’Tis the season: Holiday happenings
November 29, 2025 | Waterbury RoundaboutThis post was updated on Dec. 12.
It’s that time of year when the calendar becomes jam-packed with holiday events, performances, celebrations, etc.
We have collected announcements for happenings in Waterbury and around the nearby region. As we receive word about more upcoming events, we will add them to this post, listed in chronological order of when they will take place. Bookmark and check back as it will be updated.
If you have a holiday event or performance to share with the community, email the information to waterburyroundabout@gmail.com. Please include a photo if possible.
through Dec. 12: The Giving Tree at Waterbury Public Library
The library’s Giving Tree provides holiday gifts to children in need. Courtesy photo
In keeping with a Waterbury holiday tradition, the Waterbury Public Library hosts The Giving Tree, which is set up now. The tree gives local residents a chance to provide a special holiday gift to a child in need.
Tags hung on the tree include the age, gender, clothing size, and any special wishes from an anonymous child. Library patrons may choose a tag to fulfill the child’s holiday wish. The tree is set up inside the library. Bring the tag of your choosing to the front desk to check it out.
After purchasing a gift for the child, participants are asked to bring the gift unwrapped to Wesley United Methodist Church at 56 South Main St. Include the library gift tag and wrapping materials (volunteers will wrap the presents).
Drop-off times at the church will be Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 13-14, between 10 a.m. and noon and 2-4 p.m. Monetary donations are also accepted. Make checks to The Giving Tree. More information online at waterburypubliclibrary.com.
Nov. 29 – Dec. 24: Bookstore’s CLiF Giving Tree (of books)
Mrs. Claus visits the Bridgeside Books CLiF Giving Tree. Courtesy photo
Bridgeside Books hosts its annual Giving Tree to support the Children’s Literacy Foundation.
Shoppers in the store may purchase books to contribute to the collection. Any children’s book purchased at Bridgeside Books and donated to the Giving Tree will be discounted by 20%. Books to be donated are collected under the CLiF tree in the bookshop.
Based in Waterbury Center, the nonprofit CLiF serves children in rural Vermont and New Hampshire communities by providing new books and hosting literacy events.
Through Dec. 15: prizes for shopping local
Revitalizing Waterbury’s annual holiday shop-local promotion has a new name this year. Very Merry Waterbury encourages shoppers and diners to support local businesses during the holiday season.
Formerly known as Wrap It Up and Win!, the program has shoppers collect stamps from participating retailers and restaurants, turning in stamped cards to enter into weekly prize drawings. More than 40 local businesses are participating by offering the stamps and contributing prizes. Weekly drawings run until Dec. 15. More details are online here.
Dec. 1-17: Letters to Santa
Santa Claus and the elves are getting ready for the big day and looking forward to hearing from young friends. This local tradition offers a great opportunity for children to write a personal letter that will get a personal reply.
Santa and the elves love letters – not just lists. Letters to Santa offers youngsters a chance to share wishes with Santa, along with asking questions that the elves may answer in their return correspondence. For example, one of their favorites is: “What makes Rudolph’s nose glow?”
Whatever the message, writers should be sure to include their name and return mailing address in order to receive a reply in the mail.
Details: Starting on Dec. 1, letters to Santa Claus can be mailed or dropped off at either Waterbury Post Office – North Main Street downtown, or Maple Street in Waterbury Center. If mailed from a different post office, stamps are necessary and letters should be addressed to one of the Waterbury Post Offices. If they are dropped off in person, no stamp is needed to place them in the special Santa’s mailbox in both locations.
Drop them off no later than Wednesday, Dec. 17, so Santa’s elves can be sure to get a response from Santa back to writers before Christmas.
Dec. 5, 12, 19: Fridays at Bridgeside Books
Bridgeside Books plans special free holiday events on Fridays in December.
Dec. 5: Grown-Up Craft Night, 5-7 p.m. The shop provides supplies for making holiday crafts. Participants can bring more and a grown-up beverage.
Dec. 12 at 5:30 p.m. is Farmer George Woodard Story Time when local farmer/author/filmmaker George Woodard visits to read from his children’s book, “The Christmas Calf” and sign copies.
