[concluded]
Articles published in the Bethel News during the operation of
the fair of 1899 confirm that the usual "mid-way" attractions were
present. The old
church, which had been used as an exhibition hall for the past nine
years, was filled to capacity with the usual exhibits.
"Guaranteed to
fit and waterproof," gaiters, dress skirts, macintoshes, jackets and
capes for all were exhibited for the first time by H. A.
Hallowell.
Booths furnishing popcorn, soda pop, frankfurts and "light drinks" were
numerous. Bethel fair was always noted for its good horses and
this
year was no exception. It was stated that one day's attendance
exceeded
that of any other day in the history of Riverside Park.
The fair of 1900 seems to
have been as successful, in general, as any of those of the past.
The
fact that local papers announced that the Grand Trunk Railroad was to
run a special train each of the two evenings the fair was held provides
an indication of the crowds that were making Bethel their
destination.
Of special interest to Bethel Historical Society members is the fact
that Cyrene
Littlehale, the niece of Dr. and Mrs. Moses Mason, had on display in
the old Mayville Church a collection of items connected with her
prominent relatives. Among these were a pair of stays reputedly
one
hundred and fifty years of age, a chair two hundred years old, a red
cloak of the same age, the dress, bonnet and shawl worn by Mrs. Moses
at the inauguration of President Andrew Jackson, as well as the
portraits of
Dr. Mason
and his wife, all prominently featured in the
hall. Though usually devoted to agricultural produce, locally
built
items such as the Bethel Manufacturing Company's chairs, tables,
tete-tetes, and couches "in the latest styles" were also on
display.
Merry-go-round
at Riverside Park, ca. 1900
Early in 1901, an article appeared in the
Bethel News which shed light
on the use of the Mayville Church as the Riverside Park exhibit
hall.
One reporter wrote,
"The white steeple of the Garland meetinghouse with the dark mountain
side for a background, presented a picturesque landscape view.
Forty
years' passing have wrought a change in the situation. Father
time has
wrought a dilapidating and demoralizing work on the church edifice, but
the name "Garland" is perpetuated in the Parish House annex."
The 1901 agricultural fair seems to have been smaller due to bad
September weather, though several lists of displays and mid-way
exhibitors
indicate how widespread was the geographic area represented by the
participants. F. W. Albee had his "victuallers tent," the
People's
Clothing Store of Rumford had a large display, W. L. O'Connor of Percy,
N.H. had a lunch counter, and a Dr. Drew was advertising Woodford's
electric belts. Carrying people from the village to the
fairgrounds in
"ten cent carriages" were George Ryerson, Harry Plaisted, George Swain
and Isaiah Coburn. Gerald Smith could be found taking tickets at
the
main gate, while the Bethel Band, considered by one observer as "one of
the best bands in western Maine," furnished music on the grounds.
Within the exhibit hall, the most intriguing display was no doubt one
of gas lights powered by an Angell Acetylene Generator. The
News called
this "one of the best and cheapest lights on the market." This
particular exhibit was given by C. W. Wyman of Gorham, N.H.
Events having to do with the next year's fair in 1902 remained
encouraging and
only a few will be cited here. Under an article which began "No
stone
will be left unturned to bring to Riverside Park all the component
parts which go to make up a first class fair," appeared news of the
expected success of the trotting events. In addition, "the best
showing
of livestock in years" greeted the many visitors to the grounds.
In the
old church, new items on exhibit included hand carved picture frames
made
by William Ames, hand painted China by Laura C. Hall, and drawing
lessons given by Alice Billings. One unusual event, a "grand fair
ball," was given at Odeon Hall in the
Cole Block during one of the evenings of the fair. Held under the
auspices of the officers of the Riverside Park Association, the ball
was provided with music by Plummer's Brigade Band of Lewiston. It
was
reported, however, that "not many people attended."
The thirteenth annual fair at Riverside Park (1903) was anticipated as
being one of the largest fairs held in Bethel, but the lack of
published accounts hints that the fair may not have come up to its
former standards. Though racing events attracted a crowd, one
account
in the
News simply stated
that the "agricultural display was not as
large as usual this year."
The tradition already begun which allowed the use of the fairgrounds
for outside groups continued when races were held in early August of
1904
and baseball games (including one between the Locke’s Mills and West
Bethel
teams) were "side attractions." The Gilead Band
provided music between the races. It should be pointed out that
at
the same time that the Riverside Park activities were taking place,
many
local fairs were being operated, in addition to the larger county fairs
at Norway/South Paris, Fryeburg and Andover. On August 24, 1904,
the
News reported that the West
Bethel Fair held at "Grover's Birches" had
recently attracted over three hundred people. When the fair of
1904 was held, the Riverside Park Association
offered an extra premium of $100. on draft horses, "an opportunity the
likes of which were never known at Riverside Park before." Little
wonder that Bethel, in weeks after this fair took place, was being
called "one of the horse centers of western Maine."
