Each July, the Storytelling Guild of Medford presents the Children's Festival
in Jacksonville. This all-volunteer program, begun in 1967, is designed to
present a positive message to children and parents and to promote reading as
important to a child's development. The festival is held at Jackson County Britt
Park (previously known as the Peter Britt Gardens) in Jacksonville. Attendance
averages between 8,000 and 10,000 people.
More than 2,000 volunteers work at the three-day festival, telling stories,
sharing picture books, and performing music, theatre, and dance in the Britt
Pavilion. Magic and puppetry are performed in smaller venues around the grounds.
Arts and crafts booths blanket the eleven-acre Britt Park, and children can
choose from throwing clay pots, creating and pulling a silk screen image,
painting a mural, making a candle, creating a sandcasting, making something out
of leather, and building with hammer and nails. Children are encouraged to
perform during the festival on the pavilion stage.
All performers and craftpersons volunteer their talents, and many are
professionals. Local organizations and businesses contribute time, resources,
and money to make the festival a success.
Nationally known artists Jim Robinson and Judy Morris, as well as local
artists, have demonstrated their art at the festival; and in 1976, for the
national bicentennial, Oregon Shakespeare actor Rex Raybold portrayed
photographer Peter Britt. The Oregon Shakespeare Dancers and Tears of Joy
Theater puppets have performed, and local journalists and county commissioners
have told stories to children under the giant Sequoia tree.
The Storytelling Guild was formed in the mid-1960s by a small group of women
who regularly read picture books for children at the Medford Public
Library. There were no public kindergarten programs in the Jackson County
schools, and they wanted to help area children prepare for first grade. The
founding group—E. Susan Bates, Gail Caperna, Lois Cousineau, Jeannette Paulson,
and Jody Pfiefer—together with the children's librarian, Myra Getchell, held its
first Children's Festival in 1967.
The Storytelling Guild maintains the focus and commitment envisioned by its
founders and continuously evaluates community needs. The Guild provides many
programs: Pre-School Storyhours at the Medford Library; Bookwalk, a fashion show
for books, designed to pique the interest of third-grade children in Medford;
Pass The Book, a program that distributes new and used children’s books to
twenty-one agencies in Jackson County; a scholarship to students studying early
childhood development; and Dial-A-Story, where children can hear a story over
the telephone.
Written by Patricia
L. Blair
Further Reading:
"The Women Behind The Magic." Medford Mail Tribune, June 2009. http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090617/JOY/906170324/-1/JOY12#STS=g0ilf67b.zg9.
The Storytelling Guild website: http://www.storytellingguild.org/.
THE CHILDREN'S FESTIVAL is held every summer in Britt Park in Jacksonville, a small historical village located just outside of the city of Medford,Oregon. Fred-The-Litter-Critter is the mascot of the Storytelling Guild of Medford, Oregon. This Blog is a 50 year history of THE CHILDREN'S FESTIVAL managed by Pat Blair, Past Director and Advisor for the festival. Pat still does the art work for the festival t-shirts, programs, posters, etc.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
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Children's Festival T-Shirt Designs, 1982 to 2014
Free picture slideshow made with Smilebox |