Dec. 19 at 6:30 p.m., Mrs. Claus visits for PJ Storytime. Kids (and their grown-ups) are invited to visit with Mrs. Claus at the bookstore for a special bedtime story with Mrs. Claus.
More details online at BridgesideBooks.com.
The Vermont Philharmonic presents two holiday concerts in Montpelier and Barre. Courtesy photo
Dec. 5 & 7: Vermont Philharmonic presents Handel’s ‘Messiah’
As Vermont enters the season of cold and darkness, Handel’s beloved “Messiah” brings warmth, light and joy. Conducted by Lisa Jablow, the Vermont Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus will present two performances to bring the holiday spirit, on Friday and Sunday, Dec. 5 and 7.
The Friday concert will be at 7:30 p.m. in St. Augustine Church in Montpelier; Sunday’s concert is scheduled for 2 p.m. at the Barre Opera House.
The program will include the entire first part of “Messiah,” with arias and choral numbers that foretell the coming and hail the arrival of the Messiah. It has the “Hallelujah” chorus from Part II, and six numbers from Part III celebrating redemption.
Soloists performing include soprano Colleen Flynn Campbell, mezzo-soprano Nessa Rabin, tenor Connor Trombly, and bass Erik Kronke. Mary Jane Austin is the assistant choral director.
Celebrating its 67th Season, the Vermont Philharmonic is composed of professional and talented amateur musicians from throughout Vermont.
Tickets: $25 general; $20 for seniors; $5 for students; online at vermontphilharmonic.com or at the door.
Dec. 5-14 Vermont Symphony Orchestra concerts
The Vermont Symphony Orchestra’s brass quintet plays several holiday concerts with Counterpoint chorus singers. Courtesy photo
The Vermont Symphony Orchestra has a busy December calendar with three Holiday Pops concerts Dec. 5-7, including performances in Burlington and Barre. Following those performances, its brass quintet will play four free concerts, including one in Warren on Dec. 11.
The Holiday Pops program features classics, including “Sleigh Ride” and “Carol of the Bells,” and an abridged reading of “A Christmas Carol” with accompanying music. The orchestra also will debut “The First Snow of Chelm,” a composition inspired by a Jewish folktale. Joining the orchestra will be the Opera Company of Middlebury's Children's Chorus.
Food drives will be held at each venue, and attendees are encouraged to bring a non-perishable food item for local food shelves in each community.
Concerts are at the Barre Opera House on Friday, Dec. 5, at the Flynn in Burlington on Saturday, Dec. 6, and at the Paramount Theater in Rutland on Sunday, Dec. 7. Ticket prices vary for each venue and by seating choice. More information, including the full concert program and ticket details, is online at vso.org.
From Dec. 11-14, the VSO’s Brass Quintet and Counterpoint tour plays four free concerts, including Warren on Dec. 11. These performances pair the brass quintet with singers from Counterpoint chorus for a program of traditional carols alongside modern compositions, including works by Vermont composer Erik Nielsen and a world premiere by Music-COMP and Mount Mansfield Union High School student Sam Acus. These concerts are free; however, registration is required. Learn more and reserve a ticket online at vso.org/events.
Dec. 6
1890 event inspires Duxbury Historical Society holiday program
At 2 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 6, the Duxbury Historical Society premieres a special holiday program that promises to retell a true story dating back to 1890.
Narrator and director George Woodard (left) and cast member Mark Morse rehearse a scene from ‘The Christmas Present.’ Photo by Shawnee Perry
The original theatrical presentation titled “The Christmas Present” is based on a “surprising” 19th-century local event, according to the society. It’s based on a story involving two local residents, Charles Corliss and Fanny Hill.
The performance will feature several society members, including George Woodard, Ramona Godfrey, Don Welch, Mark Morse, and Skip Flanders. Donations accepted at the door; light refreshments will be served. Guests are encouraged to dress warmly, perhaps even bringing a lap robe as was the custom of the 1890s.
The performance will be held at the Old Meeting House (formerly the South Duxbury Church) on Vermont Route 100, across from Harwood Union High School. Note: The building entrance includes six exterior stairs.
