
In the years after World War Two beauty contests were introduced in a
number of seaside resorts around the country. Towns like Eastbourne,
Weston-Super-Mare, Great Yarmouth, Cleethorpes and Skegness staged
contests, but the main focus was the Lancashire and North Wales coast:
Rhyl, New Brighton, Southport, Blackpool, Fleetwood and Morecambe.
In Morecambe such beauty contests were staged in the resort in the new
Super Swimming Stadium as entertainment spectaculars for the
holidaymakers. Morecambe was home to the Miss Great Britain competition
between 1956 and 1989. Originally called the Bathing Beauty Queen, the
contest began in the Summer of 1945, as the "Bathing Beauty Queen",
organised by the Local Council in partnership with the 'Sunday
Dispatch' newspaper.
The first final was watched by 4,300 people in a continuous downpour.
The winner, chosen by the film star Michael Rennie, was an 18 year old
Morecambe girl Lydia Reid, a civil service typist, who received a cup
and a paltry prize (according to the local paper) of seven guineas as
well as a swimsuit. Prize money increased over the years.
The contests were a new kind of entertainment for the holiday-maker.
Aimed at a family audience organisers hoped that the men would enjoy
watching pretty girls, the women would enjoy picking their favourites
(or commenting on the others) and the little girls would dream of being
bathing beauties when they grew up. The entrants themselves had the
promise of cash prizes, as well as possible fame and fortune to follow.

In
the early days Morecambe and Heysham Council in association with the
'Sunday Dispatch' hosted the competition. As a preliminary to the
personal appearance heats at Morecambe, photographic heats held in
conjunction with the newspaper attracted contestant from all over the
country.
In 1946 the first prize was increased by the
local authority to £100. Due to the success and popularity of the
contest, the prize was further increased in 1947 to £500, and then to
£1000 in the fifties. This by any standards was rapid progress, and
throughout the years the contest has continued to offer the largest
prize fund of any competition run by a municipal authority.
The 1950s and 1960s saw the hey-day of the seaside beauty contest,
these decades also saw the zenith of the British seaside holiday.
Increasing prosperity meant that more and more families could take a
fortnight's holiday on the coast and seaside towns were in competition
for a growing market. Many seaside towns believed that beauty contests
were important in gaining publicity for the town, in Morecambe, beauty
contests were seen as second only to the Illuminations as the major
tourist attraction.

Throughout
the 34 years prior to 2004, judges for the heats and finals were
selected from personalities from all walks of life. Press and
publishers, stars of stage, screen and television, peers and
politicians joining sportsmen and a bishop. Over the years the
Competition was sponsored by various internationally known companies,
in 1978 Pontin's Holidays Ltd were the main sponsors yet previous
sponsors included supermarket companies.
As the
contest grew, heats were held at various ballrooms throughout the
country and at events staged in conjunction with other local
authorities. The winners of these heats, together with the winners of
the weekly seasonal heats held each Wednesday afternoon in Morecambe
during the summer, were invited to the Grand Final. The competition was
held annually on the last Wednesday afternoon in August, a pattern
followed up to and including 1970. Each Grand Final was a parade in
swimwear before a panel of judges.

The
Foreword to the official 1962 Miss Great Britain programme states "when
the Morecambe Corporation started the contest in 1945, they introduced
to the attractions of the seaside holiday, a new form of entertainment
which has now become a big part of Show Business. As the years go by,
the size of our audiences shows no signs of diminishing, the standard
of our beautiful competitors improves steadily and the Contest remains
as popular as ever." But, during the sixties, the British seaside
holiday started to lose out to other types of holiday. Increasing car
ownership meant that many families had a wider choice of destinations
and some families could afford to go abroad for certain sun, rather
than taking pot-luck in Southport or Scarborough. And, the girls' names
were changing. The Normas, Irenes, Margarets and Maureens of the early
years were replaced in the sixties by Judiths, Cheryls, Carols and
Sheilas But the format - and the cliches - of the contests were well
established: results in reverse order; mothers apparently entering
their daughters without their knowledge; and the judges saying that
they were looking for the "friendly, girl-next-door type". Usually over
20 contestants entered the heats. Their jobs were receptionists and
models, secretaries and students, young women who either wanted to
further their careers in fashion or beauty or who took the opportunity
of the difference offered by the seaside scene to make themselves
glamorous.

1971
saw a change in this pattern. This was brought about by the involvement
of television. After long negotiations agreement was reached between
the Council and Yorkshire Television Ltd. for the Grand Final to be
recorded and for the event to be broadcast by the whole of the
independent television network. It was suggested by Yorkshire
Television that the Grand Final for 1971 should be changed in format to
create a more spectacular programme for the viewers. The Grand Final
was therefore recorded in three parts - Swimwear Parade (at the Super
Swimming Stadium), Daywear Parade (at the Promenade Gardens), Evening
Wear Parade (from the stage of a local theatre) followed by the
presentation and Crowning Ceremony. This format was found to be
completely successful and was followed to at least 2004.
Prior to 1971 winners of the various preliminary heats automatically
qualified to take part in the Grand Final of over 40 finalists. The
changes in the Grand Final, the introduction of televised contest
winners and the limitation of transmission time necessitated a
curtailment of the numbers of Grand Finalists, achieved by introducing
a semi-final parade.

