• Fuel Assistance Help Application Begins

    Fuel Assistance: The Cornwall Food and Fuel Fund can be asked for help with the heating bills during the cold months. The application period starts October 1. Contact Social Service Director Becky Hurlburt at socialservices@cornwallct.gov or 860-689-6511 for an appointment.

  • Voter Registration Session

    Recurring
    Cornwall Town Hall 24-26 Pine Street, Cornwall, CT, United States

    The Registrars will conduct a registration session on October 1 from 9-11 A.M. The deadline to register by mail or online is Oct 18. The Registrars will have a registration session October 18 from 9-8 P.M. Same Day Registration is available during Early Voting.

  • Beginner’s Tai Chi

    Recurring
    Cornwall Town Hall 24-26 Pine Street, Cornwall, CT, United States

    Beginner's Tai Chi: Wednesdays, 5-6 PM, Cornwall Town Hall. First class: January 3. Cost: $50/month (first class is free). For more information: Dave at 672-6726 or davidcolbert7@gmail.com.

  • Writers’ Workshop with Deb Devins – Library

    Recurring
    The Cornwall Library 30 Pine St, Cornwall, CT, United States

    Writers’ Workshop with Deb Devins: A 6-week Writers’ Workshop led by Deb Devins begins Wednesday, September 4, 6pm-8pm. The workshop is open to anyone interested in writing short stories, novels, children’s stories, poetry, personal essays, memoirs, or family stories. Be inspired by the assigned writing exercises, or work on your independent writing projects. Whether you [Read More...]

  • Ongoing Bridge Series with Gary Steinkohl – Library

    Recurring
    The Cornwall Library 30 Pine St, Cornwall, CT, United States

    Bridge is back with Gary Steinkohl: An ongoing series every Thursday through December from 3pm until 5pm at the Cornwall Library. The first class is September 5. If you know basic bidding and play and want to improve your game these classes are for you. For questions and to register contact Gary at garysteinkohl@gmail.com.

Cookies to make this site work properly, we sometimes place small data files called cookies on your device. Most websites do this too.