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mt. sterling court
days
October Court Day(s)
3rd
weekend of October.
Court Day:
English Inheritance
-
To a Southern Tradition
(Reprinted from Southern
Bell's "Phonews" winter 1965-66)
October Court Day at
Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, is a mad melee of people and livestock gathered
together
for purposes of doing business.
That business may range from the
purchase of a coon dog to a winter's supply
of sorghum molasses; from
trading guns, knives or horses to just milling elbow
to elbow with the
thousands of curious sightseers who come to Mt. Sterling to
see what
Court Day is all about.
At the end of a few
hot, dusty hours the visitor has managed to inch his way past sorghum
sellers, gun traders, barbecue stands, medicine men, antique dealers,
hat vendors, fortune tellers, horse handlers, jewelry peddlers, dog
fanciers and a host of other hucksters. His nostrils have been assailed
by an odoriferous blend of hot dogs, old leather, dust, popcorn,
perspiration, tobacco juice, horses and hickory smoke. And above all the
rumble rises the shrieking
of children, the cry of hawkers, the laughter
of
the lighthearted and the raucously amplified twang of a hillbilly band.
What is Court Day all
about? Well, it has come a long way - some old timers
will say
"degenerated" -
from its original intent and purpose back in Colonial times. Then our
American form of government was
based on the English County System, brought to this country by the early
settlers. One of the system's
most important elements was the English Common Law, which was
administered throughout the colonies.
After the settlers had
spread out over the countryside to farms where they
were no longer
confined to communities or forts, they revived the old English custom of
setting aside an annual day on which county officials would sit as a
court to adjudicate matters brought before them. This court was served
by a
sheriff, as in England. And the day designated for the meeting of the
court became known as "Court Day".
It was only natural that Court Days should
become business and social get-togethers in addition to legal occasions.
The farmers brought livestock -
as well as hound dogs and fighting cocks
- to sell and trade.
And they gathered to visit with friends they
had not seen since the last Court Day. Old times were
reviewed in the mellow atmosphere of taverns, whereas the streets became
the scene of horse-trading
and racing, cock fighting and wrestling matches. Patent medicine men,
fortunetellers and itinerant
peddlers also had their place in the sun.
Around the turn of the
century October Court Day in Mt. Sterling was noted particularly for its
livestock sales. Situated between the Blue Grass and the mountains, the
town was the largest cattle and mule market in Kentucky, exceeding even
Lexington and Louisville in sales. For a week before Court Day
the roads
leading into Mt. Sterling were crowed with droves of cattle and hogs.
Flocks of turkeys and geese also walked to market, with drovers spending
the night at friendly farms where they could pen and rest their
livestock and poultry.
In those days mules
provided the major motive power on the great cane and cotton plantations
of the Deep South. So many mules from the breeding farms
of Montgomery
and surrounding counties also made their
way to Court Day to
be purchased by mule dealers from all over the
South.
As Court Day
approached, the dust rose for miles around churned up from the country
roads and turnpikes by the marked-bound multitudes.
But Mt. Sterling was
ready for the influx. Every home on a route leading into town had a
fence around it
to keep the cattle, hogs, mules, turkeys and geese out of the yard. It
was no uncommon sight, however,
to see men chasing livestock out of someone's yard, with the lady of the
house raising sand over the trespassers. By Tuesday morning the stray
pen in town
was usually filled with lost horses and cattle rounded up by
the police. Animals were released to their owners on payment of a
50-cent fine. Pranksters had a
field day opening the stray pen when the police were not looking. So the
roundup of strays provided a
24-hour chore for the overworked force.
Horse-trading was
carried on mainly in the streets around the Court House. Cattle trading
took place in
the pens on Locust Street. Pistols, knives and dogs were traded
anywhere. Circuses, minstrel shows,
political gatherings and poker games rounded out Court Day noise and
confusion.
Court Day today in Mt. Sterling is a far cry
from what it was in days past. There is no association with
the Court House. In fact that building is practically deserted, for the
crowds flood down the hill to where the mass of humanity browses and
barters from dawn to dusk.
Court Day is a
nostalgic institution of the past, with little resemblance to its
predecessor except the
crushing crowds of people. It might well be called Sorghum Day (more is
sold on this day than during
the rest of the entire year); or Hound Dog Day (there are enough
specimens of dogdom to house half the fleas in Montgomery County); or
Knife and Gun Day (the number of weapons on display gives evidence that
the South may be ready to rise again).
The old-time residents
of Mt. Sterling are the first to tell you that the color and picturesque
ness and romance have gone out of Court Day. They disappeared with the
paved roads and motorized livestock transport. With the exception of the
youngsters, who are given a school holiday, few townspeople even
bother to brave the crowd. As one old timer puts it: "Today, October
Court Day is nothing more than a conglomeration of sightseers and
sorghum buckets."
Paradoxically,
however, October Court Day at Mt. Sterling grows bigger every year. So it must have
something.
Court Day has changed even more since this
article was written over thirty years ago.
If you were to venture to Court Day this
year, you would not see any horse or dog trading.
In recent years, I don't recall any
fortunetellers, and as far as medicine men go, you might find
a health food, vitamin stand.
The predominant odor is old ham, sometimes
over-powered by green peppers, onions and sausage.
The more popular booths have sweatshirts, tee
shirts and "as seen on T.V." signs.
The last sentence of
the above article is certainly true.
Over one hundred
thousand people come to Mt. Sterling to the "granddaddy of all flea
markets"
(as it is sometimes
called) on the weekend preceding the third Monday in every October.
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