On Dec. 6, Waterbury’s 16th annual River of Light Lantern Parade steps off at 5 p.m. sharp from Brookside Primary School. D
Waterbury’s River of Light Parade
The 16th Annual River of Light Lantern Parade will be held on Saturday, Dec. 6, starting at 5 p.m. from Brookside Primary School on Stowe Street in Waterbury.
This year’s parade theme is “Wheels and Wings.”
All are invited to join in the parade by marching with a lantern or watching from along the parade route. Lantern-making workshops hosted by MakerSphere are now completed.
The parade will leave at 5 p.m. sharp and head down Stowe Street, turning right onto Main Street, proceeding to Dac Rowe Field. At the park, there will be free hot cocoa, a warming fire, and entertainment from the Cirque de Fuego fire spinners from Jericho.
Parking is available behind Brookside School (not in front), near the post office and Anderson Park, and at the municipal building.
Additional note: The Waterbury Public Library will be open 4-7 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 5, around the time of the parade for people to stop in to warm up, visit for a book or a puzzle, use the restrooms, etc. More here.
More River of Light Lantern Parade information is online at: makerspherevt.com/paradeinfo.
Richmond Holiday Market
The Richmond Holiday Market will be held on Saturday, Dec. 6, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Richmond Congregational Church and Richmond Town Center, on Bridge Street in Richmond.
Admission is free. More than 40 crafters will be set up in both buildings on all floor levels. Table proceeds will benefit the Richmond Food Shelf (a non-perishable food donation bin will also be available). A Silent Auction for Toys for Kids will be in progress and a toy donation bin will be available.
Also in Richmond on the same day will be the Richmond Free Library’s Book Sale and the Sixth Grade Craft Fair at Camel’s Hump Middle School.
The Congregational Church will be serving lunch for purchase. The Richmond Community Band will attend, playing festive music.
Parking is free at the middle school, the Town Center, and at Volunteer’s Green. For more information, email spochop@uvm.edu or call 802-318-5360.
Dec. 7
‘A Christmas Carol’ with Willem Lange
Lost Nation Theater presents Willem Lange’s annual telling of “A Christmas Carol: A Ghost Story” by Charles Dickens on Sunday, Dec. 7, in Montpelier.
Storyteller extraordinaire Lange has been presenting the readings since 1975; this year is the fifth with Lost Nation.
Willem Lange performs ‘A Christmas Carol’ at Lost Nation Theater. Courtesy photo
The single presentation begins at 2 p.m. at City Hall Arts Center inside Montpelier City Hall.
Lost Nation Theater’s Kim Bent adds to the production with stage design and lighting to “enhance the mood” and highlight Lange’s personal storytelling flair. “We love adding our theatrical magic to Willem’s nuanced storytelling in this wonderful tradition,” said Artistic Director Kathleen Keenan.
Lange recalls the origin of his holiday tradition: “My 72-year friendship with Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’ began at my small liberal arts college in Ohio,” he said. His professor, Dr. Lean, performed the readings for nearly 50 years from Dickens’ very own original prompter script used on a 1867-68 tour of America. “Smitten by the story, I wondered, ‘Who’s going to take over when he’s gone?” Lange said.
After 23 years, Lange said he decided to pick up the baton. “In 1975, I sat down with my typewriter and an LP recording of Professor Lean’s performance, and typed out the script. That took some patience! My wife and I invited friends over. I borrowed a set of tails; and we held the first session in our living room. Who would have suspected it would come to this!”
The story of Ebenezer Scrooge and his Christmas ordeal as he’s visited by three ghosts was first published in 1843. Lange reflects on the tale’s appeal: “It’s a haunting story (literally) of a miserly curmudgeon who comes face-to-face with the personal result of his ill-tempered stinginess. It speaks to the Scrooge in all of us. I love the moment when Scrooge wakes to the joy of his new-born self, tries tentatively to laugh, and the amused audience laughs along with him.”
Tickets: $20, general admission; $15, students and seniors; $10, youth. Livestream/digital viewing is $20 and available until Dec. 31. Details online at lostnationtheater.org.
Dec. 9 + 16: State House Christmas, Hanukkah ceremonies
Gov. Phil Scott and the Department of Buildings and General Services invite Vermonters to ceremonies t the Vermont State House to celebrate Christmas and Hanukkah.
