Ad
related to: fairs and carnivals in massachusetts
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Film festivals in Massachusetts (1 C, 12 P) M. ... Marshfield Fair; Massachusetts Educational Theater Guild; N. New England Summer Nationals; R. Readercon; S.
This is a list of music festivals in Massachusetts, United States, both ongoing and defunct. Amesbury Harvest Fair and Country Music Festival Aston Magna Music Festival
The Big E, formally known as The Eastern States Exposition, is an annual fair in West Springfield, Massachusetts, which opens on the second Friday after Labor Day and runs for seventeen days. It is billed as "New England's Great State Fair," the largest agricultural event on the eastern seaboard and the fifth-largest fair in the nation. [2]
The fair is located on the 62-acre (250,000 m 2) Marshfield Fairgrounds in Marshfield, Massachusetts, approximately 30 miles (48 km) south of Boston in Massachusetts' South Shore region. The fair features amusement rides, a midway, typical fair food and extensive farm and agriculture exhibits. It is one of the few remaining fairs that still ...
The Topsfield Fair is an annual county fair located in Topsfield, Massachusetts.The Topsfield Fair is known as America's Oldest County Fair. Started in 1818 by the Essex County Agricultural Society, the Topsfield Fair was originally a one-day cattle show. [1]
Fiesta Shows has been in partnership with the Topsfield Fair for over 50 years now. About 500,000 views come to the fair every year. In the year of 1967, Dean and Flynn purchased Fiesta Shows completely. [2] Fiesta Shows is a traveling amusement park that features rides and concession set up for fairs and carnivals. [3]
The world's oldest annual marathon, beginning in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, roughly 26 miles west of Boston. The finish line is on Boylston Street, outside the main branch of the Boston Public Library at Copley Square. Patriot's Day Parade: Patriots' Day City Hall Plaza, Kings Chapel, Paul Revere Mall, Eliot Square
Festivals unique to the United States (and Canada and Mexico in some cases) include pow wows, Rocky Mountain Rendezvous, blues festivals, county fairs, state fairs, ribfests, and strawberry festivals. The first U.S. state fair was that of New York, held in 1841 in Syracuse, and has been held annually to the present year. [1]