Field Day celebrates our past
image

Photo by Amy Condra
J.E. “Radar” Raynor of Richmond mans the Skinner steam engine, built in the mid-1920s, Friday at The Field Day of the Past.  “Steam has the capacity to replenish itself faster than you can use it,” he said.




Published: September 19, 2009

About 30,000 people were expected to venture to eastern Goochland County last weekend for the 18th Field Day of the Past, an event known for its unique presentation of the region’s rural heritage.

The three-day celebration offers typical county fair offerings: funnel cakes, thrill rides and carnival games. But most of the 50 acres dedicated to Field Day were transformed into a setting where volunteers re-created turn-of-the-century agricultural and industrial workplaces.

Visitors were greeted by the revving engines of tractors, the rattling of corn shuckers and the deep whistles that announce the startup of the steam-powered sawmill.

At the Sorghum Mill, local farmers demonstrated how sorghum, grown in the Southeast as an alternative to sugar cane, is pressed and cooked down into syrup.

“Back in the old days, wagons would go from farm to farm, sharing the press,“ said Chester Brooks of Amherst County.

“But nobody really raises it anymore,“ added Calvin Turner of Varina, noting that this year’s crop came from a school in Petersburg.

Many of the skills shown at Field Day have faded into obsolescence, as have many of its permanent structures.

As the once-rural community of Short Pump developed into a bustling area of corporate commerce, old businesses such as the Short Pump Grocery and the Short Pump Transmission Shop were moved to the Field Day show grounds.

Springfield Baptist Church, built in 1887 in Henrico County and one of only a few black churches from its era that remain locally, was moved to the grounds in 2007.

A new attraction this year is the Rocketts Voting Precinct House from Sandy Hook. The small wooden house was built around 1890 and was used as a voting precinct until the early 1960s.

A few of the demonstrators are simply showing off what they still do as their day job.

At the blacksmith shop, Scott Hingley, who grew up in Short Pump and now lives in Nelson County, has crafted a career forging steel gates, signs and old-fashioned hardware for restoration projects.

“In the old days, there was a blacksmith shop on every corner. Everything was made by hand in those days, but the Industrial Revolution changed all that,“
Hingley said. “Not too many people do it now—which is a good thing, if you make your living at it.“

Hingley said he remembers Short Pump when it was still rural; he even went to school with some of the boys who once worked at the Short Pump Transmission Shop.

“I’m glad they preserved some of it,“ he said.


reader comments header image
Comments

There are no comments for this entry



Submit Your Comments Below

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:



By clicking submit, you agree to our terms and conditions.