During
more recent years the staging of many more heats throughout the country
further enlarged the contest and necessitated the introduction of
Regional Finals.
In 1978, in co-operation with the main
sponsors Pontin's Holidays Ltd. and other subsidiary benefactors, the
local authority (now Lancaster City Council) offered a prize-fund of
over £10,000 to encourage the most beautiful girls in the country to
enter.
During her term of office Miss Great Britain was contracted to
Lancaster City Council who were her sole agent and she was to be
available through them to undertake promotional personal appearances at
home or abroad. Past title holders visited countries all over the world
carrying out their duties as ambassadors for the resort (and indeed the
country). Immediately after her crowning Miss Great Britain undertook a
publicity tour of the country, lasting about eight days, making
personal appearances and attending press calls. By 2003 this tour was
arranged in conjunction with Button Farshaw Group, who lent one of
their cars to the winner for her year of office, and Trust House Forte
Ltd, who attended to accommodation arrangements.

The
falling popularity of seaside resorts was later mirrored by a fall in
the popularity of beauty contests. In some ways, this was a
contradiction since national and international contests were now being
covered by television and, indeed, the Miss World contests had high
audience figures in the seventies. However, the British public were
seeking more sophisticated forms of holiday entertainment, questions
were being asked about what the contests represented and the
opportunities open to young women were changing.
The
eighties saw the end of a number of seaside beauty contests. Rhyl,
Great Yarmouth and Morecambe took decisions to end their contests.
Other towns moved the contests from the swimming-pools to other venues
and, more dramatically, New Brighton finished its contest when the
swimming pool was destroyed by winter gales. So, the local councils
that had started the contests after the War were now asking themselves
whether these were events they should be involved with.
The contests were becoming less acceptable and less popular as seaside
attractions. But there were still attractive young women - now Debbies,
Traceys, Clares and Joannes - interested in entering the contests,
there were mothers right there behind them and there were still enough
people prepared to watch for a pleasant hour or two.

At
the start of the nineties, only Southport, Blackpool and Fleetwood were
staging traditional seaside beauty contests and that decade saw further
decline. There were decreasing numbers of contestants and fewer people
wanting to watch. In particular, more young women had better career
opportunities than in the past, meaning that fewer had the time to
spend summer afternoons entering heats across the country. The seaside
towns themselves were also adapting to the different ways in which
people used their holidays. They had to re-think their marketing. By
the 1990s Southport and Blackpool were able to do this successfully:
Morecambe less so. By the end of the nineties, Southport had finished
its contest because it wanted to diversify its afternoon entertainments
on the Prom and Blackpool's contest had changed from swimwear in the
afternoon into club-wear for the evening. So Miss Wyre at Fleetwood was
the only traditional seaside beauty contest to make it into the new
century, finishing in 2002, although Miss Blackpool continued
successfully in its new format.

In
the early 1990s the title 'Miss Great Britain' was purchased by new
owners, an organisation that became known as 'Miss Great Britain
Organisation'. By 2004 Miss Great Britain was still running as a beauty
competition and was part of the growing commercialisation and publicity
wing of the beauty industry. By 2004 the organisers sourced their own
contestants, with applicants filling out a form and sending in a
photograph. There were no local heats, rather a panel reduced the
number to 60 finalists. The main winner of the Miss Great Britain
competition then went on to enter Miss Universe and the 'Miss Tourism'
competition. Finalists other than the winner were also eligible to
enter 'Model of the World', 'Miss Bikini', 'Miss Internet' and 'Model
of the Universe', 'Miss Millionaire'. Whilst 'Mr Tourism World' was an
equivalent male contest from the same organisation. A separate
organisation provided the 'Miss World' competition, illustrating that
beauty competitions were continuing well into the new millennium.

2005,
saw a national tour of local heats commence with Miss Great Britain
title now having been bought by a new company Miss Great Britain Ltd,
co-owned by a previous winner Liz Fuller. In 2006, the largest ever
Miss Great Britain final was staged at the Great Room in the Grovesnor
House hotel with the worlds paparazzi, tv crews and many national
celebrities. Danielle Lloyd won the title and caused much controversy
and debate and took Miss Great Britain into national headlines. Liz
Fuller was bought out by a large Fashion Company one month after the
2006 final. who continued to run Miss Great Britain until they went
into financial difficulties with their fashion empire early 2009.
August 2009, previous winner and owner Liz Fuller bought back once
again the rights to Miss Great Britain and is looking forward to
revolutionising the structure, format and taking Miss GB back into the
hearts of the British public. Let the search for the most beautiful
inside and out girl in the UK continues.
Note: This administrative history was compiled with reference to Remembering Seaside Beauty Contests (
http://www.mac.ndo.co.uk/).