Its Beginnings
The first Iowa State Fair was held in Fairfield, in southeast Iowa,
October 25 to 27, 1854. This was 20 years before America's great
westward movement began, when a streaming tide of countless thousands of
people migrated from the east in white-topped prairie schooners to
settle in what had been called "The Great American Desert."
The outgrowth of one of Iowa's early county fairs, the first Iowa State
Fair was managed by the fledgling Iowa State Agricultural Society. The
first president was Judge Thomas W. Clagett of Keokuk. Dr. J.M. Shaffer
of Fairfield served for many years as secretary and leading spirit of
the Fair.
The six-acre Fairgrounds tract, surrounded by a high rail fence,
boasted temporary sheds and pens for livestock, a tent for exhibits and
a circular 1,500-ft. track. The grounds, according to the State
Historical Society's Palimpsest Magazine of July 1954, were policed by a
"chief marshal, five assistant marshals and a number of policemen" who
were made conspicuous by wearing a "blue sash around the body."
Fairgoing families traveled by covered wagon, camping on the road and
at the Fair. Hardy frontiersmen with long pistols in their belts for
protection and ornament rode in from outlying regions, as the Palimpsest
describes.
Commenting on the three-day event, the Fairfield Ledger of November 2,
1854, read, "The attendance was large. For several days before the Fair,
strangers commenced pouring into Fairfield by scores... Such a concourse
of people never before assembled in Iowa. We think we are safe in
estimating the number at 7 or 8,000."
Secretary Shaffer displayed a collection of "more than 100 varieties of
snakes, lizards, etc., preserved in alcohol." A Mr. Moore of Fort Des
Moines exhibited a "fine collection of birds, all the varieties of which
are found in the state." The Ledger also noted, "As to corn, it is
useless to talk of finding any better. One sample of oats was the best
we ever saw." In the grain yield competition, Hezekiah Fagan of Polk
County won first for the best five acres of Indian corn, with a
production of 139.5 bushels, shelled, to the acre. The prize fall wheat
yield was 26 bushels per acre, while H.G. and J. Stuart of Lee County
raised 66 bushels of spring wheat on two acres.
The entertainment feature that seemed to have made the greatest
impression upon spectators was the exhibition of horseback riding by
women, or, to use the official designation, "female equestrianism." Ten
performers, wearing various colored ribbons, competed for "a lady's
superior gold hunting watch" offered by President Clagett. According to
the Palimpsest, the contest was so exciting the first day that it had to
be repeated the second. Miss Belle Turner of Keokuk, "the Lady of the
Pink Ribbon, with elegant form, fine face and soft blue eyes," was
judged the winner. Total expenditure for staging the first Fair: about
$323.
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