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The University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service, in an early attempt to preserve the vanishing heritage of the Ozark Mountains, assisted local craftsmen and musicians to form the Ozark Foothills Crafts Guild in 1962. The guild started with 30 members and now consists of over 300 master craftsmen and musicians.
In 1963 the guild, in cooperation with local civic organizations, organized the first Ozark Folk Festival which attracted approximately 15,000 people. The festival became an annual event and within a few years was attracting almost 100,000 people to Mountain View. Due to the success of the annual festival the guild realized that they needed a permanent home.
The guild, in cooperation with local government, obtained a grant from the United States Economic Development Administration to establish a private commercial craft center at Mountain View. Prior to its opening in 1973 the state of Arkansas recognized the potential of the project and folded the center into the state park system and provided additional funding.
The Ozark Folk Center consists of numerous modern and traditional buildings which house a variety of culturally significant demonstrations and interactive activities.
The cultural areas include an organic herb garden displaying traditional Ozark herbs, a traditional blacksmith shop, a pottery making facility, traditional soap and candle making activity areas, demonstrations of traditional quilting and weaving by master craftspeople. Traditional Ozark folk music is presented to guests throughout the park on a daily basis and at the Ozark Folk Center Theater at regular times throughout the day.
In addition to the cultural areas the park maintains a restaurant and smokehouse which serves traditional foods, provides lodging to visitors at the Dry Creek Lodge, and has a modern conference center with an 1,100 seat auditorium and private meeting rooms. The conference center also conducts seminars and exhibitions on Ozark culture and history on a regular basis.
A large gift shop is also present in the park where visitors can purchase items made by the park's craftspeople and local residents as well as whimsical and humorous items of the stereotypical "hillbilly culture".
The Ozark Folk Center maintains one of the nation's largest collections of music and folklore including the 17,000 country, jazz, and folk recordings, books, and related material from the Stan French Collection
These materials are available to serious researchers at the park's resource center.
Many visitors to the Ozark Folk Center also visit Blanchard Springs CavernsBlanchard Springs Caverns is a cave system located in the Ozark National Forest in Stone County in northern Arkansas administered by the United States Forest Service. Blanchard Springs Caverns is a three-level cave system, two of which are open for guided, float the Buffalo National RiverThe Buffalo National River is the US's first federally-protected river and one of America's great natural treasures. The Buffalo River meanders through the heart of the Ozark Mountains in northern Arkansas for 150 miles before joining the White River., or enjoy some of the world's best troutThis article is about fish. The Trout Quintet is a work by Schubert. Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss Trout is the common name given to a number of species of freshwater fishes belonging to the salmon family, Salmonidae''. All fish properly called trout fishingFishing is both the recreation and sport of catching fish (for food or as a trophy), and the commercial fishing industry of catching or harvesting seafood (either fish or other aquatic life-forms, such as shellfish). Fishing is done in a river, canal, lak on the White RiverThe White River is a 722-mile-long river that flows through the US states of Arkansas and Missouri. The source of the White River is Beaver Lake in the Boston Mountains of northwest Arkansas, the upper portions of the river are fast, cold, and clear and a, all of which are located in the Folk Center area.
The town of Mountain View bills itself as the "Folk Music Capital of the World" and local musicians often gather in small groups to play their instruments in the town square after dark during the summer months. Visitors have always been welcome to attend these impromptu free concerts and often bring their own lawn chairs. Food and drink are usually available from vendors on the square at these times.