GREENUP — There’s something about Greenup County Old Fashion Days that keeps folks coming back year after year.
Just ask Wayne and Helen Fries.
They’re from California — the one in northern Kentucky, not the one on the West Coast — and they’ve been at the festival every year since its inception.
That’s 44 years now.
The couple sells rugs that Wayne Fries makes on an authentic 1800s loom he purchased in 1960. He also works the loom at the festival, giving folks the opportunity to watch him ply his craft.
Wayne Fries said Saturday that he was able to trace the loom’s history from 1818, when it was given as a wedding gift. However, “We don’t know if it was new or old at that time,” he said.
Helen Fries proudly displayed a plaque the couple received this year from the Old Fashion Days Committee for their years of dedicated support of the festival.
“We really like it here,” she said. “This is the last show we do every year.”
Another fixture at the festival since its very beginning has been the Greenup County Lions Club’s Antique Car Show. It’s one of the longest-running, if not the longest-running car show in the region.
This year’s show drew 57 entries, ranging from street rods to ‘60s muscle cars to actual antiques.
Show Chairman Jim Archey said the number of entries was down this year. He attributed that to the fact there were other car shows taking place elsewhere in the area on Saturday.
Money raised through the car show is used by the Lions Club to support vision health, Archey said. That includes paying for glasses and eye exams for children and adults who are unable to afford them.
The live Wild West drama is another popular Old Fashion Days event that’s been going on for years. However, the folks who laughed as they watched the scenarios play out in front of the county courthouse likely had no idea how much work goes into the production, said Greg Stevens of Flatwoods, one of the actors.
According to Stevens, who played a character named Flash, a mountain man clad in buckskin clothing and a coonskin cap, a la Daniel Boone, rehearsals begin about six weeks before the show date.
“We meet here and work out our parts, and sometimes, we’re here as late as 3 or 4 a.m.,” he said.
Stevens has been part of the drama for 21 years. He said it’s the camaraderie among the cast that keeps him coming back.
“We’re just like family,” he said.
Other attractions at Old Fashion Days on Saturday included an apple pie-baking contest, a talent show, a cornhole tournament, tractor games, a fiddle contest and a parade.
Roger Hardin of South Shore was one of the unexpected stars of the festival — or, more accurately, his companions were.
Hardin was pulling a wagon through the streets of downtown Greenup. In the wagon were some 9-week-old English bulldog puppies, which Hardin was selling.
Hardin started the day with seven pups. He’d sold three of them by about 2 p.m. Still, kids trailed after the wagon, eager to reach out and pet the pudgy, wrinkly and completely adorable canines.
“I’m going to have to take them home and let their hair grow back,” Hardin joked. “They’ve just about rubbed the hair off of them.”
KENNETH HART can be reached at khart@dailyindependent.com or (606) 326-2654.
Local News
Old Fashion fun
Festival keeps folks coming back for more
- Local News
-
-
TIM PRESTON: Karats, peaches, wings and brews, old couches and new beauty
Weekly business column from Tim Preston.
-
Come on in!
It’s time to grab a towel, some sunscreen and your shades — pools in the Tri-State are nearing their opening dates and are bound to provide some days of fun this summer.
-
Pooches take to the street in Dog Jog
They were running with the big dogs Saturday in Grayson.
-
A Smith Branch Legacy
Six generations of Robinsons have called Smith Branch home.
-
Court battle heating up over stretch of blacktop
The court fight is just heating up over a block-long stretch of blacktop in Grayson.
More parties are piling on in the lawsuit accusing Grayson of passing an illegal ordinance to take ownership of the pavement. -
Regional jails ‘a total failure’
As the debate over a proposal to create a new Northeast Regional Jail Authority continues, some officials with the Big Sandy Regional Detention Center in Paintsville are watching closely.
-
Beshear in West Liberty to help in tornado recovery
State legislatures and Gov. Steve Beshear gathered in West Liberty on Friday to sign three bills that will help in the recovery efforts of the tornado-stricken town.
-
Students get more than a scoop’s share
There’s nothing more refreshing than ice cream on a hot day, and no one knows that better than the principal of Hager Elementary School in Ashland.
-
2 school aides part of drug arrests
Two elementary school aides and three other people were arrested Thursday in a Carter County drug investigation.
-
5K run main attraction for Final Friday in Greenup
Greenup’s Final Friday included the usual live entertainment and car show, but a 5K run also attracted many to town Friday evening.
- More Local News Headlines
-
TIM PRESTON: Karats, peaches, wings and brews, old couches and new beauty




