Fall Festival's long weekend of family events


SALISBURY — While lately it has felt more like summer than autumn, the Fall Festival will make its annual appearance this weekend with the usual variety of activities for all ages and tastes.

"Everything seems to be going just fine," said festival organizer John Neufeld.

The three-day event begins with a breakfast at St. John’s Episcopal Church featuring what organizers call the church’s "famous blueberry pancakes." It concludes Sunday with the annual chili cook-off and scarecrow contest awards on the Green in front of The White Hart Inn, and the Harvest Run and Walk beginning at the Salisbury Marketplace.

In between, there is the Congregational Church’s silent auction, which also features children’s activities such as face painting, games, hayrides and plenty of food. A magician will be performing during the auction, with shows at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Sunday.

The Scoville Memorial Library, the nation’s oldest public library, will hold its annual book sale Saturday and Sunday, with a sneak-peak preview party Friday from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.

The Joint Chiefs, a popular local band featuring Louise Lindenmeyr, Eliot Osborn and George Potts, will perform Saturday on Academy Street from 2 to 4 p.m. in front of Best & Cavallaro Real Estate, which is sponsoring the group’s appearance.

Last year the newly formed Salisbury-Lakeville Merchants Association sponsored a Columbus Day Cabaret on the Village Green to benefit the Lakeville Hose Company. The association will not be involved in the festival this year.

The Fall Festival was begun in 1946 by the Trinity Lime Rock Episcopal Church as an antiques fair centered around the old Town Hall, according to Trinity’s Web site.

After the town hall burned down in 1985, events were shifted outdoors and expanded to include hay rides, performances by the Salisbury Band, sidewalk sales, food and the silent auction run by the Congregational Church. Other churches, including St. John’s, Lakeville United Methodist, St. Mary’s Catholic and, most recently, All Saints Orthodox Christian, became involved.

Organizers are hopeful they can repeat the success of last year, when "thousands of people were downtown," Neufeld said. They are hoping to avoid problems such as the one that occurred two years ago, when a power failure blacked out downtown Salisbury and hampered many of the activities, including the pancake breakfast.

Finding adequate numbers of volunteers to staff the many booths, displays and activities is not easy.

"This is always difficult," added Neufeld. "But by and large we have managed."

A couple of generations ago, there were fewer part-time residents in Salisbury than there are now and, among full-time residents, families in which both parents work are now common, which leaves little time for volunteering, people associated with the festival say.

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