
down his face.
“In the
end the police had to charge on to the beach and escort this group of Rockers
off the seafront, which must have been humiliating. They were tough men and we
were just little kids poncing around in fancy clothes.
“But we
weren’t going to take their c**p any more. It was the holidaymakers I felt
sorry for. They looked terrified.”
Tensions
had been rising for some time. The Rockers were usually in their 20s or 30s;
Elvis-loving bikers rooted in 1950s Teddy Boy culture.
The
teenage Mods’ culture, which flourished in the early 60s, was based on
continental clothes, Italian Vespa and Lambretta scooters and the music of soul
and jazz musicians.
They
first clashed that spring on the March bank holiday in Clacton. At the Essex
resort 97 people were arrested and the battle lines were drawn.
After
that, trouble flared from Bournemouth to Margate, up to the bank holiday of
August 1964. But Brighton’s Whitsun clash was the most notorious, thanks to
sensational headlines and its immortalisation in Mod flick Quadrophenia.
Battles
ran well into the night but although there were weapons – knives, chains and
makeshift knuckle dusters – most scuffles involved fists and boots.
Tony,
once branded King of the Mods in hometown Reading, says: “There were quite a
few scuffles. I got into a few myself and nearly got arrested.
“I kept
out of it most of the time but we would rush over and watch if something did
kick off. We saw the action on top of the aquarium, a scene which is famous.
"In
the middle were these Mods with deck chairs bringing them down on the heads of
Rockers.
“But a
lot of injuries came from the sense of panic and all these crowds running
around. It was bedlam.
“A Mod
got pushed through a window and got so badly cut he was pouring with blood. It
was really nasty and there was this copper holding this lad and he was quite
emotional: ‘For Christ’s sake, just look at this!’ he said.
“It was
an accident, the crowds pushed him through, but word spread that a Rocker did
it – and that fired us up more.”
The Mods
got much of the blame for the violence but 68-year-old Tony, now a dad of three
and a grandad of two living in Cornwall, blames the Rockers and police.
He says:
“The police were very heavy-handed. There was panic about Mods but it was
misplaced. All we wanted was to have a good time. Music and clothes were our
passion.
“There
was probably a hardcore of violent people, Mods and Rockers, who just used it
as an opportunity for a fight.
“But it
was the Rockers who went to Brighton knowing there was going to be trouble.
They went there looking for it – and they certainly found it.”