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This is an incomplete list of festivals in the United States with articles on Wikipedia, as well as lists of other festival lists, by geographic location. This list includes festivals of diverse types, among them regional festivals, commerce festivals, fairs, food festivals, arts festivals, religious festivals, folk festivals, and recurring festivals on holidays.
The Feast of the Assumption Festival (Italian: Festa dell'assunzione; also locally referred to informally as The Feast (La festa)) is an annual four-day Catholic and Italian American street festival in the Little Italy neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, centered on Holy Rosary Church on Mayfield Road near its intersection with Murray Hill Road. [1]
The Belle of Louisville, Natchez, and Majestic preparing for 2006 Tall Stacks The Belle of Louisville docks next to the Natchez in Cincinnati for Tall Stacks.. Tall Stacks, formally known as the Tall Stacks Music, Arts, and Heritage Festival, was a festival held every three or four years in the Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, area, which celebrated the city's heritage of the riverboat.
Founded in 1904, it is Ohio's longest continuously running festival. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The festival will be open from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. It will be open from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturday. McGuffey Lane will perform on at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Erika Johnson, head coach of the North High girls soccer team, decorates a world soccer-themed Christmas tree ahead of Akron Children's Hospital's 42nd annual Holiday Tree Festival at the John S ...
Oktoberfest Zinzinnati is an annual German-heritage festival in the city of Cincinnati, Ohio. Based on the original Munich Oktoberfest, it is billed as the largest Oktoberfest celebration in the United States [1] and second largest in the world. [2] First held in 1976, as of 2024 it hosted over 800,000 attendees each year.
Former Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and his wife Elizabeth, at the Woollybear Festival parade in 2008. The festival is the brainchild of the late Dick Goddard, the former long-time weatherman at Cleveland's WJW-TV. [4] The Woolly Bear Caterpillar is similarly celebrated for its mythical association to winter forecasting. [2]