Powassan Fall Fair

Powassan • Nipissing District • Northern Ontario

The Powassan Fall Fair is a long-standing agricultural fair celebrating livestock exhibitions, homecraft competitions, agricultural displays, and family-friendly entertainment in the community of Powassan in Nipissing District.


Visitor Information

📍 Location: Powassan Fairgrounds, Powassan, Ontario
🎪 Event Type: Agricultural Fair
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Best For: Families, livestock exhibits, agricultural displays, homecraft competitions, and community entertainment
🗓 2026 Dates: September 5–6, 2026

Plan Your Visit

Time Needed: Plan several hours to explore livestock exhibits, agricultural displays, competitions, and family activities throughout the fairgrounds.
🎡 Fair Highlights: Livestock shows, agricultural exhibits, homecraft displays, and community entertainment.
🐄 Agricultural Experiences: Cattle, sheep, horse, and small animal exhibits reflecting the farming traditions of the Nipissing region.
🎠 Family Activities: Children’s activities, games, food vendors, and family-friendly entertainment.
📅 Annual Timing: Early September
🌐 Official Website: Powassan Agricultural Society


Celebrating Agriculture in Nipissing District

The Powassan Fall Fair has been an important community tradition in Nipissing District for generations. Agricultural fairs like the Powassan Fall Fair provide an opportunity for farmers and residents to celebrate the region’s agricultural heritage while showcasing livestock, produce, crafts, and traditional rural skills.

Visitors can explore agricultural exhibits, livestock competitions, and homecraft displays while enjoying entertainment and family activities. These fairs highlight the importance of agriculture within Northern Ontario while bringing communities together to celebrate rural traditions.

Events such as the Powassan Fall Fair continue to strengthen connections between agriculture and the community while preserving the traditions that have shaped rural life in this scenic part of Ontario.

Did You Know?

Powassan is located along Highway 11 south of North Bay and has long served as an agricultural service community for surrounding farms, forests, and rural settlements in the Nipissing region.

Powassan Fall Fair

About the Fair

A Near North Tradition Celebrating Agriculture, Community Heritage & Rural Pride

The Powassan Fall Fair, hosted by the Powassan Agricultural Society, is one of the Near North’s longest-running celebrations of rural life. With origins reaching back to the late 19th century, the fair continues to showcase agricultural excellence, community craftsmanship, and the enduring spirit of the people who call Powassan and its surrounding countryside home.

A Fair Rooted in Early Settlement

Like many fairs across Ontario, the Powassan Fall Fair began when agricultural societies were the backbone of rural development. Local farmers and settlers relied on fairs to exchange knowledge, compare livestock and crops, and strengthen ties among scattered homesteads.

Powassan, established along the railway and surrounded by farmland, quickly embraced the fair as a vital annual gathering. Early fairs featured livestock judging, produce competitions, homecraft displays, and demonstrations of practical farming skills, all reflecting the determination and ingenuity of settlers working the region’s rolling hills and fertile valleys.

Heavy Horse Team - Powassan Fall Fair

Agriculture at the Heart of the Fair

Agriculture remains central to the Powassan Fall Fair’s identity. Exhibits continue to highlight the area’s long-standing farming traditions through:

  • Dairy and beef cattle
  • Sheep, goats, poultry, and small livestock
  • Field crops, garden produce, and hay
  • Rural crafts, woodworking, and heritage skills

These displays honour generations of farm families who have shaped the Powassan region.

The fair’s strong homecraft divisions, featuring quilting, sewing, canning, baking, floriculture, photography, woodworking, and junior entries, reflect the creativity and practical craftsmanship that define rural life.

Demo Derby - Powassan Fall Fair

Youth Engagement & Generational Traditions

Young people have always been central to the fair’s success. Through 4-H displays, school participation, junior classes, and agricultural learning opportunities, youth gain:

  • Leadership skills
  • Creative and practical abilities
  • Agricultural literacy
  • Responsibility and confidence
  • A strong sense of community pride

Many families in the region participate across multiple generations, helping preserve the fair’s traditions.

Powered by Volunteers & Community Commitment

The Powassan Agricultural Society and its volunteers form the backbone of the fair. Their year-round efforts, organizing exhibits, preparing grounds, maintaining records, and preserving heritage, ensure the fair remains vibrant, relevant, and deeply rooted in local identity.

Their dedication reflects the collaborative, community-focused spirit that defines life in Powassan.

