Preston Kinsmen bring annual event back to Riverside Park
Published on
May 25, 2009
CAMBRIDGE -- After 60 years, the annual Preston Kinsmen Carnival shows no sign of fading into history.
While
other family-themed events in the area have struggled or folded -- like
Kitchener's Central Ontario Exhibition or an annual Rotary Club
fundraising carnival -- the free-admission Kinsmen event in Cambridge
appears healthier than ever.
This year's sour economy may boost
the turnout for the four-day party in Riverside Park, if advance sales
of discounted midway tickets are any indication.
"I've had people calling up saying they've sold out, wanting more," carnival committee chair Dwayne Loughlean said last week.
That doesn't usually happen until the last couple of days before the show, which this year runs Thursday through Sunday.
The $30 packet of tickets sell for $20 until Friday, at Zehrs and Giant Tiger stores in Cambridge.
That
kind of early interest from families looking to stretch pennies makes
Loughlean hopeful of a big year raising money for community events and
programs. In recent years, the carnival has generated $15,000 to
$20,000 profit.
"It's our biggest fundraiser of the year," said Earl Grubb, a Preston Kinsman who ran last year's show.
"It's a great family show. We strive to keep that family image. We don't have a beer tent."
The only thing that can spoil the party is rain.
"We don't say the R-word," Loughlean said.
Grubb,
a member of the service club for 40 years, has three times headed the
carnival committee. When he wasn't, he was always tapped on the
shoulder to provide prizes. Early on, as manager of the St. Clair Radio
store in Preston, he was a popular guy.
While now a last-weekend-of-May fixture in Riverside Park, the carnival has moved around over the years.
The
first carnival was held July 1, 1949, starting with a parade marching
everyone in Preston to a Dominion Day party in Riverside Park. By the
1960s, it had moved to the old Preston Arena at Lowther and Moore
streets, supplemented with a circus tent
In May 1972, the arena
burned to the ground, leaving the carnival homeless two weeks before
the event. Club members scrambled to move back to Riverside. Town crews
quickly strung temporary hydro and water lines to the site so the show
could go on.
That year was one of the carnival's biggest and the Kinsmen donated all proceeds to the arena rebuilding fund.
In
1979, the carnival was homeless again because striking city workers
picketed the front gate of Riverside. The show went to Dumfries Park,
which is owned by the Grand River Conservation Authority.
Events
from the past will return for the 60th anniversary. Saturday, a parade
will form at King and Bishop streets and head through old Preston to
the park. At the same time, Preston merchants plan to turn downtown
into the biggest garage sale in the region.
Also Saturday,
Kinsmen will revive the kid-friendly bicycle and wagon decoration
contests, with prized handed out to the most imaginative decoration.
Children can also try a Guitar Hero contest, while their parents play
traditional games of chance such as crown and anchor.
Along with
the midway, the Preston Kinsmen Rock and Roll Revival show -- usually
held in the fall -- will take the stage in Riverside. And Kinsmen will
have their industrial-sized barbecues fired up to serve the throng.
With
a club of just 17 members, it takes months of work to arrange the show,
Loughlean said. But when the carnival starts setting up, reserves
arrive by the score: redshirted members of area Kinsmen and Kinette
clubs, along with dozens of community volunteers.
"When you see smiles on the kids' faces, that's reward enough,'' he said.
kswayze@cambridgereporter.com