Kent County Show

The Kent County Show is an event hosted annually by the Kent County Agricultural Society at their Kent Showground headquarters at Detling near Maidstone in Kent, England. The event is primarily an agricultural show, showcasing the produce of Kent farmers such as soft fruit, alongside a livestock show and various other attractions such as demonstrations of traditional skills like blacksmithery and displays from the Royal Artillery.

First held in 1929, the show remains the shop window for rural Kent life, attracting around 100,000 visitors each year.[1]

History

The Kent County Agricultural Society was formed in 1923 with the amalgamation of the Mid Kent and East Kent Show Societies. The Society’s primary objective was to host an annual agricultural show.

This led to the very first Kent County Show being held that year at Wombwell Park in Gravesend. The show was declared by Gravesend's mayor of the time as "the greatest advertisement the town had been privileged to enjoy."

The official programme listed details of a band and smoking concerts with a sports gala and carnival as a Saturday night grand finale. There were 833 livestock entries and 15,000 people turned out to watch the prize cattle, sheep, pigs, and horses take the rosettes.

The first county show turned out not to be profitable and the Society relocated the event to Ashford in 1924. This year marked the first royal attendee when Prince Henry visited to peruse the livestock. This time, the event turned a profit.

In 1927, the county show moved on to Knole Park in Sevenoaks. Up to the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, a three-day Show was held in various parts of the County. In the years immediately preceding WWII it was held at Canterbury before then moving to Mote Park in Maidstone. From 1939 to 1945 it was cancelled as Kent farmers agreed that they needed to focus their energies on producing food for the nation.

After the war the event was restarted. From 1947–1963 two-day shows were held at Mote Park. In 1949 Winston Churchill arrived personally in Maidstone to collect his rosette and cup for breeding the first prize winner in a 'cow in calf' category at his farm in Westerham.

A permanent site, now known as the Kent Showground, was acquired in Detling in time for the 1964 Show. The show has been held annually there ever since.

Other royal visitors have since followed in Prince Henry's footsteps. In 1973 Princess Anne paid a visit. At the 50th anniversary of the show in 1979, another Duke of Gloucester, Prince Richard, cut the ribbon and for the diamond anniversary the Queen herself saw the agricultural pride of Kent with the Duke of Edinburgh.

In 2004, the Duke of Kent enjoyed the newly built Kent pavilion to celebrate the 75th anniversary.[2] The 2009 show saw Prince Edward and the Countess of Wessex visit to salute the 80th holding of the show.[3][4][5]

In 2012, over 25,000 visitors were expected each day, but for the first time since 1964, the show was closed by bad weather - mainly severe rain over the preceding weeks. The first day of the show was closed due to the difficulty in getting vehicles into the car parks, after 8,000 visitors had been admitted. A similar situation allowed only 9,000 on the second day, despite over 400 tonnes of bark chippings being used to try to keep roads and entrances open. The third day, Sunday 15 July, was open only to those with pre-booked tickets.[6][7][8]

The Kent County Show 2013 took place from 12-14 July 2013. New areas including a Canine Area hosted by the Kennel Club and a Country and Game Area hosted by the CLA were introduced. The Show enjoyed excellent weather, but many stands were missing after the poor weather of the previous year.

In July 2015 the show was featured on the BBC One programme Countryfile.[9]

References

  1. "100,000 enjoy county show spectacular". Kent Messenger Group. 2004-07-19.
  2. Zigler, Angela (2004-06-25). "Royal visitor at county show 2004". Kent Messenger Group.
  3. "Thousands join Royals at start of 80th County Show". kentnews.co.uk. 2009-07-17.
  4. "History of the Kent Show". Kent County Agricultural Society.
  5. Foreman, Melody (2009-07-22). "Recession won't stop us celebrating all that is Kent". Bromley Times.
  6. "BBC News, 13 July 2012". bbc.co.uk. 2012-07-13. Retrieved 2014-02-19.
  7. "BBC News, 14 July 2012". bbc.co.uk. 2012-07-14. Retrieved 2014-02-19.
  8. "BBC News, 15 July 2012". bbc.co.uk. 2012-07-15. Retrieved 2014-02-19.

Coordinates: 51°18′6″N 0°34′54″E / 51.30167°N 0.58167°E / 51.30167; 0.58167

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