The annual Christmas tree lighting will be held on Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 5 p.m. on the State House lawn. The event will start at 4 p.m. with performances by the Cirque de Fuego fire dancers and Shidaa West African Drumming. The Vermont Agency of Transportation’s plow truck named Rudolph will be on site, and Agriculture Secretary Anson Tebbetts promises to bring along his miniature donkey Frannie.
This year’s tree is a 41-foot blue spruce donated by the W.M. Group in Moretown.
Refreshments will be served inside the State House after the lighting ceremony, and Gov. Scott will read the Christmas story, “The Night Before Christmas,” to children in attendance.
On Tuesday, Dec. 16, at 4:30 p.m., Gov. Scott will host a menorah lighting ceremony on the State House lawn for the third night of Hanukkah. Led by Rabbi Eliyahu Junik, the ceremony will include live music. Inside the State House, the celebration will include latkes, sufganiyot, and games of dreidel and Gov. Scott will read a Hanukkah story to children in his ceremonial office.
Dec. 12, 13, 20: Cookies & Carols with Sen. Sanders
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders at Waterbury’s Not Quite Independence Day Parade. File photo by Sarah Milligan
Vermont’s U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders will host five holiday gatherings in December. Cookies & Carols events will be held in Burlington and St. Albans on Friday, Dec. 12; Bennington and Rutland on Saturday, Dec. 13; and at the State House in Montpelier on Saturday, Dec. 20.
In a message to constituents, Sanders writes: “This is the time of year to come together with family, friends and the whole community.
Please join me for holiday gatherings that I am hosting across the state. We’ll enjoy some wonderful holiday music as well as delicious desserts, hot chocolate, cider and eggnog. Please join us for some family-friendly holiday cheer — and bring your friends. All are welcome.”
Times and locations are listed on the RSVP form that attendees are asked to fill out so organizers can plan accordingly.
Dec. 12: Waterbury Winterfest Silent Auction and Cask & Cork
The December Waterbury Winterfest Silent Auction supports five days of Winterfest winter fun in late January and early February. Snow soccer file photo by Gordon Miller
Waterbury Winterfest is set for Jan. 28 through Feb. 1 and to prepare, organizers each year put on a silent auction in December that helps cover costs for the five days of wintertime fun just around the corner.
This year, the auction will be held on Friday, Dec. 12, from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at Cask & Cork on Elm Street in downtown Waterbury.
Many local businesses have contributed merchandise and gift certificates for auction prizes. The event even takes place during the wine and beer store’s weekly tasting, hence it’s billed as a “sip and shop” event. Winners need not be present to claim their auction items, too.
See more about the auction and Winterfest 2026 online at WaterburyWinterfest.com.
Dec. 12 & 14: Mad River Chorale presents two holiday concerts
Mad River Chorale will perform holiday concerts in Waterbury and Waitsfield. File photo
Mad River Chorale’s 2025 holiday concerts titled, “Hope Lights the Way!” will be performed Dec. 12 and 14 in Waitsfield and Waterbury.
The program’s main piece is the baroque “Messe de Minuit pour Noël” by Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1643-1704). His “Midnight Mass for Christmas” is based on 10 traditional French Christmas carols.
The chorale also will perform holiday pieces by early Baroque Dutch organist and composer Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck, Morten Lauridsen, Ola Gjeilo, and Spanish Renaissance composer Tomás Luis de Victoria. Selections will be accompanied by vocal soloists, piano, string quintet and flutes. Audience members will be invited to join in singing holiday carols and Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus.
Both performances are at 7:30 p.m. (no matinee this year). On Friday, Dec. 12, the chorale performs at the Waitsfield United Church of Christ; on Sunday, Dec. 14, the concert is at the Waterbury Congregational Church.
Tickets: $20 for general admission; $15 for seniors and students; children age 11 and under are free and do not need a ticket. Purchase online at madriverchorale.org or at the door.
Dec. 13
American Legion Craft Fair
The American Legion Auxiliary at the Legion Post #59 in Waterbury hosts its 3rd annual Craft Fair on Saturday, Dec. 13, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The fair will be held at the post, located at 16 Stowe St. with local crafters and vendors. The fair will include a concession stand. Entry is free.
More information: Contact Regina Hodziewich at hodzie@comcast.net.
