Oregon Country Fair: from hippies to belonging

The Evergreen

Oregon Country Fair: from hippies to belonging

Clean

Published on Jun 30, 2025, 5:00:00 AM
Total time: 00:22:35

Episode Description

At the Oregon Country Fair, there are fairies and gnomes walking around in colorful costumes. A 40-person marching band also bursts out of nowhere and plays down a path. 

“Feels like you stepped into a wonderland or something magical,” one fairgoer told OPB in 2024. 

The fair grew out of a 1960s vision of a better world: a paradise for hippies. But the history of the fair is complex. It takes place on a native ancestral gathering site. 

“I think there's a part of hippie culture that thinks that they can take any culture from any part of the world and make whatever they want of it,” said David Lewis, PhD, Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Indigenous Studies at Oregon State University and a member of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde.

 

In this week’s episode, we sit down with OPB’s Oregon Art Beat producer Eric Slade and freelance producer Kunu Bearchum to talk about the Oregon Country Fair and how it houses hundreds of artists every year – and its history, from hippies to Native belonging. 

 

Check out OPB’s hour-long documentary on the Oregon Country Fair. 

 

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More about The Evergreen

OPB’s weekly podcast creates an audio portrait of the Pacific Northwest. We tell the stories of the people, places, communities and cultures that make up this region. It’s a podcast about the place YOU live, the places you love, and the geography you feel connected to.