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On Kelleys Island |
Picnics in Sandusky
and the Lake Erie
Islands area were held
quite often, by families, church groups, companies, and clubs. The proximity to
Lake Erie provided nice lake breezes for the picnic-goers. Local newspapers frequently reported on picnics held in the area. The Sandusky Register of September 8, 1868,
announced the “Grandest Pic-Nic of the Nineteenth Century” when students of the
Buckeye and Great
Western Business
College chartered
steamers for a picnic at Put in Bay.
In 1911, the Castalia Telephone operators enjoyed a picnic
at the Blue Hole, while two other Castalia groups met at Rye Beach
with their lunch baskets.
The
Sandusky Star
Journal of July 30, 1931 reported on a picnic at
Bay View Park held for members of the Sandusky Typographical Union, #237, who were employees of the
Sandusky Register and the
Sandusky Star Journal. A ball game
between the two newspapers started off the festivities. Other contests included
horseshoe pitching, egg throwing, nail driving, a wheelbarrow race, and a
blindfolded fly swatting contest.
In 1942, about 300 members of the Eagles Club and their
families had their annual picnic at
Lions
Park. Some of the events
were rolling pin throwing, balloon blowing, and a peanut scramble.
Cedar Point has been a popular picnic destination for large group
picnics for over a century.
The Jaycees held a picnic at Cedar Point in August of 1954.
In this picture, it appears as though the employees of the Sandusky Library
in the 1920s had an impromptu picnic outside the library building:
If you would like to see if the names of your family members
ever appeared in local newspapers, whether for a picnic or other news event,
browse through the historical Sandusky
newspapers on microfilm at the Sandusky
Library Archives
Research Center,
or check Newspaper Archive,
accessible from home with a Sandusky Library card number.
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