History & Culture · Western New York
Elba Turns Muckland Onions Into a Town Story
Elba's onion fields, Field Day, and Onion Queen tradition make its agricultural identity feel lively instead of just labeled.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Elba does not have to work hard to make its nickname stick. The town calls itself the Onion Capital of the World, and its home page says 2,500 acres of rich muckland soil produce a bounty of crops, especially onions.
The fun part is how that farm identity turned into community ritual. The town historian page says nearly 5,000 people crowded the village streets on August 14, 1937, for the opening Elba Volunteer Fire Department Field Day. Floats rolled through the four corners, children decorated bicycles and brought pets into the parade, and open-air dancing filled the evening.
The contests sound wonderfully local: bicycle races, soap box derbies, tire rolling, pie eating, tug-of-war, water fights, and even rolling-pin throwing. In 1947, the event added the Onion Queen competition, with village and town applicants and a selection after the parade.
That is why Elba’s onion identity feels alive rather than dusty. The muckland gives the crop its ground. Field Day gives it noise, neighbors, prizes, and a reason for people to come back home.