The Most Bizarre Beauty Queens Of The 1950s and ’60s

One of my favorite scenes from The Golden Girls involves Betty White’s character, Rose, lamenting how she never won the coveted title of “Butter Queen” when she was a teen in her fictional Midwestern hometown of St. Olaf.

The description of the beauty pageant sounds ridiculous. It involved a trivia section with a trick question about margarine and a churning competition — and inevitable churning scandal.

Although this particular beauty contest never actually existed, during the 1950s and ’60s, the world of pageantry boasted plenty of strange beauty competitions in which local ladies brimming with old Hollywood glamour vied for the title of their hometown’s highest honor.

Yet, an offbeat beauty pageant wasn’t just a small-town thing during this era. There were also businesses, like the Zion Meat Company, and even government agencies, like the National Security Agency, that rated women willing to compete on their beauty, poise, and that certain je ne sais quoi that paired perfectly with something as random as potatoes…

Diving into the wonderful world of bizarre beauty pageants, let’s begin with Geene Courtney’s “Sausage Queen.” The contest was sponsored by the Zion Meat Company during National Hot Dog Week in 1955.

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Vintage Everyday

Gail Hooper was photographed holding a 56-pound catfish when she was 18, after she was crowned Miss National Catfish Queen in 1954.

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Al Pucci / New York Daily News

These lovely ladies competed for Miss Correct Posture in 1956.

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Vintage Everyday

This bombshell won the esteemed honor of being Miss Atomic Bomb in 1957.

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Vintage Everyday

Joy Harman, who at the time was just 19 years old, was crowned the "NYC Donut Queen" at the 1957 USO.

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Evelyn Straus / New York Daily News

In 1960, Julia Meade, aka “Mink Queen,” posed with pelts at the West Side Fur Company.

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Nick Peterson / New York Daily News

On June 29, 1955, this beautiful “Blueberry Queen” posed in a tub full of the berry at Hotel Roosevelt shortly after winning the honor.

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Hal Mathewson / New York Daily News

In 1963 Cindy Carol won “Queen of the Anti-Triskaidekaphobia.” Triskaidekaphobia means “fear of 13,” so she posed shunning all superstitions.

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Jack Tresilian / New York Daily News

Sunny Austin, a 21-year-old woman, posed with a lamb and a toucan after she was named “Queen of the Pet Festival” in 1964.

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John Peodincuk / New York Daily News.

The Wool Bureau and National Knitted Outerwear Foundation crowned Jeanne Davis of Alabama the 1952 “Sweater Queen.”

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Hank Olen / New York Daily News

All hail 1954’s “Miss Magic Marker.”

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Vintage Everyday

Darlene Larson was crowned “Outdoor Health Queen” in 1967.

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John Tresilian / New York Daily News

Eva Sloan, won “Queen of the Village” (Greenwich Village, that is), in 1962 at the age of 22.

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George Mattson / New York Daily News

Cheers! Paula Wayne is crowned “May Wine Queen” in April 1965.

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Frank Hurley / New York Daily News

Jacqueline Petite was chosen as the 1959 “Queen of the Circus.”

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Phil Greitzer / New York Daily News

What is the strangest beauty pageant you’ve ever heard of or seen? Let us know!

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