Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival

The Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival takes place in Indio, California. Since 1947 the annual festival has been held to celebrate the Date Palm harvest in the Coachella Valley. The event is held in February on the Riverside County Fairgrounds. The fair is located in Indio, California, a city in the Colorado Desert, approximately 130 miles (210 km) east of Los Angeles.

Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival
The Magic Carpet Stage hosts many of fair's performances
GenreCounty fair, Fair, Food Festival
Date(s)10 days (mid-to-late February)
FrequencyAnnually
Location(s)Indio, California
Years active77 (at Riverside County Fairgrounds) [1]
Inaugurated1921 (1921) (at Indio City Park) [1]
Attendance0 (2021-22) [2]
Organised byRiverside County Economic Development Agency Pickering Events LLC[2]
Websitewww.datefest.org [2]
[1][2]

The Coachella Valley has about 250,000 date palms planted on approximately 5,000 acres (20 km2) which produces 35,000,000 pounds of dates annually.[3] This long-standing agricultural industry is responsible for 95 percent of the nation's crop of dates.[4]

The Date Festival has more than 7000 exhibits and competitions related to the fruit. It has grown to feature musicians and comedians, a Date Festival Queen and her court, monster trucks and bull-riding.[4]

Safety for the fair is provided by the Indio Police Department, the Riverside County Sheriff's Office, and private security.

History edit

The Fair started as a festival to celebrate the end of the annual date harvest in Southern California's desert region, the major commercial date-producing area in the Western Hemisphere. Dates were an unknown commodity in the desert until 1903 when date palms were transplanted there from Algeria. By the early 1920s dates became a major crop for the area. Date groves in the Coachella Valley also became tourist attractions.

With the popularity of the date gardens the idea was planted for the first Date Festival in 1921 to be held in Indio's city park. A second festival was held the following year. Some 16 years later a third Date Festival was held, this time under the name of the Riverside County Fair and the Coachella Valley Date Festival. The Indio Civic Club, under contract from the County Board of Supervisors, sponsored the event.

That year there were 72 booths exhibited and attendance reached 5,000. It was also the first year the street parade was staged. In 1936 Western themes were in style and the Fair took on a Western theme complete with wiskerenos, cowboy hats, and rodeo events.

In 1940 the County purchased the present fairgrounds. The original 40 acres (160,000 m2) cost $10,000 and over the years later the grounds were expanded with the purchase of an additional 40 acres (160,000 m2) including the date grove on the fairgrounds. Presently, the fairgrounds cover 120 acres (0.49 km2).

When World War II started all fairs in California were halted. When the War ended, Robert M.C. Fullenwider was hired to manage the Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival. Fullenwider introduced an "Arabian Nights" theme tying in with the desert region and date industry.

Besides 1923 to 1937 and 1942 to 1945, no fair has happened since 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, 2022 had "Thrillville", a smaller carnival and event.[citation needed]

The Riverside County Board of Supervisors approved in June 2022 a partnership with Pickering Events LLC to bring the Date Festival back to Indio on an annual basis. The agreement brings back the Riverside County Fair & National Date Festival and ensure the continuation of the Fair Board as well as funding support to improve the Fairgrounds facilities, Supervisor Manuel Pérez announced.[5]

Pérez also announced that the next Riverside County Fair & National Date Festival will be held February 17-26, 2023, and it will return as a full-scale event.

“This is great for the City of Indio, the Coachella Valley and Riverside County and for the future of the National Date Festival,” said Supervisor Pérez. “Riverside County and the Fair Board look forward to being partners with Pickering in bringing the Riverside County Fair & National Date Festival back for the community, as well as attracting events to increase use of the Fairgrounds for the community and families.”[5]

Pageant edit

 
A fair vendor selling dates at the festival during the 1950s

Also, tying into this theme, the Fair has a scholarship pageant called "Queen Scheherazade". Students from Riverside County compete to win the scholarship money for continued education and act as the "good will" ambassador over the Fair.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Fair Fun Pg3-DATEFACTS.pdf
  2. ^ a b c d Riverside County Fair and Date Festival
  3. ^ The History Of Dates
  4. ^ a b Checking out the Coachella Valley - Palm Springs, California
  5. ^ a b "Supervisor Perez Announces New Partnership to Bring Back National Date Festival, Revitalize Fairgrounds; Announces 2023 Date Festival Date". Riverside County Board of Supervisors District 4. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
  6. ^ This name came from the story "1001 Nights". Early storytellers of Baghdad say that there was once a jealous king named Shahriyar, who dearly loved his beautiful wife. But, unfortunately, he discovered that she was unfaithful. So he promptly had her beheaded. The King vowed he would remarry and the morning following his wedding night his bride would be slain. The task of finding the King a new wife each day was turned over to the Grand Vizier (Chief of Police). It so happened that the Vizier was the father of two of the most beautiful women in the land-Scheherazade and Dunyazade. Shocked at what was happening to her sister citizens, Scheherazade begged her father to take her as a bride to the king. At first the Vizier refused, but Scheherazade argued that eventually her time would come. And so it was, that the king met "Scheherazade", a comedian and great storyteller. On their wedding night Scheherazade started the Tale of 1001 Nights, but she was unable to finish it. She promised to do so the next evening. Intensely interested, the king agreed. However, the next night, Scheherazade again stopped her story as it reached an exciting point. Again, the King agreed to a continuance. And so it went for 1001 nights, until the King fell deeply in love with Scheherazade and they lived happily ever after.

External links edit

33°42′45″N 116°13′22″W / 33.71250°N 116.22278°W / 33.71250; -116.22278