VISIT Easingwold- Yorkshire at its best

The famous Alne Village Summer Fair

12th June 2011

As featured in 'The Times Top 20 Family Days Out' and live on 'Radio York'

 Alne Fair - The great local village event for everyone!

The wonderful and famous Alne Vllage Fair - the very essence of summer in North Yorkshire!

Held throughout the Village, the day is a vivid demonstration of halcyon days gone by together with an illustration that all is good and well in todays rural North Yorkshire! Included in the top 20 events to attend in the Sunday Times!

 

 

A great afternoon for all the family including:

Music - live bands and dancing in  FIVE  locations - all musical tastes catered for, folk, rock, steel band 

  • Refreshments - home-made teas served in the Village Hall with seating plus satellite refreshment stall.   BBQ at TWO locations.
  • Bar - including hand-pulled local beers, Pimms and soft drinks.
  • Ice-cream stall.
  • Loads of local craft and produce stalls - jewellery, soft toys, fancy goods, jams, cakes and plants.
  • Tombola.
  • Children’s' entertainment -: climbing-wall, bouncy castle, egg-throwing, plate-smashing, hook a duck, plus our renowned Duck Race!
  • Historic church hosting photographic competitions.
  • Toilets in TWO locations

Partying in the Street!

The fabulous catering team!

The now traditional steel Band playing hot music in the shade!

  

 

 

 

  
Come and celebrate the beginning, indeed the very essence of summer in North Yorkshire, in the pretty village of Alne, near Easingwold and just North of York.

 

  • Location: Alne Village, near Easingwold

  • Entry: Adults £3.00, Children free

  • Open 12:00 to 16:00 - Sunday June 13th 2010

  • Easy and Free car parking

  • Easy access for pushchairs and wheelchairs

  • Contact: alnestreetfayre@btinternet.com

     

    Location

    Contact

    Easingwold Tourist Information
    Chapel Lane
    Easingwold
    York
    YO61 3AE
    Tel 01347 821530
    Fax 01347 821530

    Email us

    It's a fact

    Easingwold once had the shortest railway line in England (2.51 miles) but was closed in the 1950’s. The former Station Hotel still stands (now a private house) but the lines have long gone, The name lives on in the nearby “Station Court” housing estate

    Supported by

    Supported by: Lottery Funding