Pepper Jelly Festival Explained

Pepper Jelly Festival
Country:United States
Founded:1986[1]
Attendance:~6000[2]
Dates:Last Saturday in April
Website:Pepper Jelly Festival

The Pepper Jelly Festival and Rural Heritage Day, commonly known as the Pepper Jelly Festival, is an annual festival held the last Saturday in April in the Black Belt town of Thomaston, Alabama. The festival is hosted at the Alabama Rural Heritage Center, which is located in the old home economics building on the former Marengo County High School campus that was redesigned and repurposed by Auburn University's Rural Studio.[3] The Pepper Jelly Festival is a celebration of rural life and traditions in western Alabama. Formerly named Rural Fun Day, the event was renamed in recognition of the unique pepper jelly made at the Rural Heritage Center. The festival features music, homemade food, art, crafts, entertainment, and other activities that reflect the culture of a rural Southern way of life.[4] [5] [6] The festival is historically the second-largest held every year in Marengo County, behind Christmas on the River in Demopolis.[2]

There was no event in 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic was to blame; the 35th is deferred to 2021.

Notes and References

  1. News: Staff writer . August 27, 1997 . Thomaston's 11th Annual Rural Fun Day, Aug. 30 . Thomasville News . April 27, 2014 .
  2. News: Parker . Lisa . November 21, 1992 . Center Holds Book Fair . The Tuscaloosa News . April 27, 2014 .
  3. Martin . Robert C. . Celebrating the Black Belt . . Southern Progressive Corporation . February 2008 . April 27, 2014.
  4. Web site: Annual Pepper Jelly Festival . April 25, 2014 . The Alabama Rural Heritage Foundation . Auburn University.
  5. Web site: Pepper Jelly Festival . April 25, 2014 . Sweet Home Alabama: The Official Travel Site of Alabama . Alabama Tourism Department.
  6. News: Cannon . Jason . April 29, 2011 . Pepper Jelly Festival is Saturday . The Demopolis Times . Apr 25, 2014 .