Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Auto daredevil show at the Missouri State Fair, 1960s. The Missouri State Fair is the state fair for the state of Missouri, which has operated since 1901 in Sedalia, Missouri. It includes daily concerts, exhibits and competitions of animals, homemade crafts, shows, and many food/lemonade stands, and it lasts 11 days.
Mid-Missouri Outlaws (APFL/CPIFL) (2010–2013) The James L. Mathewson Exhibition Center is a publicly owned 3,155-seat multi-purpose arena on the Missouri State Fairgrounds in Sedalia, Missouri . Built in 1988, it received its current name in 1994 to honor Missouri Senator James L. Mathewson, who was instrumental in getting support for the ...
The Ozark Music Festival was held on July 19–21, 1974 on the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia, Missouri. It is estimated that anywhere from 160,000 to 350,000 were in attendance at the three day festival. [1] [2] The event was marked by mismanagement as the facilities were not equipped for the number of attendees. [3]
Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush and other presidents have given speeches on the fairgrounds, though not during the State Fair. In 1974, the Missouri State Fairgrounds was the site of the Ozark Music Festival, one of the largest but least remembered major music festivals of the 1970s. While the plan was for the pop/rock/bluegrass festival's ...
A 9-year-old Missouri farm boy is winning fair ribbons with a Patrick Mahomes lookalike made from spuds and a pretty little calf named Taylor Swift. Pat ‘Tater’ Mahomes takes blue ribbon at ...
Junction of MO 50 and Rte M: Sedalia: 12: Missouri State Fairgrounds Historic District: Missouri State Fairgrounds Historic District: June 28, 1991 : Roughly bounded by US 65, Co. Rd. Y, Clarendon Rd. and the Missouri-Kansas-Texas RR tracks
The expansion into Missouri was made possible by legislation and $11 million was allocated as part of the state's fiscal year 2024 budget. Commissioner of Education Karla Eslinger, who supported ...
In 1974, residents of Sedalia, Missouri, weren’t expecting the 150,000 fans who showed up to see some of the biggest rock acts of the era. Disaster or best show ever? ‘Notorious’ Ozark Music ...