New Hampshire - Cultural Destinations
- By Smithsonian.com
- Smithsonian.com, November 06, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The MacDowell Colony (Peterborough)
The MacDowell Colony is an artists' colony in Peterborough, celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2007. The MacDowell Colony has offered a creative, all-expenses-paid haven for writers, composers, painters and other artists ever since pianist Edward MacDowell established the place in Peterborough in 1907. Over the years, MacDowell's 250 residents have included composers Aaron Copeland and Leonard Bernstein, writers Willa Cather and Mary Higgins Clark and playwright Thornton Wilder, who wrote Our Town while at the Colony.
Fairs
From the Stratham Fair, which is the first of the season offered in late July, to the late-season offering at the Sandwich Fair, a visit to one of New Hampshire's major country fairs is worth a special trip, or as an add-on to other travels in the state. Of special note is the Deerfield Fair, New England's oldest country fair, coming late enough in the season (late September into early October) that it's easily combined with a fall foliage tour of the state. Look for horse shows, a woodsmen contest, a midway and a "relaxation grove" on the fairgrounds.
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