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Rhododendron Festival was Depression-era wonder in Asheville NC

A Citizen-Times float glides through downtown Asheville during the Rhododendron Festival Parade in 1939.

“The South’s greatest play-time in the world’s finest playground,” full-page ads announced in the 1930s about Asheville’s five-day Rhododendron Festival, a mountain Mardi Gras that attracted performers from 10 states and the attention of the world.

When Myra Peyton Lynch was named queen of the festival in 1934, her image appeared on front pages of newspapers from Boston to Texarkana.

“The Pathe news came and took movies of the pageant,” Lynch said. “I received letters from all over the country from people who had seen it.”

The festival, held the second week in June, reserved the third day for a parade of floral floats.

“Every summer, I went to stay with my aunt in Skyland,” said Cricket Williams, of Canton. “She had a flower and dairy farm and needed my help. She loved parades and every year we took a Greyhound bus downtown and watched the parade from in front of the S&W Cafeteria.