Of the interesting particulars of the 1904 fair (held on October 4-5 ),
the
Bethel News reported that
a fortune teller was on site, and an exhibit was held by the Bethel
Creamery
Company, with Mrs. H. S. Hastings, Mrs. Eli Barker, Mrs. E. A. Capen
and
Mrs. O. H. Spearin exhibiting butter. Also featured were a
high-diving
dog which leaped from a thirty foot ladder onto a canvas set up before
the grandstand, and the Dixfield Brass Band, which played during both
days the fair was held. Though the exhibits in the hall were not
as
numerous as in the past and the local granges did not participate, "the
usual array of fakers and dime catchers were in line."
Though the three day fair of 1905 was announced well before it occurred
on September 26-28, a number of changes were taking place that
would soon alter the course of Riverside Park's future. Charles
Ryerson, who operated the old Mason homestead (on which the fairgrounds
was situated) as a boarding house or hotel, died in 1901 and was buried
in nearby Riverside Cemetery. While Mrs. Ryerson obviously
carried on,
aided by her young son, George, it probably came as no surprise when
people read of the sale of the farm in the September 6th issue of the
Bethel News. The notice
concluded that "upon the farm is a trotting
course of the Riverside Park Association which, with all buildings,
goes with the farm." Despite such news, the Association's
officers urged the
public to do its part in keeping the fair alive, and the event was held
as
scheduled to the tune of "good crowds and good trotting."
In 1906, the fair at Bethel was seen as a great success. Wrote
the
News
reporter, "the shriek of fakers, the whistle and hum of the
merry-go-round, the tramp of hoof and the toot of the automobile, and
the hum of many voices made a perfect pandemonium." The
pulpit of the old Mayville Church, from which the Reverend David
Garland had so long preached, was used to form an archway "which added
much to the Bear River Grange display." Despite these notes of
optimism, the newspaper
noted that the exhibits were not as large as in previous years.
The
majority of articles on the fair carried details of the many races and
the prizes awarded during them.
Only sporadic notices of the fair of 1907 appeared in the local
papers. Again, the exhibits appeared not to be as large as those
of the
past. One of the most "attractive" exhibits, however, was a
snowshoe
display exhibited by Seth L. Mason of Northwest Bethel. Of this the
local reporter observed, "He showed nine pair of completed snowshoes
and three frames."
The agricultural fair of 1908 was the last to be held in what we might
term the "heyday" of Bethel's Riverside Park. At this, the
eighteenth exhibition of the "Bethel Fair and Cattle Show," the
days saw excellent weather and large crowds of people. A
highlight of
the fair was the "Florida Animal Zoo," where were exhibited a
nine-and-a-half-foot alligator weighing three hundred and ninety
pounds, a seven foot rattle snake, and a cage of prairie dogs.
During
this same fair the races and other "interesting things" were captured
on film by a photographer who planned to make post cards of the scenes.
Anyone researching the Riverside Park property after 1908, when the
fair no longer took place for a time and the fairgrounds were used for
other purposes, frequently encounters the name of William Rogers
Chapman, a man once synonymous with Mayville and the present Norseman
Inn (the
former Mason farm), which Chapman owned as one of his several Bethel
residences. An article appearing in an 1892 edition of the
Lewiston Journal spoke
of Chapman's "track" laid out by himself on part of his farm.
According
to the location of his Bethel residence at that time, this would place
the track behind the present Dorothy Fadner house in Mayville. As
the
Riverside Park trotting track was laid out on Mason family property in
1890, one might ask whether Mayville contained two trotting tracks in
the 1890s. In any case, Chapman seems to have been the owner, at
one
time, of hundreds of acres of land in and around Mayville, and a closer
look at deeds of several Mayville properties might clear up any
uncertainties. In 1895, Chapman announced the sale of his "stock
farm"
in Mayville, described in the
Bethel
News two years previous as having
stables housing fancy trotters, brood mares and "youngsters."
Mrs. Charles (Ellen) Ryerson died in 1911 and "Professor" Chapman, then
a well-known musician and founder of the highly successful Maine Music
Festival, purchased the old Mason homestead and its expansive
property, including the Riverside Park fairgrounds. In July of
1912, several
months after the purchase, the Maine Music Festival picnic, by then an
annual event hosted in Bethel by Chapman, was held on the
fairgrounds.
