Summer In The Hills 2022

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The Phenomenon that was Rock Hill Park A booming mecca of down-home entertainment once brought thousands of happy visitors to the heart of Mulmur Township. BY KEN WEBER

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n 1940, when Elwood Hill inherited the family farm on the southwest corner of 10 Sideroad and First Line East Mulmur, he was 23 years old. Two years later he married Jean Little from nearby Elba and together they set about earning a reputation for their prize cattle and potato growing operation. As their family grew, so did a desire for something new, and in 1958, after adding to the property, Elwood and Jean turned the farm into a family campground. They called it Rock Hill Park. Their new venture was a success that grew even more the very next year, when they began holding country music talent shows on Sunday nights. At first the performers were local, but as early as 1960 these popular openair shows were featuring professional Canadian talent. No one knew it then, but Rock Hill Park and its shows were destined to find their way into Canadian music history.

always saw to it that Canada’s big names, such as Hank Snow, Wilf Carter and Tommy Hunter, were front and centre, too. That close relationship paid off the time Tommy Hunter volunteered to fill in for Waylon Jennings on a few hours’ notice when, en route to Mulmur, country music’s “outlaw” was denied entry to Canada. Although weather was an obvious liability for these open-air concerts, it didn’t seem to matter all that much. For the Willie Nelson concert in 1980 (advance tickets $25), Elwood and Jean had prepared elaborately but couldn’t hold off a deluge that delayed the show for hours. Yet the crowd – again over 10,000 – stayed for it and left soaked but happy.

A major concert venue in a rural township In the summer of 1963, a Hamilton radio station telephoned Elwood to say Grand Ole Opry star duo Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper were available to perform on a Saturday night. The event would be in addition to the regular Sunday show and the Hills had only three days to promote and prepare for it. But they did, and the success of this first-ever “Nashville” show was a preview of extraordinary things to come. An enthusiastic crowd of campers ($1.50 per night including the concert) and a paying audience ($1 for adults) sat on lawn chairs and blankets to enjoy the music. They numbered about 600. Over the years that followed, “Opry” shows on holiday weekends drew crowds in the thousands to Rock Hill Park, attracted by the heavy hitters of country music. When Charley Pride, for example, performed there in July 1979, he had to board a helicopter in Primrose to make his way over the crowd into the park, where he greeted an audience of over 10,000. (The

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population of the entire township that year was just under 2,000.) That level of enthusiasm for the Rock Hill shows carried on summer after summer. No other rural area in the province could claim anything like it.

The “stars” were truly big stars The list of performers at these holiday weekend concerts is a who’s who of country music, all of them at the top of their game. Kitty Wells was long established as the Queen of Country Music when she headlined at Rock Hill in 1968 and again in 1977. Webb Pierce performed in 1973, so did Conway Twitty. Ronnie Prophet was featured on Labour Day weekend in 1978 and,

Kitty Wells and Conway Twitty were two of the many country music superstars who played at Rock Hill Park in its heyday.

on the same weekend the next year, his crowd was outdrawn by Johnny Paycheck. Grandpa Jones from the Hee Haw television show was a regular. Ferlin Husky (1968) had already appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, while Barbara Mandrell and Willie Nelson, who were frequent headliners in Las Vegas – but always in separate theatres – appeared at Rock Hill in 1980 in the same show! The high-powered performers were mostly American because that’s the way the system worked, but Elwood

From the beginning, the operation of the campground had set a relaxed tone. Fees were low for this attractive setting on the edge of the Escarpment; it had amenities like a huge spring-fed pond for swimming, playing fields, a pavilion for giant picnics and dances, even a short landing strip. Above all, it had Elwood, Jean and their children (among them, their daughter Mavis, a regular performer at the park and later an Ontario MPP and cabinet minister). Campers could count on personal attention from the family. The easy tone at the campground carried over into the concerts. In 1964, Elwood and Jean built a stage in the pond for the popular Sunday concerts, and the surrounding natural environment, especially the Escarpment, helped create a kind of homey amphitheatre. To accommodate the thousands at big-name shows on holiday weekends, there were two – sometimes three – larger, moveable stages on the grounds. The shows, whatever the size, had a Hill family touch. While Jean and the children helped manage ticketing, food and refreshment booths, among other things, Elwood’s amiable and expansive presence was evident at every performance – almost always in a T-shirt and a big white cowboy hat.

COURTESY MUSEUM OF DUFFERIN ARCHIVES

Everything was “down home and personal”


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