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What
we know as the Clarion County Fair wasn't always what it started out
as. In an effort to improve relations between the area's
merchants and farmers, community members organized a "gala one-day
event".
About
5,000 people turned out for the first picnic in 1938,
which featured such events as a balloon-blowing contest,
a potato race, a greased pig contest and a tug-of-war.
The event was so successful that the organizers decided
to keep it going.
The
Farmers and Merchants Picnic was first inspired by the
Harvest Home days when the park was known only as
"Alcola." The park was then owned by the
Frank R. Johnson family, and in the 1930s, the Johnson
interests sold the grounds to the Walter W. Craig Post
of the American Legion in New Bethlehem.
During
the Legion's operation, the grandstand was erected, and
the auditorium and pavilion were converted into the
skating rink and dance floor. The pool was later
added, and many of the original buildings are still in
use. The old dance hall and club, which at one
time housed the park's merry-go-round, is now used as an
arts and crafts display center. The large
grandstand is still an important part of the Fair, and
structures housing the refreshment stands are still in
use. In fact, the original cattle sheds are filled
to capacity each year during Fair Week.
Throughout
the years, the Farmers and Merchants Picnic included not
only events at the American Legion Park, but in downtown
New Bethlehem as well. Four days were spent at the park
and three days in town. Teen dances were held at
the New Bethlehem Fire Hall, bargain days at Newbie
stores offered customers great deals, and a "giant"
firemen's parade was held along Broad Street.
By
1953 the Fair had expanded to three days from two and
lasted Wednesday until Friday. Wednesday was
dedicated to registration of animals and agricultural
events, and Thursday featured many of the picnic's main
events.
It
wasn't until 1967 that the Fair was expanded to its
current seven-day length, and in 1969, it was renamed
the "Clarion County Fair." About the same time,
the park again changed names - this time to the Redbank
Valley Municipal Park. A strong sense of community
spirit and involvement have always been sources of pride
for the Clarion County Fair. And through the
years, the involvement of its many sponsors, committees,
volunteers, and fairgoers, the sense of community is as
strong as it was seven decades ago.
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