50
YEARS OF THE HERSHEY MEET
1950s
Fifty years ago, Barbie was
introduced,
Russia
sent Sputnik I into
space, and we just started listening to Rock and Roll on our radios.
After
the 1954 Fall Meet sponsored by the Pottstown Region in Hershey, Jim
Ladd found there was enough interest among old car owners in the Hershey
area to form an AACA Hershey Region.
On
February 8, 1955
, Jim Ladd held an
organizational meeting at his home and the twenty men and women who
attended agreed to petition AACA to become a region.
The charter was granted and the new Hershey Region was named host
for the AACA Fall Meet held October 8 - 9 in the Hershey Stadium.
About 400 cars were entered for judging on Saturday.
However, rain soaked the field and scared off about 100 of those
registered. Seven
vendors set up an array of parts for sale outside the stadium, thus the
flea market was born. Volunteers
from the new region registered the cars, arranged for judging, scheduled
an early Sunday morning breakfast run followed by afternoon activities.
For
the rest of the decade, more of the activities that are still part of
the Hershey Fall Meet were instituted. In 1956 the first ladies luncheon
was arranged at the Community Inn in Hershey.
The few Parts Peddlers, as they were called then, were invited
inside the Stadium in 1958 and, if sales warranted it, were asked for a
few dollars. The Region
purchased the 1914 Ford "Chuck Wagon" in 1958 for $500.00 from
Ben and Ruth Shonk on a pay-as-you-can basis.
This fine vehicle has served the Hershey Region well over the
years and is still used to dispense cider.
Shuttle buses were first provided in 1959.
1960s
During the 60's, John F.
Kennedy was elected, Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, and Ford
introduced the Mustang.
Bell
bottoms and mini skirts
were the style.
1960
was the Silver Jubilee Meet in celebration of AACA's 25th
Anniversary. With 891
vehicles registered, this was proclaimed the largest gathering of old
cars held anywhere in the world. This
year, the flea market vendors outgrew their space in the Stadium and
moved to the road between the stadium and the car field.
In 1961, the special feature of the meet was the kick-off of the
16th Annual Revival Glidden Tour.
Because of the tour, the car registration jumped to 924 which
could not be accommodated inside the stadium.
They were moved to an adjacent field for judging.
By now, the road between the stadium and the field was a carnival
of flea market vendors, which spilled over onto the field alongside the
road.
At
the ten-year mark, 1965, the Hershey Region hosted about 35,000
visitors. Almost 1,100 cars
were registered and 336 vendors were in the flea market. Everything kept
growing in the next five years. In
1967, a Friday night welcoming party was held at the new Hershey Motor
Lodge. A record of 1,186
cars were judged in 1968 and
it seems that record held for a long time.
1970s
1970s
brought us the pet rock, the Watergate Break-in and the fall of
Saigon
. Nixon resigned
and Ford pardoned him. The
Apple computer was developed and Elvis died.
Remember gas rationing in 1979?
The
Hershey Fall meet, during the 70s, hosted more and more vendors and
visitors while show car registration remained at about 1,000.
In 1971 2,904 flea market spaces were set up.
In 1972, the year of the big flood, things didn't slow down much.
People were arriving in their campers and flying planes into the
Hershey
Airport
(which is now the White
Field). The Red Field was added in 1974 and this was the first year for
bus tours. The next few
years there was rain which, at times, created ankle-deep mud but bad
weather didn't deter the crowds. The first amateur night for the flea
market vendors was initiated in 1978.
Even with the
Three-Mile
Island
disaster in 1979, 900
cars were registered for the show and over 5,300 spaces in the flea
market were filled.
1980s
This
was the decade of the Cabbage Patch dolls,
Dallas
on TV, and the fall of
the Berlin Wall.
In
1981, the Hershey show grew to cover 80 acres.
The flea market was divided into Red and Blue fields.
An all-time high of 463 judges were required to go over 1,250
cars. Sunday games were
resumed after a 5-year hiatus.
Show
car and vendor numbers were growing so large, registration was becoming
unmanageable. During
1981-82, two Hershey members established a standard operating procedure
to standardize all the steps required in setting up the meet.
In 1984 the Chocolate Field was opened.
By 1985, AACA celebrated their 50th anniversary while
Hershey Region celebrated their 25th.
An all-time high of over 2100 show cars were registered that year
and the Hershey Meet was considered the largest antique automobile meet
in America and perhaps in the world.
The
Region stepped into the computer age in 1987.
In 1988 the ladies enjoyed their luncheon in a newly renovated
Hotel Hershey. The Green
field was added in 1989, expanding the flea market by 4,000 spaces.
By now, the Car Corral was growing by leaps and bounds.
The 80's closed with 2,009 cars being judged and 10,286 flea
market spaces.
1990s
Desert
Storm was in the news; the Cold War officially ended in 1992; O. J.
Simpson was on trial in 1994 and Dolly was cloned in 1997.
In
1990, the Meet opened between two hurricanes moving up the coast.
It took over 600 tons of crushed stone to fight the mud. By now,
Hershey was truly an international event with visitors from
Australia
,
Denmark
,
France
,
Great Britain
,
Ireland
,
Italy
,
Japan
,
Mexico
,
Portugal
,
New Zealand
,
Spain
,
Sweden
and
Switzerland
.
Rain
was a factor in the first three years of the 90s, but the flea market
vendors still came in droves. In 1996, a ribbon-cutting ceremony was
held to dedicate the land along Route 39 for the
future
AACA
Museum
and for the Hershey
Region Headquarters. In
honor of the 100th anniversary of the automobile in
America
, a car representing
each year from 1904 to 1971 was displayed in the Stadium.
1996 was also the first year for the young peoples' event where
their crafts, hobbies or talents were judged.
Some
statistics were compiled in 1997: A total of 1,722 show cars, judged by
600 judges were displayed on 15 acres; the 10,425 vendors took up four
flea market fields covering 134 acres; and
the car corral covered 15 acres.
Camper parking took up another 15 acres, 10 acres for show car
trailer parking and 107 acres for public parking.
The Hershey Meet took over a total of 296 acres.
2000s
Like
everyone else, Hershey Region made it into the new millennium without
any Y2K problems.
Giant
Center
construction caused
some problems for the field chairmen and crew who laid out the fields.
The car corral was moved to the Hershey Outlet Mall parking lot
in 2002 then over to the
Giant
Center
parking lot in 2003.
Because of space restrictions, the registration numbers have remained
pretty steady for the last few years.
Hershey
Region is in the computer age now, and putting the Meet together has
come a long way from the living room get-togethers of the late 1950s.
However, the procedures those early members initiated just grew
and became more refined as the Region and the Meet grew. Seventy-five
different committees and over 750 volunteers now do the job of those
first few men and women. Hosting
the Eastern Division Fall Meet for the last fifty years definitely has
been a labor of love and Hershey Region hopes to continue to provide the
finest antique automobile meet we can for another fifty years.