Palmerfest
Palmerfest | |
---|---|
Students gather along the street at the 2011 Palmerfest | |
Date(s) | May annually |
Begins | ~8:30 a.m. (EST) |
Ends | Midnight (EST) |
Frequency | Annual |
Location(s) | Palmer Street, Athens, Ohio United States |
Years active | 25 |
Inaugurated | May 15, 1981 |
Most recent | April 9, 2016 |
Attendance | ~8,000 |
Palmerfest is an annual block party in Athens, Ohio, usually taking place annually in May on Palmer Street near the city's eastern edge. Palmer Street is a major student neighborhood of Ohio University. The event regularly attracts regional attention as tens of thousands of students from universities around the state gather on the street, and has attracted controversy over reported binge drinking and other disruptive behavior.
Founded in 1981 by the self-proclaimed legendary Front Porch Monkeys of 21 Palmer Street in response to the cancelled Ghetto Bash. The first Palmerfest was a Potluck Banquet invitation only event for Selected V.I.P.s. The street fest's original iteration included only 500 friends and neighbors of the street residents. After 35 years of annual parties, the attendance of the fest has grown to around 8,000 people. Substantial police presence is required each year, and the event attracted attention throughout the state as the 2009 and 2010 iterations of the party had to be shut down by riot police after "near riots" erupted with intoxicated attendees setting fires to furniture in the streets and throwing debris at officer and fire department crews attempting to control the crowds. Subsequent backlash saw the city crack down on party ordinances, though Palmerfest has spawned spinoff parties in town and around the state.
Palmerfest
The event is held on Palmer Street near the central east section of the city, a street 575 feet (175 m) long composed primarily of student-rented houses from undergraduates at Ohio University; it is surrounded on three sides by streets which also consist primarily of student-rented houses, as well as the student-leased Palmer Place apartment complex to the northwest. Palmerfest is one of the largest events in the town each spring, and publicity of the event rivals the larger Halloween celebration held in the town each October, which is a city-sanctioned event.[1] The Palmerfest party, however, is held entirely by residents of Palmer Street and surrounding areas, who are almost exclusively students, who often erect temporary fencing around their houses and admit friends and classmates. The string of house parties, which take place throughout the day, often involve beer pong and other drinking activities.[2] Annually revelers build stages around the houses on the street where local bands play music throughout the day.[3] Street vendors often set up businesses at the ends of the street, and food carts report substantially improved business the weekend of Palmerfest.[4]
Athens and Ohio University police maintain a large presence at the party, often mounted police patrol the street and area to prevent the event from spiraling out of control.[2] The event often produces large amounts of trash, and police are on hand the next day to supervise cleanup and ensure the houses do not violate city trash ordinances. Consequently, cleanup of the event often falls upon the residents of the respective houses.[4]
History
Origins
In the early 1990s, residents of Palmer Street began hosting a string of parties after the university cancelled Spring Fest, a university sanctioned and sponsored event. Spring Fest, which had been held on university grounds and featured alcohol vendors, was made alcohol-free in 1990, and attendance dropped sharply. The university cancelled the event the next year, prompting residents of the street to hold a fest of their own to replace it.[5] The first Palmerfest was held on April 12, 1991.[3] The event was originally attended by about 500 friends of the street residents and with only 15 beer kegs.[3] Palmerfest grew in size with each successive year as word of the party spread.[6] In general, each Palmerfest event was described as "peaceful" with minimal police intervention. Ohio University officials have coordinated with the residents of the street to ensure the event was as safe as possible.[7]
Historically, heavy police presence was only necessitated to break up fights or if there is property damage or disorderly behavior.[8] Police traditionally did not need a major presence on the street. However, Ohio University, in an effort to tone down the school's party school image, cracked down on punishment for drinking. University officials noted in the years leading up to the 2009 fest, the university was seeing a measure of success in regulating student behavior and restraining drinking.[7]
The 2008 Palmerfest party was mostly quiet, though a lawsuit was filed by an attendee who claimed he was struck and injured by a water balloon thrown by a student resident of the street.[9]
2009 "near riot"
By the May 9, 2009 Palmerfest, attendance had grown to an estimated 8,000 people, including a significant number of students from other universities around the state. The 2009 Palmerfest attracted statewide attention after a "near riot" erupted on Palmer Street around 10 p.m. when partiers began setting fires to furniture in the street and assaulting police officers and firefighters who attempted to put out the blaze.[10]
Around 10 p.m. officers responded to the first reports of a furniture fire in the street, and riot police moved down the street escorting a fire engine. Firefighters put out the blaze, but attendees quickly became belligerent and the crowd began shouting insults at the police, who withdrew. By 10:30, several more furniture fires were started in the street, and when police and firefighters attempted to return and extinguish the blazes, the crowd turned violent, throwing bottles of beer at police. Five police horses were injured, most by thrown glass bottles, and police reported a substantial amount of debris being thrown at them. Attendees of the party were packing the rooftops and alleys in between houses, some of whom participating in throwing debris and chanting sloagans with the crowds surrounding the fires.[8] Police responded by calling in reinforcements and 40 riot police and mounted police armed with batons and pepper spray confronted revelers and pushed them from the street and surrounding yards. Attendees criticized the behavior of the police as overly violent.[10]
