75th annual Laurel Festival this weekend

WINSTED — This weekend brings the return of Winsted’s annual Laurel Festival and organizers are celebrating the rich history of the event.

Frank H. DeMars is credited with nicknaming Winsted “The Laurel City� in 1930 upon seeing the town’s great abundance of the state flower. Four years later, the first Laurel Queen, Gladys Weaving, was crowned.

Seventy-five years later, Winsted continues to celebrate the Laurel Festival, which pays tribute to up-and-coming young ladies with a weekend of pageantry. A new Laurel Queen will be crowned Sunday, along with two runners up. All three will receive scholarships from the Laurel City Commission.

Originally called the Laurel City Horticultural Society, the organization has been around since 1932. The group’s mission was to plant laurel in town. “Laurel Week� was first observed June 18 to 25 of 1932.

In 1934, the first Laurel Festival took place in the auditorium at Central School. Gladys Weaving was elected queen by a vote of fellow pupils. Ruth Cross, Winsted’s well-known author, performed the ceremony of placing the laurel crown upon the head of the queen.

Two years later, in 1936, the coronation took place in a natural field of laurel on the Bronson farm, near the schoolhouse, in Winchester Center. In 1938, the celebrated prima donna, Alma Gluck Zimbalist, performed the ceremony at the same location, while the Rev. Dr. Karl Reiland delivered the address.

In the years since, Winsted has seen dozens of Laurel Festivals, with some time taken off during periods when the nation was at war. The festival was not held for a large part of the 1940s and for the entirety of the 1970s, when it was presumed finished for good.

Organizers resurrected the festival in 1981 and the annual celebration has since continued uninterrupted.

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