Mentoring group hosts Soup with Santa in Waitsfield
Mad River Mentoring will participate in the 3rd Annual Waitsfield Holiday Walkabout with a Soup with Santa fundraiser on Saturday, Dec. 13.
The event, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., will take place at the Village Meeting House/Waitsfield United Church of Christ, and proceeds will support Mad River Mentoring’s mission to match caring adults with youth in local schools.
At Soup with Santa, adults and children can enjoy a lunch that includes soup, salad, and mac and cheese, along with a visit with Santa Claus, for $10. Kids under age 2 are free. For $30, attendees can take home a handmade bowl from Blockhouse Studio. Eat-in or take-out options are available.
“Mad River Mentoring is thrilled to be a part of this joyful, community event, while at the same time raising awareness and funds for this successful and worthwhile program,” said Program Manager Kathy Mai.
Sponsored by the Mad River Valley Chamber of Commerce, the Waitsfield Holiday Walkabout is Saturday-Sunday, Dec. 13-14, from noon to 4 p.m. with a host of holiday free activities, treats, music and more. More details are online at madrivervalley.com.
Morristown’s 25th Festival of Lights
Organizers of Morristown’s 25th Festival of Lights checked invite the Waterbury community to its celebration on Dec. 13, presented by the Morrisville Alliance for Culture and Commerce.
The celebration will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and this year’s theme is Hometown for the Holidays. Activities will include photos with Santa and Mrs. Claus, cookie decorating, hot chocolate, wagon rides, a holiday movie, a puppet show, campfire s’mores, handbell and choir performances, plus a Nutcracker preview at 1 p.m. After dark, everyone is invited to drive through town to view and vote on homes and businesses in the Holiday Lights contest.
Find more information online at Festival of Lights - Morrisville Alliance for Culture and Commerce.
'Blue Vase for You,' acrylic on canvas by Arthur Zorn
‘Enchanted Christmas’ concert + art opening in Berlin
On Saturday, Dec. 13, at 4 p.m., Christopher McWilliams and friends will present an “Enchanted Christmas” free concert at the First Congregational Church of Berlin.
The program features a rich variety of music in celebration of the holiday season, including “Ring Out, Solstice Bells” by Roger Emerson and “A Gloucestershire Wassail” arranged by Ralph Vaughan Williams.
Admission is free, with donations accepted to benefit Capstone Community Action.
Following the concert, there will be a reception in the church Community Hall for the opening of a new exhibition of paintings by Barre artist Arthur Zorn titled, “Fascinating Florals & More.”
Zorn’s abstract expressionist acrylic paintings are familiar to art enthusiasts in Central Vermont and beyond as he creates images out of contemplation, emotions, and deconstructed scenes such as flowers to natural landscapes. This new collection of his work will be on view at the church Community Hall until Jan. 31 and available for viewing on Sundays from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., and by appointment.
Zorn shares his work in exhibitions regularly and many of his paintings are in private collections. He twice has been the featured artist for the Governor’s Art Exhibit in Montpelier. Forty-five of his paintings are on semi-permanent display at the state Supreme Court and the Pavilion state office building in Montpelier as well.
The First Congregational Church of Berlin is located at 1808 Scott Hill Road in Berlin. More information about the concert and exhibition is online at fccbvt.org. Contact Arthur Zorn at vermontartmusic@gmail.com.
Dec. 14
Reindeer visit Waterbury for the holidays. File photo by Gordon Miller
Reindeer Rendezvous + author Matt Tavares + Santa Fin
Santa Fin is a special needs professional Santa, who includes Waterbury on his holiday stops. File photo
Reindeer from the Vermont Reindeer Farm in West Charleston, Vermont, will pay what has become their annual visit to Waterbury on Sunday, Dec. 14, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Bidwell Lane at Stowe Street outside of Bridgeside Books.
This free event is a chance to see and meet the reindeer and talk with their handlers. There is no touching or feeding of the animals.
Book cover art. Courtesy image
During the reindeer visit, the bookstore is hosting New York Times best-selling author and illustrator Matt Tavares, who will be signing copies of his reindeer-themed children’s books, including his newest, “Dasher and the Polar Bear.”
