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The word festival is
defined as a time of feasting or celebration, entertainment, or series or
performance of a certain kind of merrymaking. The members of Hebron United
Methodist Church fill this role every year on the third Saturday of September
as they carry out the tradition that was started by their forefathers.
Hebron’s
fall festival could only be traced back to the year of 1956 where it was held on
church grounds. In earlier times, fall festivals were held every year in not
one, but many homes in the Hebron community. The people in the community would
come together in the fall of the year to help with each others crops. They
would have corn husking parties where they would gather corn and put it in the
barn. This was a time of hard work and long hours because the tasks had to be
performed before winter set in. They would move from farm to farm to do in days
what modern-day machinery can now do in a few hours.
Meals
were very special. They were prepared most of the time by the younger women, as
the older ones worked in the fields beside the men. The evening meals were
sometimes followed by entertainment which was either story telling, music, or a
time to give thanks or worship. This was a time the neighborhood could interact
with each other and catch up on the news.
Wrestling
matches, jumping contests, and rifle matches were enjoyed by the boys and men.
Pitching horseshoes was another popular pastime.
With the
Industrial Revolution came new farm machinery which cut farm work in half. For
this reason, there was no longer a reason for this type of gathering on a large
scale. Families could now take care of their own farms without the neighbor’s
help, but the need to celebrate the end of the growing season and the gathering
of the harvest still existed.
In 1956,
Rev. Gayle Alexander, who was the pastor of Hebron Church at that time,
recognized the need for the community to come together at this time of year. He
proposed that Hebron host a Fall Festival. The purpose was to raise money for a
building fund. Perhaps God was working with His people to pull them together,
not only as a church, but as a community. Thus, the people of the Hebron
community moved their festival from the farm to the church grounds.
At the
early Fall Festivals, there were items for sale, an auction and an evening
meal. Mebane merchants would donate merchandise to sell at the auction. Whites
Furniture Company and Craftique Furniture Company were two of many that donated
items. Local farmers donated livestock, hay, and other farm products to sell.
This
year’s Fall Festival is slated to be one of the biggest and best.
Thanks to the generosity of local businesses as well as donations from church
members, the auction promises to be outstanding. Games for the kids will abound,
music and singing will be heard, and as the local folks say, “if you leave
hungry, it’s your own fault”. |