The town responded with several new safety ordinances guiding party behavior for students, including an attempted ordinance banning house concerts, as local code enforcement saw them as unsafe and potentially hazardous for fires.[11] OU Dean of Students Dean Lombardi released a statement condemning the behavior, and police used online photos and YouTube to try and identify people responsible for the riotous behavior, and OU also announced efforts to hold students involved responsible.[7]
2010 and town backlash
The May 8, 2010 Palmerfest began early, around 8:00 a.m. and remained relatively calm throughout the day, spurred mainly by unseasonably cooler weather.[12] Crowds did not block traffic or behave riotously throughout the early day, though police noted at 6:00 p.m.[13] the tone of the crowd began to shift. At 9:20 p.m. police shut down two parties on the street due to lighting of fireworks, provoking significant antagonism from the crowd. The crowd quickly began to grow more hostile, and after 11 p.m. attendees began throwing objects at the officers. Mounted police began sweeping the sidewalks and several yards, following people who had assaulted them with objects. One officer fell off his horse while attempting to control the crowd. By 11:35 p.m. 50 riot police appeared on the street and began clearing it, armed with batons and pepper spray. One officer and one police horse were injured.[12]
A total of 82 people were arrested during the weekend, 31 by Athens Police and 51 by state liquor control agents.[14] Most of the arrests involved alcohol, though several arrests for rioting and felonious assault on an officer were also reported.[13] Police subsequently created a website to identify people responsible for starting fires, taking pictures of the event from Facebook pages of people who attended the event.[15] OU President Roderick McDavis subsequently released a written statement expressing outrage at the event, promising to hold any involved students responsible and meeting with city officials to plan preventive measures to prevent future events from spinning out of control in a similar manner.[16]
2011
The May 7, 2011 Palmerfest was called "uneventful" by police, and in spite of statewide attention the event remained calm, spurred greatly by rains throughout the day. Fires and other rioting behavior were not reported.[17] Police reported attendees were substantially less rowdy than in previous years, never blocking the street to traffic, and crowds never escalated to violent action, as they had in the two years past. Police also attributed increased officer presence at the event and the more aggressive communication campaign to success at keeping the party in order.[4]
However, police arrested about 170 people in connection with the event, many for underage drinking.[14] The Ohio Department of Public Safety's investigative unit reported 172 arrests in Athens between May 6 and May 8, accounting for 86 percent of its arrests statewide. Most were for underage drinking or possession of fake IDs.[18]
2012
Palmerfest moved back into April, turned 21, and had a house set on fire. A riot zone was declared by the mayor of Athens around 7:50 PM and the spring fest was shut down shortly after.
Legacy
The growing popularity of Palmerfest spawned similar events on other streets throughout the town. Other events, all of them coordinated house parties by houses along the same street, have subsequently sprung up on Oak Street (Oakfest) Mill Street (Millfest) and High Street (Highfest), among others.[18]
Increased attention to the Athens area during the fests means the town continually leads the state for annual arrests by the Ohio Investigative Unit.[18]
References
Citations
- ↑ Jardy & Rolando 2011, p. 86
- 1 2 Jardy & Rolando 2011, p. 123
- 1 2 3 Palmerfest Gears up for 18th Anniversary, Athens, Ohio: The Post, May 8, 2009, retrieved August 13, 2011
- 1 2 3 Roussos, Meg (May 8, 2011), Big Fest calmer than last two years, Athens, Ohio: The Athens NEWS, retrieved August 14, 2011
- ↑ Hollow 2003, p. 270
- ↑ Hollow 2003, p. 283
- 1 2 3 Ludlow, Randy (May 12, 2009), Athens police try to ID unruly revelers, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 14, 2011
- 1 2 Willia, Donna (May 10, 2009), Athens Police: Fires, Near-Riot at "Palmer Fest", Columbus, Ohio: WCMH-TV Channel 4, retrieved August 13, 2011
- ↑ Phillips, Jim (October 10, 2008), OU student sued by man hurt by water balloon, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 14, 2011
- 1 2 Hendricks, Dave (May 10, 2009), Riot Police shut down Palmerfest, Athens, Ohio: The Post, retrieved August 13, 2011
- ↑ Lutz, Ashley (July 6, 2009), Athens officials crack down on house concerts, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 14, 2011
- 1 2 DeWitt, David (May 9, 2010), Palmerfest goes up in flames once again, arrests up from last year, Athens, Ohio: The Athens NEWS, retrieved August 14, 2011
- 1 2 Rozenman, Martin (May 9, 2010), 30 Arrested at Palmerfest in Athens, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 14, 2011
- 1 2 Manning, Allison (May 8, 2011), Palmer Fest arrests total about 170, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 13, 2011
- ↑ Pyle, Encarnacion (May 12, 2010), OU Police want your help in finding fire bugs, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 14, 2011
- ↑ Pyle, Encarnacion (May 10, 2010), OU President outraged by festival behavior, Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch, retrieved August 14, 2011
- ↑ More than 100 Arrested at Palmerfest, Charleston, West Virginia: WSAZ-TV Channel 3, May 8, 2011, retrieved August 13, 2011
- 1 2 3 Franz, Dustin (May 15, 2011), Over Palmer Fest Weekend, Athens was Ohio's hot spot for arrests made by state liquor agents, Athens, Ohio: The Athens NEWS, retrieved August 14, 2011
Sources
- Hollow, Betty (2003), Ohio University 1804-2004: Spirit Of Singular Place, Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, ISBN 978-0-8214-1523-8
- Jardy, Adam; Rolando, Becca (2011), Ohio State University: Off the Record, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: College Prowler, ISBN 978-1-59658-094-7