Events (2011) Each June, the Salina Arts & Humanities department holds the Smoky Hill River Festival lasting three and a half days, with arts and crafts shows, music concerts, games, and other activities. Originally held as a downtown street parade in 1976 to celebrate the
United States Bicentennial, the festival proved popular enough for the city to hold it every year. To celebrate
Independence Day, the city puts on its All American Fourth and Play Day in the Park which includes children’s games, music, and dance performances in Oakdale Park. The Smoky Hill Museum Street Fair in September includes a parade, a chili cook-off, and historic demonstrations. In November, downtown Salina hosts the Christmas festival which includes a
5k run, a mile walk, live music, dance performances, children's entertainment, and the Parade of Lights.
Points of interest The Smoky Hill Museum is operated by the city's Arts & Humanities department, containing artifacts, exhibits, and public educational programs on local history, agriculture, and education with collections since 1879. The
Tony's Pizza Events Center (formerly Bicentennial Center) is the primary venue in the city for large indoor events. It includes a 7,500-seat multipurpose arena and the Heritage Hall convention center. The Center hosts concerts, sporting events, and trade shows. The Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure is a public zoo and wildlife park located west of the city near
Hedville. It has animal exhibits, an art gallery, and a wildlife museum. Indian Rock Park is the tallest point in the area, mainly featuring a hill within the vast
Wellington Formation stretching from Nebraska to Oklahoma. In the late 1950s,
part of the hill was excavated for flood control after the
Great Flood of 1951, diverting the Smoky Hill River along the edge of the park and creating 80-foot steep shale bluffs. It has a panoramic view of the city, a river fishing pier, a pond from the former brick factory, and hiking trails. In 2010, the city opened Kenwood Cove Aquatic Park to replace the aging Kenwood Municipal Pool operating 1956 to 2009. The Caribbean-themed
water park was designed to transcend the typical scope of a city pool, with over of slides and a wave pool, as a primary regional tourist attraction.<
Religion More than 70
Christian churches are in and around Salina including the
cathedral of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Salina (
Sacred Heart Cathedral) and the cathedral of the
Episcopal Diocese of Western Kansas (
Christ Cathedral). The
Roman Catholic Diocese of Salina has its regional administrative offices in Salina as do the
Presbytery of Northern Kansas and the Salina District of the
United Methodist Church which is based at
Kansas Wesleyan University. A
Buddhist temple is located northwest of the city.
Sports • Salina hosted
minor league baseball from 1898–1952. The
Salina Blue Jays and other Salina teams played as a member of the
Kansas State League (1898),
Central Kansas League (1908–1910, 1912), Kansas State League (1913–1914),
Southwestern League (1922–1926) and
Western Association (1938–1941, 1946–1952). Salina was an affiliate of the
Cleveland Indians (1941) and
Philadelphia Phillies (1946–1952). Salina teams played at Athletic Park (1898–1914), Oakdale Park (1922–1926) and Kenwood Field (1938–1952). • Salina hosted the
Kansas Cagerz and
Salina Rattlers basketball teams. • Salina hosted the
National Junior College Athletic Association Division I women's basketball national tournament each season in the
Bicentennial Center. • Salina hosted the
Women's Big Eight basketball tournament at the
Bicentennial Center. When the Big Eight became the
Big 12, the tournament was moved to
Kansas City, Missouri. • Salina hosts the Kansas State High School Activities Association (
KSHSAA) Class 4A state
wrestling tournament and the Class 3A & 4A volleyball tournaments, the Class 4A state basketball tournament, and the Class 4A state softball tournament. Salina also occasionally hosts the Class 4A state baseball tournament and one of the state championship football games. • Salina was home to the
Salina Bombers, an
indoor football team playing in the
Champions Professional Indoor Football League from 2013 to 2014, then
Champions Indoor Football. • Salina hosts the
Salina Liberty, the second indoor football team from the city, who now play in the CIF. • Salina is the home of the
Kansas Wesleyan University Coyotes, a 20-sport
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics athletics program. The Coyotes have been a member of the
Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference since 1928.
In popular culture • The 1980 teen comedy film
Up the Academy starring
Ralph Macchio was filmed entirely in Salina, mostly on the campus of
St. John's Military School. • Scenes in the 1955 movie
Picnic, starring
William Holden and
Kim Novak, were filmed in Salina: the train arrival and The Bensons' mansion. • Millie Dillmount, the fictional main character in the musical
Thoroughly Modern Millie, is from Salina. She leaves home for
New York City, determined never to return, as depicted in the opening number, "Not for the Life of Me". • In
Alfred Hitchcock's film
Vertigo, the character Judy Barton (played by Kim Novak) comes from 425 Maple Avenue in Salina. •
The Avett Brothers wrote a song "Salina" on the 2007 album
Emotionalism. ==Notable people==