Community Corner

Photos From The 2024 Bucks County Middletown Grange Fair

The fair continues through Sunday at the Middletown Grange Fairgrounds on Penns Park Road in Wrightstown.

How now, brown cow? A magical moment in the cow barn.
How now, brown cow? A magical moment in the cow barn. (Jeff Werner)

WRIGHTSTOWN, PA — The Middletown Grange Fair continues through Sunday at the fairgrounds on Penns Park Road in Wrightstown. The fair will be open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday, August 17 and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, August 18.

The event is again featuring everything people have come to know and love about the fair from its famous chicken dinner to its 4-H and community exhibition barns, free nightly entertainment shows, and its carnival rides and games.

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Students from the Delaware Valley University won lots of awards on Friday for their sheep. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

Find out what's happening in Newtownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Sheep from Delaware Valley University compete on Friday. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

Last minute preparations inside the Pig and Hog Barn. (photo by Jeff Werner)

Rabbits and Cavys are always a popular attractions at the fair. Don't miss the Rabbit and Cavy Parade of Breeds on Sunday. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

Making new friends at the Grange. (photo by Jeff Werner)

On the moooove. A cow is led to a nearby watering trough outside the cow barn. (photo by Jeff Werner)

"Welcome to my world!" Inside the goat barn at the Grange. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

A 1956 Farmall tractor owned by DeGroot Farms in Yardley. The tractor display, the tractor pull and the tractor parade are always a big hit at the Grange. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

Quiet time in the barn. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

Fair goers always love the alpacas and the llamas. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

Hay girl, is that for me? Feeding time in the barn. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

That's Josh Wilkoski of Newtown riding a 1958 Massey Ferguson. (Photo by Jeff Werner)

The always competitive hot dog pig races are back and running. The popular tractor parade is again making its rounds on Saturday at 4:30 p.m. and on Sunday at 4 p.m. And the exhibition barns are again filled with thousands of judged entries from baked goods to vegetables, photography and quilts.

At the heart of the fair are its many 4-H raised animals and shows. More than 300 4-H-raised animals, from bleating sheep and squealing pigs to mooing cows, are again filling the fairground barns with the sounds of the farm.

The schedule is again packed with shows and competitions taking place throughout the fair's five days. Saturday features the 4-H Dairy and Beef Cattle Shows and the 4-H Market Hog Auction; and Sunday brings the Rabbit and Cavy Parade of Breeds.

Admission to the fair is free, but there is a $20 parking fee per vehicle.

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