Homecraft Table - Powassan Fall Fair

A Reflection of Powassan’s Rural Identity

The fair embodies the values that make the region unique:

  • Agricultural pride
  • Creative craftsmanship
  • Multi-generational involvement
  • Community cooperation
  • Northern resilience
  • Celebration of rural heritage

These qualities have helped make the Powassan Fall Fair an important cultural fixture in the Near North.

A Tradition That Endures

Through the changing decades, the Powassan Fall Fair remains a cherished celebration of agricultural heritage, creativity, and community spirit, connecting Powassan’s past with its continuing story.

Kid's Demo Derby - Powassan Fall Fair

About the Community

Powassan, Ontario: A Near North Community Built on Farmland, Forests & Strong Local Spirit

Situated south of North Bay, at the edge of the Near North region, Powassan, Ontario is a warm and welcoming rural community known for its agricultural roots, natural beauty, and vibrant local identity. With rolling fields, forested hills, and a strong sense of community pride, Powassan offers an authentic northern small-town experience.

A Community Born of Rail, Timber & Farming

Powassan’s history began in the late 1800s, when the arrival of the Northern Railway encouraged settlement and economic growth. Lumbering and sawmills were some of the community’s earliest industries, supported by the rich forests that surrounded the area.

At the same time, fertile pockets of land attracted farm families, who established homesteads, livestock operations, and field crop farms across the region. These agricultural beginnings remain central to Powassan’s identity.

Historic homes, early commercial buildings, and rural landscapes all reflect the community’s strong connection to its past.

Fall Scene

A Landscape of Hills, Trails & Rural Countryside

Powassan is surrounded by the scenic elements that define Northern Ontario’s transition zone between farmland and wilderness:

  • Rolling fields and agricultural valleys
  • Mixed forests rich with wildlife
  • Quiet backroads and winding rural concessions
  • Wetlands, creeks, and small lakes
  • Striking views from nearby hills and ridges

The changing seasons, lush green summers, brilliant fall colours, snowy winters, and bright spring thaws, add natural richness to daily life.

A Friendly & Engaged Small Town

Powassan is known for its neighbourly spirit and commitment to community life. Residents participate in:

  • Volunteer groups
  • Agricultural organizations
  • Local clubs and recreation programs
  • Community fundraisers
  • Cultural and heritage initiatives

The town centre includes locally owned shops, essential services, cafés, and gathering spaces that create a warm, small-town atmosphere.

War Memorial

Agriculture as a Continuing Pillar

Agriculture remains one of Powassan’s defining strengths. Local farms contribute to:

  • Dairy and beef production
  • Hay and forage crops
  • Mixed livestock operations
  • Market gardening and small-scale farming
  • Rural craftsmanship and food traditions

The agricultural landscape shapes the local economy and continues to influence the community’s seasonal rhythms and cultural identity.

This heritage is celebrated every year at the Powassan Fall Fair, one of the region’s enduring rural traditions.

A Natural Partner to the Powassan Fall Fair

The fair reflects Powassan’s strongest qualities:

  • Agricultural heritage
  • Youth involvement
  • Creative homecraft traditions
  • Volunteer dedication
  • Multigenerational continuity
  • Strong community values

Together, the community and its fair tell a complete story of Powassan’s rural pride and northern resilience.

Community Centre

A Near North Community with Heart

Whether exploring scenic backroads, connecting with friendly residents, enjoying quiet natural spaces, or celebrating traditions like the Powassan Fall Fair, Powassan offers a warm and memorable Ontario experience.

It is a community where rural heritage is preserved, where agriculture remains vital, and where community spirit shines in every season.


🌾 Explore Nearby Agritourism Experiences

Visitors attending the Powassan Fall Fair may also enjoy exploring nearby agritourism experiences and attractions in Nipissing District and Northern Ontario.

  • North Bay Farmers’ Market – North Bay – a regional market offering fresh produce, baked goods, artisan foods, and local products
  • South River Brewing Co. – South River area – a Northern Ontario craft brewery destination with local character and rural charm
  • Laurier Woods Conservation Area – North Bay – a scenic outdoor destination featuring forest trails and nature experiences
  • Lake Nipissing Region – nearby area – a popular destination for fishing, boating, and outdoor recreation

Some nearby experiences include links to additional Ontario Agritourism Showcase pages with more visitor information.

Visitors interested in Ontario agricultural fairs may also enjoy exploring events such as the Trout Creek Fall Fair and the Magnetawan Fall Fair, each celebrating the farming traditions and community heritage of Northern Ontario.

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