During the following year's picnic, an extensive account of the event
appeared in the
Oxford County Citizen
(later
Bethel Citizen) under
the
title of "The Old Shack." This rather distasteful label for one
of
Bethel's more venerable landmarks brought a response in the paper from
Thirza Mason Stone, a younger sister of Moses A. Mason, the former
owner. Of the massive house she wrote: "Over this transaction I
have shed many bitter tears. That my home
has passed from the Mason ownership into other hands and from the Mason
name forever was hard to realize." Despite such
sentiments, "Professor" Chapman continued the alteration of the Mason
property, already
much changed under the Ryerson ownership.
The period of Chapman's ownership saw major developments on the former
Mason farm,
one of Bethel's oldest-settled properties. Chapman had the
Northwest Bethel road repositioned from between the former church and
the back of the present Norseman barn to its current location south
of the homestead. In early 1915 he dismantled, moved and
re-constructed a
massive barn (from the Chapman Homestead near the Gilead line) to
Mayville just west of the main house, to use as a stable for his
growing number
of horses. This barn was later moved to a
location nearer the present Bethel airport, where it still
stands. Chapman may also have been
responsible for the razing of the old 2nd Congregational Church, though
the exact date of its
demise is unknown. Photos of Mayville taken in 1927 from the
south
abutment of the Androscoggin covered bridge (razed that year just
before the flood)
give no hint of the church. In a taped interview, the late John
Harrington stated that parts of the church were used in various Bethel
buildings, including the Hanover Dowell mill building. In any
case, it seems probable that the church, long used for fair exhibits,
was torn down between the time of Chapman's purchase and 1927. It
stood
between the present Norseman Inn barn and the home of Floyd Thurston
facing present-day U.S. Route 2.
In 1918, "Professor" Chapman sold the Mayville Property and what
remained of the fairgrounds to Newell Stowe Godwin. Chapman then
purchased the W. K. Aston property in nearby Shelburne, N.H., where he
resided summers until 1924, when he purchased his last Bethel home, the
"Chapman House" on the Bethel Common. As one final note to
Chapman's
ownership of the Mason homestead, the "Professor" several times allowed
Bethel townspeople to use his "picnic grounds" for such things as
Fourth of July gatherings. He also permitted
Gould Academy's baseball and football teams to use the old fairgrounds
for sporting
events until he sold out and moved his summer residence to
New Hampshire. As an additional note, it should be pointed out
that
although the Riverside Park Association seems to have ended its
existence
soon after the 1908 fair, local fairs continued to be held in
neighboring
villages, most notably West Bethel and Newry Corner, which were
successful gatherings sponsored by Granges in each place.
Harry King, the former manager of the Prospect Hotel on the village
common, purchased the old Mason farm in January 1928 from Godwin.
It
appears, however, that Godwin retained ownership of the former
fairgrounds and track, for in early September of 1929, the
Citizen
announced that Bethel would have its first fair in over twenty years on
September 21st. In this newer version of the Bethel town fair
were some
of the same attractions that had made Riverside Park so popular in its
heyday period between 1890 and 1908. There was a large collection
of
"fakers" as usual, and various livestock exhibits. As well, there
were
ball games, exhibits of farm produce and band music. This all
appeared
fortuitous, for as one individual wrote in the
Citizen: "Although
several times it has appeared that a local fair might be put on in the
last ten years, it never progressed beyond the talking stage, and this
year's successful attempt of Mr. Godwin was certainly deserving of the
patronage it received." The writer concluded with word of
expected
improvements of the fairgrounds, including the addition of new
buildings.
The fair of 1930 was labeled the "First Annual Bethel Agricultural
Fair" and, as one person explained, it was the first fair in twenty-two
years that had races "and everything." Ball games were held
during the
September 30th event, as well as the usual displays and pulling
matches. Newspaper accounts indicate that the fairgrounds had
been purchased
late in 1930 from Godwin by Henry Boyker, who also served as president
of a reconstituted fair association. Meanwhile, the old Mason
homestead
had been sold by Harry King to Paul Clemens (Seigfried Paul Clemens
Schultz). An actor and marionette craftsman, Clemens held shows
in the
barn of the farmer Mason property during the fair's operation.
Clemens
also served as the secretary treasurer of the new fair association, and
Hugh Thurston held the position of vice-president.
The published schedule for the fair of 1930 reveals a well-organized
event which included a parade of old automobiles, pulling events, and
bicycle and saddle horse races in the morning, and athletic events,
trotting races and ball games in the afternoon. Advertised also
were a
"local stunt circus," a pet show, and the usual music provided by the
Bethel and Dixfield bands. Admission for the fair in 1930 was
thirty-five cents for individuals and the same for automobiles parked
on the grounds. In the spring of 1931, Henry Boyker moved the
large barn built by
"Professor" Chapman a short distance up the Northwest Bethel road
to its present site (it had not been included in the sale of the Mason
house by Newell Stowe Godwin to Harry King). Boyker also built a
high board fence around the fairgrounds, constructed new bleachers and
laid out an outdoor dance floor for the upcoming fair. While
extra
stalls were being built in the relocated barn (for the large number of
horses entered in
the track events), improvements were going on at the track itself, and
a new baseball diamond was being developed. Indeed, Henry Boyker
had
major plans for "Old Riverside Park."
Harness
racing at Riverside Park, ca. 1930
Held over a two-day period during the first week of September, the fair
drew large crowds
—probably
about two thousand. Paul Clemens (who would
eventually sell the old Mason house to Boyker who, in turn, ran it
again
as a hotel under the name "Bethaven") operated his "Marionette Theatre"
during the fair, while a race featuring the "World's Smallest Race
Horses" took place a short distance away (years earlier, another race
was held on the Riverside Park track which featured local work horses).
In late September of 1932 "a few interested citizens" of Bethel
gathered
to discuss the advisability of holding a fair at Riverside
Park. Officers elected were president, Henry Boyker (the owner of
the
fairgrounds); vice-president, D. Grover Brooks; secretary, Clarence W.
Hall; and treasurer, Tom I. Brown. At this same meeting it was
decided
to adopt the name "Riverside Park Association," which, of course, was
the
name of the original organization to hold fairs here. Held on
October 14th and 15th, the 1932 fair featured exhibits by local 4-H
groups, as well as large showings by area poultry and cattle
owners. In
a special edition of the
Citizen
published on October 15th, articles highlighted
the major attractions of the event. According to later editions
of
the same paper, the races, contests and exhibits were well-balanced,
although the same could not be said for the receipts and expenditures.
While the agricultural fair of 1932 was mostly seen by the
Bethel
Citizen's reporters as a success, the fact that meetings of the
newly
formed association held during the following winter had to be postponed
several times for lack of
interest foreboded the fair's future. In addition, the patterns
of
people's lives had changed drastically over the past few years, so much
so that a town-sponsored fair may have been too large
an effort for Bethelites attempting to survive the nation's worst
economic crises
—the
Great Depression. In any case, during
February of 1933 Henry Boyker was faced with two obstacles: the
Androscoggin was progressively eating away at the grove of trees
nearest the fair grounds (as well as the nearby cemetery), and the
roof of the new exhibition hall, a "temporary structure," had
collapsed due to heavy snows. As soon as the weather had
improved,
Boyker rebuilt the hall; new officers for the association did not
surface, however, and the old ones were re-elected.
The fair of 1933, originally planned for August 23-24, was postponed
until September 15-16. Though Henry Boyker promised a huge
variety of
concessions (mainly those that had recently been at the county fair at
Norway/South Paris), as well as rides, horse racing and pulling events,
many of the expected attractions did not surface for various
reasons. One person wrote in the September 21st
Citizen of the "small
attendance at the "Bethel Fair" where "a few stood around to watch the
races, a few more stood or sat in cars to watch the ball game [and] the
midway had little to offer
—kiddy
rides, fruit dealers, fortune
tellers, and three or four eating stands comprised the
attractions."
Some shows apparently set up tents but didn't open for business,
apparently "due to the small crowd."
When the time came for the 1934 event, the newness of the affair,
combined with a general lack of spending money, probably did much to
influence the outcome. Twelve horses booked for the races were in
the
Riverside Park stables early on the morning of October 13th when a
large snowstorm began. When, by the following Monday, the snow
had
changed over to rain, the fate of the local agricultural fair had been
decided and a bethel tradition had come to an end.
There are those whose memories still return, now and again, to the time
when colorful fairs were held in Bethel's Mayville. For many
years, the
remnants of the revived fair grounds stood idly by, waiting for the
encroachment of weeds and general neglect. The judges stand,
located
not far from the grandstand, was later moved to Paradise Hill to be
used as an observation post during World War II. Today little
remains,
except "Professor" Chapman's barn and the much-remodeled Mason
homestead
to recall the days when hooves thundered and crowds cheered at Bethel's
Riverside Park.