Permanent Home
In the fall of 1855, following the second Fair, President Clagett
declared, "The prosperity of the Society will be greatly promoted by the
permanent location of the place of holding the exhibition . . . the
Society must be permanently located in some central position and
permanent arrangements made for its accommodation."
In the years to come the same idea was voiced on many occasions and by
supporters courageous enough to put the future of the Fair above other
considerations. Finally, in 1879, the Fair moved to Des Moines and
remained there, although it took six years to persuade the Legislature
to appropriate the money to buy a site. In the meantime, according to
historian George Mills, the Fair took place on the west side of Des
Moines. Now a residential site, it was then a city park named "Brown's
Park," located between 38th Street on the east, 42nd Street on the west,
Center Street on the north and Grand Avenue on the south.
The Legislature appropriated $50,000 for the purchase of a location in
1884, on condition that the city of Des Moines raise an equal sum for
site improvements. The new grounds on the east side of Des Moines,
stretching between University and Dean Avenues from East 30th to East
36th streets, were dedicated on September 7, 1886, with addresses by
Gov. Larrabee and other notables. A historian of the times wrote, "There
is doubtless no more beautiful site for the Fair in the U.S. Situated
about two miles east of the state capitol, it rises from the plain in a
beautiful and sightly eminence from which the country for miles to the
west, northwest and southwest stretches out before the view." Iowa was
the second state in the Northwest to acquire a permanent home for its
Fair. Several waited until the next decade.
In the 1880s the lengthening of the Fair beyond a week necessitated a
special Sunday program. A sermon by a pulpit celebrity with a special
musical program was the solution.
The Fair was hit hard by a cycle of falling prices that culminated in
the Panic of 1893. A combination of poor crops, bad weather and hard
times ruined the Fair in 1894 and only specific guarantees from the city
of Des Moines made it possible to open the gates the following fall.
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