For the Mayerle family of Woodbury, their newborn son came just in time. Born June 23, he'll attend his first Minnesota State Fair at 2 months old. When they go, Stephanie and Neal Mayerle will bring little Cass straight to the brick plaza in the shadow of the grandstand.
There will be a brick waiting there with his name on it.
"That was one of the first forms we filled out after Cass was born, the State Fair brick form, to make sure we'd get it in there," Stephanie Mayerle said. "Before insurance and everything, we got that taken care of."
His 8- by 8-inch brick ("Cass Mayerle / Fair-ready since 06-23-08") will be nestled among the 1,500 other engraved bricks, honoring everything from Ferris wheel engagements to the power of corn dogs, when the fair opens this month. The brick sales began in 2002, and this year's approximately 150 new bricks, at $250 each, will bring the Minnesota State Fair Foundation thousands of dollars after engraving and installation costs.
But for the fair fanatics who order them, and the Minneapolis sandblaster who makes each one, the bricks mean personal stories and the chance to leave a memorial.
"It puts a perspective on everything else I'm working on," said 47-year-old artist Kerry Dikken (pronounced deacon). Amid his glass and stone projects that will be installed in Hilton and W hotels, the fair bricks mean a chance to come back down to earth, Dikken said.
The brick plaza is like "an interesting little novel of Minnesota," said Ron Jacobson, 52, of Coon Rapids, who bought one of Dikken's State Fair bricks this year to remember his father, Gene Jacobson, a volunteer firefighter. "A brick like that is going to be there probably 20 years before the thing wears out."
That's almost as long as Nick Henkemeyer has been attending the fair with his grandmother, Mary Jane Keep. The 22-year-old from Prior Lake bought Keep a brick last year to mark her birthday and their years of fairs. He hasn't missed a year yet.