Plans being made for year-round use of state fairgrounds
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[August 14, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The state of Illinois is
teaming up with the Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln to
develop a master plan for year-round use of state fairgrounds facilities
in Springfield and Du Quoin.
Gov. JB Pritzker and Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello
II made that announcement Friday, along with John Stremsterfer,
president and CEO of the foundation.
“Today, we honor the legacy of paving an even better path forward for
these fairgrounds for generations to come,” Pritzker said during a news
conference early Friday morning outside the Department of Agriculture
building next to the Springfield fairgrounds. “That's our intention.
That's what our state fair advisory board is tasked with.”
The first Illinois State Fair was held in Springfield in 1854, according
to the fair’s own website. For several years afterwards it moved to a
number of different communities before settling at its permanent
location on the capital city’s north side in 1894.
Like other state fairs, it serves as a kind of harvest festival and a
celebration of the state’s agriculture industry, which Costello
describes as Illinois’ largest industry that contributes about $19
billion annually to the state’s economy.
In 1923, a group of businessmen in the southern Illinois town of Du
Quoin, in Perry County, launched a competing fair in an effort to
attract visitors specifically from that region. It was later acquired by
the state and has been operated by the state since 1986.
The larger state fair in Springfield typically draws more than half a
million visitors during its two-week operation, while the Du Quoin fair
has been drawing about 100,000 in recent years.
Both fair sites also host other events occasionally throughout the year,
but Stremsterfer, who grew up just blocks away from the Springfield
fairgrounds, said the idea is to turn them into year-round venues.
“It's such a great asset for the people in the state of Illinois. I
think we all want to be proud of everything that in the state, but
especially the property that we're all responsible for our citizens,” he
said. “And I think nothing exemplifies that more than the State
Fairgrounds.”
That announcement came on the second day of the 2021 state fair after
many of the opening-day events, including a Grandstand concert by rock
musician Sammy Hagar, had to be canceled due to a violent storm that
swept across central Illinois Thursday. That storm resulted in
significant flooding in Gibson City, a town of about 3,000 people
roughly 100 miles northeast of Springfield.
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Gov. JB Pritzker talks with Casey Wichmann, Route 66
Scenic Byway executive director, after a ribbon cutting ceremony
Friday to mark the opening of a new exhibition at the Illinois State
Fair in Springfield commemorating the iconic highway and the places
in Illinois that it passed through.(Capitol News Illinois photo by
Peter Hancock)
But Pritzker, along with Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton,
made up for lost time Friday by attending several events at the
fair.
Among them was a ribbon cutting ceremony to mark the start of a new
attraction at the fair that is still under development, the “Route
66 Experience” that will commemorate the nation’s first
transcontinental highway, which stretched from Chicago to southern
California.
The project is planned as a walking tour that will feature exhibits
representing many of the towns and attractions in Illinois that
travelers on the roadway would have seen, from Chicago to the Chain
of Rocks Bridge just north of St. Louis. The project is expected to
be completed by 2026, in time to mark the 100th anniversary of the
highway.
“I think about Route 66. I think about how it was built to create
opportunity,” Stratton said during the ceremony. “But that wasn't
always available to everyone. I think about Black people like those
in my family who traveled Route 66 but had to carry a Green Book
with them because, due to Jim Crow, they could not stop where they
wanted to eat, get a cool refreshing beverage, or to get some
lodging or get gas for their cars.”
She said the project will foster “conversation about the Mother
Road, about the challenges that have been presented, but also the
opportunities that were presented.”
Pritzker and Stratton also attended a ribbon cutting ceremony to
open Conservation World, a 30-acre park staffed by the Illinois
Department of Natural Resources that features a large aquarium
stocked with sport fish that are popular in Illinois, several
educational programs and an outdoor amphitheater with live music.
The fair runs through Aug. 22. Additional details can be found at
the fair’s website, Illinois.gov/statefair.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |