In partnership with the Maine Memory Network Maine Memory Network

Northern Maine Fair Memories

Text by Krystal, a student at Presque Isle Middle School
Images from the Presque Isle Historical Society by Dr. Richard Graves III

The Northern Maine Fair existed about seventy years before my grandmother was born and still exists today. When she was young, the Fair was three days long. There was Children’s Day, the Big Day, and the Last Day. Now the Fair is nine days. The Fair has and will always be one of Presque Isle’s favorite entertainments for old and young people.

Dorothy, some times known as Dot, has lived in Maine and has been involved with the Northern Maine Fair all her life. She said that her parents would always make sure that her family of seven bothers and sisters would go on Children’s Day and the Big Day. Her father and her whole family went in the car to the fair, which was about four miles from her house in the country.

Dorothy got involved with harness racing because her husband John enjoyed watching the races. Her son, Jimmy one of her five children, started racing in the early 1980’s. Dorothy worked at the racing office about the same time. Dorothy thinks one thing that has changed about harness racing is racers need to go faster to even qualify to race. Dot, also thinks the betting has dropped.

The attendance of the Fair has dropped because at the time when the Northern Maine Fair was in full swing, it was the main attraction in the area. All the families went. Dot said that now there are so many other things families can do that the Northern Maine Fair is not that important to them anymore.

Her favorite and only ride that she would go on was the Ferris Wheel because the other rides were too fast and would make her sick. The fair food has changed a lot. When she was young they had hamburgers, hotdogs, and soups. Now there is pizza and baked potatoes. Her favorite fair food would be a hotdog.

Some buildings that Dot’s construction company built for the Northern Maine Fair were the Forum, the eatery, the restrooms, and the exhibition building. She liked the Forum the best because it was one of her larger projects. She had a subcontractor do the refrigeration and in thanks they gave her a trip to the Bahamas. At the busiest time, the forum had thirty men working on it.

One thing that has changed tremendously was during the fair there were baseball games in the infield. The teams were made up of only boys, but the girls could cheer for them. The Presque Isle boys were named the Indians, but Dorothy cheered for the boys from Robinson. She liked the boys from there.

She misses when all the families came and had a picnic lunch. Everybody came to the picnic because it was the last thing before school started. Families had this picnic lunch because they could not afford to feed their families all three meals at the fair. Families brought their lunch, and for supper they would snake at the food booths.

Still today, Dot goes to the Northern Maine Fair to watch the races. She eats her hotdogs and watches her grandkids and great grandkids have an awesome time just she as did when she was young.