July 20, 2001
Celebrating 75 Years of 4-H Fairs
by Betsy Booz
There was an air of anticipation in the group of about
30 youth gathering at the Durham Fairgrounds on Friday evening, July
13. It was the last meeting of the New Haven and Middlesex County 4-H
Fair Association before their upcoming fair on August 3, 4 and 5, held
on the lower grounds of the fair. But this isn't going to be just any
4-H fair; this is their 75th fair, and the proud group has much to celebrate.
"First Fair of Its Kind"
The year was 1924, and the article read: "The first
county agricultural fair in the United States to be managed by boys
and girls of the 4-H clubs was held at Ridgewood Farm, Middletown, on
August 30." More than 2,000 people attended, "and it promises
to be the beginning of
an annual event in the county." With
the exception of a few years during World War II, the tradition has
continued.
Elizabeth Spencer participated in the first fair when
she was 16, and she‹s planning on attending this year‹s as well. "I
haven‹t made it to all 75 of them," admits the 93-year-old lifelong
Middletown resident, "but I‹ve been to at least 50!"
|
A SIMPLER TIME...Pictured above is the headquarters of the first
Middlesex County 4-H fair, held on August 30, 1924 in Middletown.
As stated in one of fair's first mailings, "4-H Club work is the
four-fold type of education that trains the Head to think, to
plan, to reason; the Heart to be kind, loyal and to play the game
square; the Hands to be helful, useful and skillful; and the Health
to enjoy life, resist disease and make for efficiency." Those
words have served to guide 4-H members over the 75-year history
of their annual fair.
|
Spencer recalls that, in addition to "generally helping out wherever
I was needed" for the 1924 fair, she and a friend also demonstrated
how to bathe and dress a baby. "We had been to a course at the
University of Connecticut to learn how to do these things, and then
we demonstrated the skills ourselves at the first 4-H fair."
The long-time fair participant says she did many things over the years
of her fair involvement, including running food booths and helping out
as a judge, "mostly in the area of clothing." As the mother
of two children, she made sure they also participated in the event.
"We were a 4-H family," she proudly acknowledges.
Also featured at the first 4-H fair in 1924 were "30 head of
purebred dairy cattle, 24 fat steers, 50 sheep and more than 300 poultry
girls
exhibited more than 800 individual articles of clothing of their own
handiwork. There were 150 articles in the basketry and arts and crafts
exhibits."
75 Years Later and Still Going Strong
In 1989, the Middlesex and New Haven County 4-H Fair Associations
combined their efforts into one annual event. Its most unique featureęthe
fact this it is totally youth organized and youth runęstill proudly
continues.
Notes Middlesex County 4-H Program Coordinator Emily McCabe Alger,
"We are fully committed to having the kids run the show. Yes, we
(Alger, her New Haven County counterpart Peggy Grillo and fair program
advisors Kathy Naples and Doug Lanyon) are there to help them and advise
them, but we let them learn by making their own decisions." Naples
agrees, "We give these kids a unique leadership opportunity."
This year, the group‹s president is Melynda Naples, and she is assisted
by 14 other youth in key vice-president jobs. Supporting them are a
number of "managers," all of them between the ages of seven
and 19. They are assisted by Alger, Grillo, Naples, Lanyon and a number
of volunteer advisors, as well as a numerous parents and former 4-H‹ers.
The youth officers all participate in a one-day training program prior
to beginning their term of office.
Not that much different from 1924, the current 4-H fair still includes
exhibits of livestock and the home arts. Both food and non-food booths
are part of the three-day event, as is entertainment. Oxen and horse
pulls, an English and Western horse show and a gymkhana horse show are
featured, as well as both a cat and dog show. (A complete schedule is
included in the 4-H fair ad on page 6.)
Vice president John Dannecker of East Haddam is particularly proud
of the "dog agility" event, which first opened to the public
(i.e., not just 4-H ers) last year. "We had about 30 dogs, and
I‹m expecting probably twice that number this year," notes Dannecker.
He goes on to explain that each handler must guide his or her dog through
an obstacle course consisting of jumps, tunnels, seesaws and other challenges.
"There are different classes with different difficulty levels,
and the dogs are judged basically on timing and accuracy," he said.
Reprinted with permission from the TownTimes
Jump to top
|