Holly Day Fair

Holly Hill Farm
http://hollyhillfarm.org
Dec. 3, 10AM-3PM

 Holly Hill Farm, in coastal Cohasset, Massachusetts, celebrates winter and nature at its annual Holly Day Fair.

Visitors gather in the greenhouse, where a wood stove burns amid pots of homemade soups and trays of cakes, cookies, and pies. Local food vendors and artisans also sell jams, breads, soaps, jewelry, ceramics, and other artwork great for wholesome holiday gifts. Fair-goers can check out the barnyard creatures, and make gingerbread, seeded pinecones for winter bird-feeding, and wreaths of freshly cut grapevine decorated with holly, juniper, and white-pine sprays. Some 30 marked trails throughout the farm’s 140 acres are open as well, from dawn to dusk, for walking, skiing, or snowshoeing. “We try to make everything local, using what’s around, and get people outdoors,” says Jean Miner White ’57, who started organic farming at Holly Hill in 1998 with her late husband, Frank White ’55, whose family has owned and lived on the property for generations. (His father, Richardson White ’27, was a gentleman farmer and sculptor, and the couple’s daughter, Jennifer White ’81, and nephew, Arthur White ’94, are members of the Friends of Holly Hill Farm board of trustees. Frank White’s brother is Donald White ’57, a former board member who still spends time on the Cohasset property.) 

The fair crowd includes longtime customers and volunteers devoted to the nonprofit Friends group that manages not only the arable fields but also a summer camp and year-round educational programs for children, adults, and school groups. The core environmental mission incorporates the farm operations, historic structures, and diverse habitats—an ethos that also extends to fair vendor and nephew Malcolm White. A teacher and woodworker, he ingeniously entwines pieces of wood scavenged on the property to create rustic furniture “without nails or screws,” his aunt reports. “He just fits it all together naturally.”

Read more articles by: Nell Porter Brown
Sub topics

You might also like

Sam Altman’s Vision for the Future

OpenAI CEO on progress, safety, and policy

The Picture of Freedom

A Boston Athenaeum exhibit explores an abolitionist with Harvard ties.

Jeff Lichtman Appointed Dean of Science

Neuroscientist to lead Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences division

Most popular

Sam Altman’s Vision for the Future

OpenAI CEO on progress, safety, and policy

The Watchers

Assaults on privacy and security in America threaten democracy itself.

Diversifying Diet

A little-known diet improves cardiovascular health through several distinct mechanisms. 

More to explore

How is Artificial Intelligence Being Taught at Harvard?

A new Harvard course on artificial intelligence teaches students how to use the tool responsibly.

The Evolution of Human Fathers

Exploring the evolutionary biology of human fathers as caretakers

Civil War American Writer and Abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier

Homes of the poet and abolitionist, whose verses were said to have inspired Abraham Lincoln.