Western Idaho Fair's historical precursor was the Idaho Intermountain Fair, first held in 1897. As with many fairs of its era it was primarily an agricultural and livestock exhibition; sheep, cattle, horses and hogs were shipped to Boise from all over the West for the event. In the spring of 1902, the fair association purchased of land on the present-day corner of Fairview and Orchard and moved the fair to the site. That was also the year the fair welcomed "
Buffalo Bill" Cody's
Wild West Show. The fair of 1913 included its first full-fledged rodeo, called the Boise Stampede. This rodeo included the best livestock and contestants from other famous rodeos, such as the
Pendleton Round-Up and
Cheyenne Frontier Days. The fair's continuity suffered during the next two decades due to economic conditions, war, changes in management, and a basic lack of interest. From 1913 to 1935 (except 1917–18, when it went on hiatus caused by
World War I), for example, the fair changed names five times, and wasn't even held in eight of those twenty-two years. In 1936,
Ada County Commissioners appointed a Fair Board to organize a new Western Idaho State Fair. Ed Sproat was named fair manager at that time and after a successful 1936 fair a gift of $1,000 was given to him for a "job well done." This was the first time any money had been given to the fair volunteers. After 1941, World War II forced the cancellation of the fair for the next four years. In 1967, the growing fair was moved to its current location at the corner of Chinden Boulevard and Glenwood Avenue. The fairgrounds remain in unincorporated
Ada County, but
Garden City now completely surrounds the complex. When the fair moved, the branding and name changed to the Western Idaho Fair and the site became Expo Idaho. Bob Lorimer, the
Idaho Statesman reporter and agricultural columnist for many years, wrote, "Even the name is new–and so is everything else except familiar faces and tradition." ==Events==