Exploring Worcester, Massachusetts, and Purgatory Chasm

Pleasures to explore in and around Worcester

Hikers stand in Purgatory Chasm, near Worcester, Massachusetts

Click on arrow at right to view full image gallery
(1 of 3) Adventures in Purgatory Chasm
Photograph by Normal Barrett/Alamy Stock Photo

Wild cats at the Ecotarium

(2 of 3) Wild cats at the Ecotarium
Photograph courtesy of the Ecotarium

Painting of a pregnant nude

(3 of 3) Picturing reproduction, at the Worcester Art Museum
Image: BPK Bildagentur/Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz/Bertram Kober (Punctum Peipzig)/Art Resource, NY ©2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn.

Shimmying through “Fat Man’s Misery,” a cleft in towering granite bedrock, is among the pure, kid-like joys of scrambling in Purgatory Chasm State Reservation. The entire site is a geological funhouse—of uncertain origins. “It’s a fault,” posits Nichols College geology professor and glaciologist Mauri S. Pelto, who has studied the area south of Worcester and updated previous theories, “and the fault was exploited by a glacier that plucked out the rocks” that now litter the adjacent Purgatory Brook Valley. It was also likely a sacred place for the regional Nipmuc peoples—and given its pejorative name, conventional wisdom holds, by colonists intent on Christianizing them.

Whatever the history, the very essence of the 70-foot gorge and its cavernous, perhaps ominous, terrain still captures the imagination. Check out the precipitous outcroppings—“Lovers’ Leap” and “Devil’s Pulpit”—or take the half-mile loop that winds through the boulder-strewn bottom and then circles back on a rough path along the cliffs. For those less eager to test their agility by clambering, the 1,800-acre park—celebrating its centennial this year—has tamer trails following brooks or through the woods, along with a playground, grilling zones, and a visitors’ center.

After everyone’s exercised, drive through pastoral scenery, stopping for snacks or lunch at the Sutton Center Store, en route to exploring art, culture, and food in Worcester.

The Worcester Art Museum’s exhibit “With Child: Otto Dix/Carmen Winant,” opening September 21, looks at women’s social, political, and medical conditions, notably during the Weimar Republic, and includes “The Trouble with Pregnancy: A Forum on Art and Reproduction,” on October 18, as well as a community arts showcase on the subject.

Check out the city’s emerging artsy Canal District, with its giant murals, Saturday farmers’ market, shops, bars, and restaurants. A self-guided walking tour explains the 1820s Blackstone Canal, which linked to Providence’s seaport, and the ensuing industrial boom. Lock 50 serves super-fresh salads, burgers, and crêpes. Binh An Market offers Asian teas and take-out fare, such as Vietnamese spring rolls and honey-soaked pastries; walk a few blocks and eat them in the courtyard of a converted factory that now holds the Crompton Collective—stalls of vintage clothing, antiques, and local artwork. Upstairs, don’t miss the “lifestyle and plant boutique” Seed to Stem, packed with ingenious botanical creations and home goods.

Get back into nature at the nearby Ecotarium, a kid-oriented science center. It has hands-on experiment stations, a planetarium, walking trails, and a new Wild Cat Station featuring sibling mountain lion kittens found orphaned in California.

Worcester’s food evolution makes dinner easy. For inventive grilled fish, meat, and vegetarian dishes, go to deadhorse hill, or dig into the artisanal pies at Volturno Pizza Napoletana. The Sole Proprietor is a traditional favorite for seafood cooked every which way, while the newer Fatima’s Café offers Africa-centric cuisine, like Ethiopean injera (spongy flatbread) and Kenyan ugali (cornmeal porridge). Eat before or after a show at the historic Hanover Theatre, where groundbreaking comic actress Carol Burnett appears for An Evening of Laughter and Reflection on October 17.

A day in purgatory, it turns out, is not that bad.

Read more articles by Nell Porter-Brown

You might also like

The Celts in Art and Imagination

A new exhibition at the Harvard Art Museums traces 2,500 years of Celtic art.

Conan O’Brien Named Harvard’s 2026 Commencement Speaker

The comedian, host, and 1985 graduate will deliver remarks at the May 28 ceremony. 

Harvard’s Hasty Pudding Honors Rose Byrne

The Bridesmaids actress celebrated her 2026 Woman of the Year Award with a roast and a parade.

Most popular

One of Harvard’s Oldest Structures Is Hiding Behind a Beer Garden

A crumbling wall in Harvard Square holds centuries of the city’s story, if you know how to read it.

Inside Harvard’s Most Egalitarian School

The Extension School is open to everyone. Expect to work—hard.

Radcliffe Acquires a Black Feminist’s Archive

An architect of Black women’s studies, Barbara Smith introduced the concepts of “identity politics” and “intersectionality.”

Explore More From Current Issue

A black primate hanging lazily on a branch in a lush green forest.

What Bonobos Teach Us About Female Power and Cooperation

A Harvard scientist expands our understanding of our closest living relatives.

Illustration of a person sitting on a large cresting wave, writing, with a sunset and ocean waves in vibrant colors.

How Stories Help Us Cope with Climate Change

The growing genre of climate fiction offers a way to process reality—and our anxieties.

Modern campus collage: Rubenstein Treehouse Conference Center, One Milestone labs, Verra apartment, and co-working space.

The Enterprise Research Campus in Allston Nears Completion

A hotel, restaurants, and other retail establishments are open or on the way.