Next door at Stowe Street Cafe, Santa Fin will stop by from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. to visit with young and old alike. Warm up inside the cafe and meet Central Vermont’s professional special needs Santa who works full time spreading holiday cheer this time of year.
Note that parking will not be available in the section of Bidwell Lane near Stowe Street where the reindeer pen will be set up.
Bidwell Lane will be closed to traffic from 9 a.m. until the event ends.
In addition to street parking in downtown Waterbury, free parking is available nearby at Brookside Primary School on Stowe Street, along Bidwell Lane accessible from Foundry Street, near Rusty Parker Park and the Waterbury Train Station, at Dac Rowe Park, and at the State Office Complex.
There will be room on Stowe Street for vehicles to stop to drop off passengers who cannot walk very far.
File photo by Gordon Miller
Waterbury Rotary hosts Santa in the Park
Waterbury Rotary Club welcomes Santa Claus in the Park from 3 to 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 14, at Rusty Parker Memorial Park in downtown Waterbury.
Santa will be delighted to hear children’s holiday wishes and to pose for photos in his sleigh. His elves will also be there with some special gifts for children.
All are invited to this free event to enjoy the festive atmosphere and some hot chocolate.
Chanukah menorah lighting + celebration
Chabad of Stowe-Waterbury will celebrate the start of the Jewish holiday of Chanukah with its fourth annual menorah lighting ceremony and celebration on Sunday, Dec. 14, at 4:30 p.m. at Rusty Parker Memorial Park in Waterbury.
The 12-foot menorah will be set up in the park with a candle lit each day of the holiday. The Dec. 14 event will begin with a gathering in the park with lighted Chanukah sticks for attendees. After the menorah is lit, the celebration for all ages will move indoors at Black Cap Cafe for donuts, latkes, chocolate coins, and a hot cocoa bar. There will be music, games and crafts. All are welcome.
Find more Chanukah information, including recipes, history, and menorah lighting details online at chabadofstowe.com. Anyone wishing to light their own menorah at home may contact Rabbi Baruch Simon for one free of charge.
Dec. 20-21: Onion River Chorus presents Christmas concerts
The Onion River Chorus will present its holiday program in two concerts on Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 20-21, at the Unitarian Church in Montpelier.
The program will feature multiple compositions by Plainfield composer Dennis Murphy (1934-2010), with the centerpiece being “A Perfect Day,” a 65-minute cantata written in 1994 for solo tenor, chorus, and five instruments.
The piece follows the cycle of the seasons, the hours of the day, and the stages of life with lyrics and music intentionally whimsical at times. “It may at first be a matter for puzzlement that this work rockets back and forth between the comic and the serious,” Murphy wrote, “but what else could it do? It’s about life, and life is exactly like that.”
Onion River Chorus Director Richard Riley. Courtesy photo
Chorus tenor Roger Grow, who was the soloist in the first performances of the piece in 1994, will have the role of narrator.
Director Richard Riley explains that “A Perfect Day” has 28 short movements – each resembling a haiku. “Murphy is happy to keep you scratching your head, wondering. But he does it with eccentric grace, two words that don't hang around together very often!” he said. The program has three shorter pieces for organ written by Murphy as well.
The Saturday concert will be at 7:30 p.m.; Sunday’s performance is at 4 p.m. Tickets: $25 at the door or in advance at sevendaystickets.com. Admission is free for those aged 18 and under. A reception following Sunday’s concert will benefit the Montpelier Food Pantry.
More information is online at onionriverchorus.org or call 802-476-2541. The Unitarian Church is located at 130 Main St., Montpelier, and it is wheelchair-accessible with a new lift.
Duxbury Historical Society’s Old Meeting House is on Rt. 100 in South Duxbury. Courtesy photo
Dec. 21
Holiday Sing-Along in Duxbury
The Duxbury Historical Society hosts a Holiday Sing-Along at the Old Meeting House in South Duxbury at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 21.
Vocalist Ann Harvey, along with musicians Nina Towne and Karen Winchester, will lead the festivities.
Light refreshments will be served. Donations appreciated at the door with all proceeds to benefit the Duxbury Historical Society.
The meeting house is on Vermont Route 100 across from Harwood Union High School.
Note: The historic building has six steps to enter. Dress warmly. This event is weather permitting.