Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Clotheslin­e Fair tradition continues in Prairie Grove

- LYNN KUTTER Lynn Kutter can be reached by email at lkutter@nwadg.com.

PRAIRIE GROVE — A one-year break from the annual Clotheslin­e Fair did not appear to dampen enthusiasm or attendance for the community parade, the craft and food booths and the square dancing.

Thousands turned out over Labor Day weekend at Prairie Grove Battlefiel­d State Park for the 2021 Clotheslin­e Fair.

Temple Moore with her Arts of the Grove booth spent 20 years participat­ing in the Clotheslin­e Fair, stepped away for nine years and then returned for this year’s festival.

“The crowd is awesome,” Moore said Sept. 4. “I think after having a year off, everyone in Prairie Grove is appreciati­ve of it even more.”

Moore, who is retired as an art teacher from Prairie Grove schools, said she most enjoyed visiting with people she had not seen in several years.

Lee Coates of Highlandvi­lle, Mo., brought his booth, called the Papercrete Potter, to the Clotheslin­e Fair for the second time. His first time was in 2019, and he said customers then “carried away everything except my wife, my tables and my chairs.”

Coats expressed his appreciati­on to the Prairie Grove Lions Club for opening back up the Clotheslin­e Fair. He spends 30 weekends out of the year going to festivals and fairs and was glad to be back at it this year, he said.

The Lions Club, which sponsors the fair, canceled the 2020 event because of covid-19. This year’s event would have been the 70th annual Clotheslin­e Fair, except for the pandemic.

The weekend opened with the Clotheslin­e Parade, sponsored by Prairie Grove Chamber of Commerce. Downtown Prairie Grove was crowded as many families and residents turned out to watch the parade, which started around the middle school and finished past the state park entrance.

Parade entries included square dance groups, tractors, classic and antique vehicles, businesses, nonprofit organizati­ons, police and fire department­s.

The arts and crafts vendors and food trucks opened at 8 a. m. Sept. 4 and were ready for the first visitors of the day.

The Lions Club took on a new responsibi­lity this year for the Clotheslin­e Fair. In the past, the Arts Center of the Ozarks has coordinate­d and organized the arts and crafts vendors for the fair. For 2021, the Lions Club assumed that job, along with also being in charge of the food vendors, smoking chicken and baloney for the Latta Barn, and coordinati­ng the community’s local square dance tradition.

Casey Copeland, Lions Club president, said the fair had 120 vendors and only four canceled because of covid-19 concerns.

Copeland said the Lions Club arranged vendor tents a little differentl­y this year, so it may have appeared the number of vendors was down. The club kept a grassy area open on the east end of the first two rows nearest the street with the intent of moving picnic tables over there to provide an eating space.

The picnic tables were much heavier than anyone realized, Copeland said. After moving the first one, he said he decided not to try to move anymore.

“It doesn’t look a lot different than ’19 around here,” Copeland said. “This is not a disappoint­ing crowd at all.”

In addition, several vendors offered products that were outside the traditiona­l fares visitors would see at the Clotheslin­e Fair. It’s possible, Copeland said, the fair could set aside an area in the future that is designated for nontraditi­onal vendors.

One thing he knows for certain, he said, is that the Lions Club will need more members or volunteers if it wants to continue to sponsor the Clotheslin­e Fair as it is today, including the food provided by the Lions Club in the Latta Barn. He said the club has about 12 active members and invited anyone interested to attend one of the meetings.

Looking toward the future, Copeland said he hopes more vendors, especially food vendors, will come to the Clotheslin­e Fair and also plans to continue to encourage the state park to provide additional electrical access for vendors.

“I know it’s an historic park, and we need to maintain that tradition,” Copeland said. “But the park already has electric in a number of places. There’s no reason there can’t be a few more.”

He noted that the history of the park and the Clotheslin­e Fair go together.

“The park is here because of the homecoming tradition that became the Clotheslin­e Fair, and it became a state park because of the Clotheslin­e Fair and the Lions Club. It doesn’t have to stay exactly the way it’s always been.”

Along with the crafts and food vendors, visitors also had the opportunit­y to watch 81 square dance groups perform on Sept. 4 and 6. The younger exhibition groups took the amphitheat­er stage in the afternoon both days, and the older groups vying to win the Peggy Parks Memorial Square Dance Competitio­n started their performanc­es in the evenings.

Craig Battles, who is in charge of square dancing for the Lions Club, said a record number of groups registered this year, and only one had to cancel because of covid-19 issues. For the afternoon, 63 exhibition groups performed, and for the evening, 18 older groups competed.

Sue McCoy with the Northeast Oklahoma Square Dance Associatio­n out of Tulsa, Okla., has served as a judge in Prairie Grove for about seven or eight years.

“We enjoy it,” McCoy said. “We have to be very careful because they are all so good.”

The competitio­n also benefits the square dance groups in the Tulsa area, McCoy said. She said the judges come away with ideas for outfits and dance moves for their own groups.

Copeland expressed his appreciati­on to everyone who helped over the weekend. In particular, he thanked two new club members, Phil Huffaker and Jeremy Conkel, for helping to organize and work with the arts and crafts vendors.

“They basically saved us as far as getting vendors situated,” Copeland said. “They were amazing.”

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Lynn Kutter) ?? Kuntry Chaos won the 2021 Peggy Parks Memorial Square Dance Competitio­n on Sept. 6 at the Clotheslin­e Fair. The group scored a record-high 585 points over the two-night competitio­n, scoring 291 points on the first night and 294 points on the second night. Cowboys N Cancans came in second with 570 points, Ropers and Ribbons got third with 569 points, and Boots and Bows received an honorable mention with 557 points.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Lynn Kutter) Kuntry Chaos won the 2021 Peggy Parks Memorial Square Dance Competitio­n on Sept. 6 at the Clotheslin­e Fair. The group scored a record-high 585 points over the two-night competitio­n, scoring 291 points on the first night and 294 points on the second night. Cowboys N Cancans came in second with 570 points, Ropers and Ribbons got third with 569 points, and Boots and Bows received an honorable mention with 557 points.

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