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Yarmouth Clam Festival

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Yarmouth Clam Festival
Yarmouth Clam Festival (promotional cartoon, 2012).png
Logo of the 2015 festival
Steamer the clam 2018.jpg
"Steamer" the clam at the 2018 parade
GenreFundraising
DatesThird weekend in July
Location(s)Yarmouth, Maine, U.S.A.
Founded1965
WebsiteClamFestival.com

The Yarmouth Clam Festival is an annual three-day event which takes place in the American town of Yarmouth, Maine, starting on the third Friday every July. Established in 1965 as a successor to the town's late-August Old Home Week (itself started in 1911), it is hosted by the Yarmouth Chamber of Commerce, with the aim of raising money for approximately thirty local non-profit organizations, churches, and school groups. The event draws visitors from all over the country.[1] As a result, Yarmouth, a town with a population of around 9,000, accommodates approximately 120,000 people over the course of the weekend.[2] A section of the former population have made it a tradition to stake out their Friday-evening parade viewpoint with a chair several weeks before the event — even as early as May,[3] though this may be in a mocking fashion.

The main festival takes place on either side of the town's Main Street (Route 115). Booths offering food and drink and items for sale are set up from the First Universalist Church at its south-eastern end to Railroad Park, a mile to the north-west. Over the years, each organization has acquired the right to sell a particular delicacy. Examples include: the Barbershop Harmony Society, who offer Lime Rickeys; the Yarmouth Lions Club (Lemon Lucy[4] slush), the First Parish Church (strawberry shortcakes); Yarmouth Ski Club (whole fried clams); the Boy Scouts of America (pizza); and various grades of Yarmouth High School offer hamburgers, hotdogs and soft drinks.

Other events include a parade on the Friday evening; a one-mile fun run (for children aged twelve and under) and a five-mile road race (ages thirteen and over; both on Saturday morning); a Firefighters' Muster and a clam-shucking contests (both on Saturday afternoon); a fireworks display (Saturday evening); and a professional bicycle-race (Sunday morning). A carnival runs from Wednesday (two days before the official start of the festival) to Sunday.

Each year, the cover of the festival's program of events is painted by a local artist, featuring a view of the previous year's event.

The festival's official mascot since 2004 has been "Steamer" the clam.

The 2020 festival was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5]

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