Howell Melon Festival

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The Howell Melon Festival is a food festival held in mid-August which showcases the Howell melon
cantaloupe hybrid claimed to be found only in the area surrounding Howell, Michigan. The first Howell 
Melon Festival was held in 1960. About 50,000 people attend the three day festival each year.
In years past, the highlight of the festival was a beauty contest to elect the Howell Melon Queen. The 
very first Melon Queen, a beautiful nurse, won a trip to Washington, D.C.where she met with 
President Dwight D. Eisenhower at the White House. The news wires picked up the story of the beauty 
queen and the Howell melons, earning front page stories in the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles 
Times, and "that's how the Howell melon got famous", according to Dr. Louis May, organizer of the first festival.

The festival is now managed by the Howell Area Parks and Recreation Authority. Instead of a Melon 
Queen, the new tradition is to elect children as Melon Prince and PrincessMini Prince and Princess
and (the youngest category) Sprout Prince and Princess .
In the past, the festival included an ice cream eating contest and a large parade. The parade tradition 
which included the Shriners, was discontinued in 2008. The 50th anniversary was celebrated without a 
parade. For a few years, the festival organized a riverboat tour of Thompson lake. The 2012 venue will 
close Grand River Ave for two days to accommodate Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels performance. 
Howell melons are available for tasting and purchase, with up to 200,000 melons sold each year.
While the following is a wonderful story, it is a myth. 'The first Howell melons were grown by August "Gus" 
Schmitt, a local farmer, who was given the original seeds by an itinerant hobo during the Great 
Depression. The taste of the melon soon won over other farmers who soon planted the distinctive melon 
elsewhere in Livingston County.


External links==The real story is contained in an article from 1964.


References

  1. Jump up to:a b Bouffard, Karen (2002-08-21). "Melon fever hits Howell". The Detroit News.






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