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NGE >> Folklife >> Customs and Local Traditions >> Georgia Mountain Fair |
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Georgia Mountain Fair The Georgia Mountain
The fair features craft booths, food stands, daily music concerts, demonstrations of mountain life, and various midway rides and attractions. Besides the usual fare, visitors can buy fried apple pies, fresh-squeezed cider, smoked trout, beef jerky, and home-cooked vegetable plates. Cloggers, Nashville musicians, and string bands perform in the music hall, named for Robert Anderson, former president of the fair.
The fair was founded as a joint project of the local Lions Club and Towns County officials. Herbert "Tall" Tabor, president of the civic group, and E. N. Nicholson, county extension agent, established the first fair as a weekend event
As the number of attendees
In recent years two other events have taken place at the Georgia Mountain Fairgrounds: a Rhododendron Festival in May and a Fall Festival in October. The Anderson Music Hall also offers weekend concerts in late spring, summer, and early fall. The summer fair draws the biggest crowds, yet it retains much of its original character. Suggested Reading Fifty Years of Fiddlin' and Family Fun: Georgia Mountain Fair, 1950-2000 (Dahlonega, Ga.: GMR Advertising, 2000). Vonda Lee Morton, "Their Own Story: A History of the Georgia Mountain Fair" (master's thesis, Georgia College and State University, 1991). W. Benjamin Kennedy, University of West Georgia Updated 8/14/2009 |
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