
SCHLACHTFEST
Sponsored by GACS
at Hickory Grove Park
Schlachtfest is a German ceremonial pig roast feast and party!
Join us on Sunday, October 3rd for our annual Schlachtfest at Hickory Grove Park, 12403 Hickory Grove Rd., Dunlap, IL from noon to 8 pm.
Hickory Grove is styled after a typical German Beer Garden. The Schlachtfest and German-American Day Celebration features German food and entertainment.
The event will feature German Music by the Ratskellar Brummer’s, Lindenhof Echoes and the C-Notes.
Complete German Dinners with Sides. Sandwiches Available Separately
A campfire will round off the evening, including complimentary marshmallows.
More Activities: Shooting Tent, Nagelspielen, and Bags. Playground equipment for the kids. A campfire will round off the evening, including complimentary marshmallows.
Schlachtfest or slaughter fest is a old German tradition related to the slaughtering of animals in the Fall before Winter sets in. Our Schlachtfest is essentially an Oktoberfest held in the country.
The fest has been combined with a celebration of German-American Day and as a kick-off to German-American Heritage month in Peoria. German-American Day is officially the 6th of October. The first German settlement in American was established at Germantown, Pennsylvania on October 6, 1683. In 1987 Ronald Reagan signed S.J. Resolution 108 into law recognizing this date.
This holiday was originally celebrated during the 19th Century, but died out in World War I. The holiday was reestablished by Ronald Reagan in 1983 to commemorate the 300thanniversary of the first German settlers to the colonies.
About one in four Americans claim to be of German descent. Even though Germans have settled in the United States for over 300 years, the first German settlers didn’t arrive in Peoria until the 1830’s.
The Germans have made significant contributions to the tri-county area since their arrival. Many of the businesses including retail stores, steel fabrication, breweries, butcher shops, etc. were largely German through the 1800’s and on into the early 1900’s . The population of Peoria more than tripled after the influx of, first, German immigrants, then Irish, Italian, and Lebanese immigrants. The influence of the Germans was heavy in the development of a city from a small town.

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