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A good day to be a Viking at Midsummer Festival in Geneva

It's been 125 years since an exact replica of the Viking ship Gokstad sailed across the ocean from Norway to the United States and eventually the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

That was cause for celebration Sunday as Geneva's Good Templar Park played host to the annual Viking Midsummer Festival - also known as Swedish Day.

Besides tours of the 78-foot ship, the event featured dozens of Viking re-enactors, encampments, and displays; Scandinavian and American foods; Viking and Scandinavian vendors; and Kubb & Viking children's games.

Visitors also had the chance to check out performances by Chicago Spelmanslag and the Nordic Folk Dancers of Chicago, and witness the traditional Maypole raising.

According to festival organizers, "Svenskarnas Dag" is the Midwest's oldest Midsummer festival, dating back to 1911.

  Paul Whaley and Garry Adams of Rochelle tour the Viking Ship during the Viking Midsummer Festival and Swedish Day at Good Templar Park in Geneva. The ship is marking its 125th year on American shores. Mark Black/mblack@dailyherald.com
  Cottage owner Shelley Giesen helps out Sunday at the Good Templar gift shop during the annual Viking Midsummer Festival and Swedish Day at Good Templar Park in Geneva. Mark Black/mblack@dailyherald.com
  Ron and Elizabeth Allen of Hammond, Indiana eat some Swedish pancakes Sunday during the Viking Midsummer Festival and Swedish Day at Good Templar Park in Geneva. Mark Black/mblack@dailyherald.com
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