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History of the Marigold Festival
The popular Winterville Marigold Festival originally ran from 1971 to
2002. The festival put the small town of Winterville on the map for
many. Read more about the Marigold Festival below in an article written
by Donny Seagraves, a former member of the Marigold Festival Board of
Directors and the committee.
The History of the Winterville
Marigold Festival
by Donny Seagraves
Transport yourself back to the year 1971, the time of the first ever
Marigold Festival in Winterville, Georgia. Richard Nixon was president
of the United States. The controversial Vietnam War raged as college
students and citizens of all ages marched in antiwar protests. Our first
manned outer space all-terrain sports utility vehicle, the Lunar Rover,
was about to explore the moon's surface during the Apollo 15 mission
while we watched on TV.
Meanwhile, back in Winterville, Georgia, population 551, we wore
bell-bottomed jeans, love beads and long hair and thought everything was
"groovy." In the heyday of "flower-power," and "all you need is love,"
the Winterville Marigold Festival began with a flower and the idea of
rejuvenating the community and extending friendship to the world.
Wesley Whitehead, a new mayor in the seventies, didn't wear love beads
or long hair, but apparently he did appreciate "flower power." Looking
around his hometown, he didn't like what he saw. The railroad tracks
that used to bring out-of-town students to Winterville High School and
drummers (salesmen) to town to call on the various merchants that
operated businesses in the area, were now deserted and overgrown with
weeds. The old depot railroad station, dilapidated, was used as a
warehouse for strong-smelling, rat-breeding feed. Across the square, the
frame building that had once served as an office for Drs. Carter and
Coile was sagging, unpainted, and often flooded from a caving roof.
Other buildings on the square were in equally serious disrepair.
An official floral symbol for Winterville might help revive interest in
the community, Wesley decided. So he asked the Civinette Club, a ladies'
auxiliary of the Civitans, to come up with a flower for Winterville.
After some discussion, Mattie Coile suggested the Marigold. She pointed
out that it was bright, hardy and was a symbol of friendship all over
the world, dating back to Cortez's time.
Since gold was the primary color of the 70s, the marigold was the
perfect choice for an official flower, and it soon caught on in
Winterville. Citizens planted marigolds, in front of businesses and
homes. Hundreds more of the perky flowers were planted along the
railroad tracks, forming a gold and green carpet.
Mayor Wesley Whitehead looked at the beautiful marigolds blooming around
town and decided that a community festival would be just the thing to
promote community spirit and friendship. It would also help fund the
restoration projects that had already begun and might encourage
Winterville's people to do things together again and former residents to
return and join in the activities.
As is the case with any new idea, some first reactions to the festival
proposal were less than enthusiastic. But the mayor persevered and
gathered members of the community for a meeting where he emphasized the
possibilities of the festival. The Marigold Festival would bring
hundreds of visitors to Winterville and would help preserve American
art, crafts, and music, he told citizens. The $5 fee paid by vendors
would help cover festival expenses, and any profits of the festival
would go toward restoration and beautification projects in the
community.
Citizens agreed to hold the first annual Marigold Festival June 18-19,
1971, and preparations began. According to an early newspaper account,
10,000 marigolds were planted by Winterville's citizens in one day in
preparation for the upcoming festival. A former resident of Winterville,
Jimmy Coile, who was a landscape architect with the Southern Baptist
Convention in Nashville, Tennessee, donated plans for a fountain in the
town square in honor of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Coile. Citizens
raised money to build the fountain on land donated in 1869 by Sarah
Pittard, beneath the shade of two stately deodar cedars.
A program from Winterville's first annual Marigold Festival lists an
outstanding lineup of entertainment and events. There was a 10:00 a.m.
"excursion train ride." Antique furniture was auctioned in the park by a
well-known area auctioneer, Claude Pardue. In the field behind the
Baptist Church, the Methodist Youth Group and the Baptist Youth Group
competed in a softball game. At 6:00 p.m., a barbecue chicken supper
with all the trimmings was prepared by local resident Dick Hodges who
had the reputation of cooking barbecue "better than the best."
A square dance was held on Town Square around the new fountain. Billy
Dillworth, Talmadge Craig and the Playboys, and the Mountain City
Cloggers entertained. Cornbread, cold buttermilk and "real country
butter" were available in the Blacksmith shed on the Square. Antiques
were displayed in the Depot, including Mrs. Jack Thomas's antique doll
collection. Festival attendees could purchase "cold watermelon,
sugar-cured hams, fresh Georgia peaches and fresh produce" from stands
in the Town Square area.
A highlight of the first festival was demonstrations of craft work
including Michael Pitts's pottery and Ed Dye's hand-dipped candles.
Demonstrated crafts also included copper jewelry making, spinning,
decoupage, tole painting, furniture refinishing, engraving, quilting and
making peanut brittle. In the park, The Merrymakers, a Dixieland Band
that included Mary Whitehead on piano and vocalist Joan Biles,
entertained, along with many others.
Winterville's first Marigold Festival parade was led by the Third Army
Band. A picture in the Sunday, June 20, 1971 Athens Banner-Herald/Daily
News, shows Lt. Gov. Lester Maddox and his wife riding in a convertible,
which was driven through the streets of Winterville by Mayor Wesley
Whitehead, who was dressed in a tuxedo. Along the parade route, Maddox
got out of the car and performed his famous stunt, riding his bicycle
backwards. Winterville still has that bicycle today. Maddox was also the
keynote speaker at Winterville's first Marigold Festival.
Other special guests that first year included: Marianne Gordon, a former
Winterville resident (now former wife of entertainer Kenny Rogers) and a
regular on the Hee-Haw Television show; WAGA-TV Sports Director Ed
Thilenius; State Sen. Paul Brown; Grady Pittard, judge of the State
Court of Clarke County and a Winterville native; Joan Biles, chairwoman
of the steering committee for the festival; and Brenda Seagraves of
Winterville, a former "Miss Pandora" at the University of Georgia who
also competed in the Miss America Pageant.
Joan Biles (who later became Winterville's first female mayor) and Sybil
Deacon served as the first Chairpersons of the Marigold Festival
Committee, with Mayor Wesley Whitehead as Honorary Chairman, and
Whitehead and his wife, Mary, as official Host and Hostess. At the Miss
Marigold pageant, Marie Fleeman (Evans) was chosen as our first Miss
Marigold.
The highlight of the second Marigold Festival was the dedication of the
newly refurbished Carter-Coile Country Doctor's MuseumCarter-Coile
Doctor's Museum. At the third festival, in 1973, the historic train
station was highlighted. The fourth Marigold Festival featured the
dedication of our community library.
Over the past 30 years, Winterville has staged a Marigold Festival each
June. Because of this annual community celebration, our town is known
across America as "the Marigold Capital of the World," and "the place
where the marigold works its magic." Countless community volunteers and
businesses have donated time, talent and resources to make the
Winterville Marigold Festival a success. Employees and elected officials
of the City of Winterville have done likewise. As the official radio
station of the Marigold Festival, WNGC has provided live coverage of the
festival on Marigold Saturday.
The Winterville Marigold Festival was discontinued in 2003 by the Board
of Directors of Marigold Festival, Inc., the nonprofit corporation that
sponsored and administered the festival and the committee for the
festival. The board thanks all volunteers, past and present for all that
hard work and all those wonderful marigold memories.
This article is reprinted in a slightly altered form from The
Winterville Marigold Festival's 25th anniversary issue of The
Winterville Iceberg. It is used with the permission of the author.
© 1995 Donny B. Seagraves.
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