41st New Hartford Day celebrated

NEW HARTFORD — The 41st annual New Hartford Day celebration was held at Brodie Park on Sunday, Sept. 21.

The event was held on schedule despite less than favorable weather with off and on rain.

“We have lots of new things going on this year,” event co-organizer Mary Lee Dunn said. “The owner of Cutie Pies bakery in Thomaston grew up in New Hartford and they’re here with their brand new food truck. We have a young woman who’s in seventh grade selling these adorable homemade clay charms and a woman who is selling homemade wooden ornaments. There’s really a bit of everything.”

Other vendors consisted of several local business and organizations, including the New Hartford Lions Club, Barden Farm, the Licia and Mason Beekley Library, the New Hartford Land Trust, the New Hartford Garden Club and the New Hartford Volunteer Fire Department.

“This is the biggest number of vendors we’ve ever had,” event co-organizer Sally O’Neil said. “We have 68 vendors and organizations participating and they all came despite the cloudy and drizzly weather.”

In addition to vendors, the day was filled with several scheduled events, including a PTO-sponsored Jog-a-thon, a tractor parade, a performance by country music band The Chaparrals, a Lego building contest and guided meditation and chanting by members of the Dae Yen Sa International Buddhist Temple. 

The final event of the day was a karate demonstration by the New Hartford Karate Club. 

“We are the longest running athletic club in New Hartford,” fifth-degree black belt Peter Ruot said. “The club has been running since 1969 and we still meet regularly. In the summer months, we meet right here in Brodie Park.”

According to a press release, the event started in 1974 as “a means to bring together the distinctly different sections of town and to provide a venue for residents to come together and find out what was going on in the different sections of town.” 

“The individual organizations do some fundraising, but it’s not a money-making event for the town,” Dunn said. “It’s about getting together and having a good time.”

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