ABAC’s Georgia Museum of Agriculture Hosts Folklife Festival April 7th

Staff Report From Tifton CEO

Friday, March 23rd, 2018

Visitors can enjoy a celebration of the rich, rural heritage of South Georgia during the annual Folklife Festival on April 7 at the Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College Georgia Museum of Agriculture and Historic Village. Showcasing South Georgia’s history and culture, the event runs from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. with interactive activities for both children and adults.   

The Vulcan Steam train’s whistle will welcome visitors for a ride to the Historic Village and Festival to open the day.  A can’t miss moment will be the ceremonial firing of the Turpentine Still at 11 a.m. for the Historic Village’s annual turpentine distillation.  Museum guests will have the opportunity to see up close and personal this age-old process that is central to South Georgia’s cultural heritage.  The turpentine still will be running throughout the day and discharging closer to 4 p.m.

The Folklife Festival is all about hands-on activities including tree debarking and hewing, sawmill demonstrations, sheep shearing, mule plowing demonstrations, and quilt square sewing demonstrations. Guests can also visit the antique and model tractors that will be on display on the Tift West Lawn. The antique tractors will parade through the Historic Village at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.

ABAC athletes from days gone by will be in the spotlight in “The Glory Days” exhibit in the Museum Gallery.   Gloves, bats, and assorted relics from ABAC Athletics Hall of Fame athletes will be included in the exhibit.

In the J. L. Sweat law office, three engravings from 1865 will be on display. The engravings feature Andrew Jackson, Martha Washington, and William Henry Harrison.

In the Tift House, a new display in the dining room will spotlight Bessie Tift's personal china. In the Peanut Museum, the American Legacy Quilt show will wow guests with exceptional fiber work.  A temporary photo exhibit of the barn quilts of Kentucky's Buffalo Gal Trail will also be showcased. In the main exhibit hall, guests will be able to use an interactive code to watch a turpentine documentary, and the same code will be made available outside by the turpentine still.

To satisfy every hearty appetite, the Historic Village’s Drug Store will offer delicious barbecue sandwiches along with chips and a drink. Henry’s Concessions will be serving burgers, Philly cheese steaks, and more.   Enjoy tacos and quesadillas that will be served by Taqueria Hermanos Chavez along with fresh fruit water. The Snack Shack will have fried cheesecake, snow cones, funnel cakes, and more to help with that sweet craving you may have. Visitors can stop into the Country Store and pick up food items including jams, jellies, grits, or corn meal.   

The Festival coincides with the seasonal opening of the Wiregrass Farmers Market. Local growers and producers will be offering fresh picked produce from 9 a.m. until noon as well as hand-made goods for sale at the Market located under the pole barn behind the Country Store.   

Admission to the Folklife Festival is $10 for adults, $8 for senior citizens, $5 for children 5–16 years of age, and free for children under five. For more information, interested persons can contact the Country Store at (229) 391-5205.