© 2024 University of Missouri - KBIA
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Fair St. Louis will be back at the Arch next Fourth of July

Fireworks at Fair St. Louis on the Fourth of July in 2006.
Dave Herholz | Flickr
Fireworks at Fair St. Louis on the Fourth of July in 2006.

Fair St. Louis will return to the Gateway Arch grounds in 2018  to celebrate the Fourth of July, organizers announced Wednesday.

The annual Independence Day extravaganza — one of the nation’s largest — was moved to Forest Park in 2014, while extensive renovations were being completed on the grounds of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial. 

The fair will be held on July 4, 6 and 7 and will coincide with the completion of work at the national park, according to the Fair St. Louis Foundation. The event had been held at the Arch since it began in 1981. The 2018 version will include all of the usual trimmings — music, food, family activities and fireworks. Plus, the air show will be back.

"You can't find a better place to celebrate our independence and the birth of our country than underneath an iconic national monument like the Arch,'' said Todd Schnuck, chairman of the Fair St. Louis Foundation.

Schnuck said the fair had four successful years at Forest Park, but his group wanted to return to the fair's original home and to be a part of the energy surrounding the reopening of the Arch grounds.

The focus of the $380 million CityArchRiver project was building a new entranceway to connect the 630-foot stainless steel monument to downtown St. Louis. The landscaping has been redone and the museum is being refurbished.

Eric Moraczewski, executive director of the the Gateway Arch Park Foundation, said work on the museum is progressing, and it will reopen just before Fair St. Louis begins.  

"We're so excited to partner with Fair St. Louis as a part of our grand opening and to bring the fair back home to where it all started,'' he said.

The CityArchRiver project is a partnership between the National Park Service, the city of St. Louis and other private and public organizations. It was funded partly by tax dollars, including Proposition B, which was passed by city and county voters in 2013, and private donations raised by the Gateway Arch Park Foundation.

Follow Mary Delach Leonard on Twitter: @marydleonard

Copyright 2021 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Mary Delach Leonard is a veteran journalist who joined the St. Louis Beacon staff in April 2008 after a 17-year career at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where she was a reporter and an editor in the features section. Her work has been cited for awards by the Missouri Associated Press Managing Editors, the Missouri Press Association and the Illinois Press Association. In 2010, the Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis honored her with a Spirit of Justice Award in recognition of her work on the housing crisis. Leonard began her newspaper career at the Belleville News-Democrat after earning a degree in mass communications from Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville, where she now serves as an adjunct faculty member. She is partial to pomeranians and Cardinals.