Memorial Day Events

Bring flowers to decorate graves at the North Cornwall Cemetery service at 9 A.M., the Seaman’s Memorial service at the Covered Bridge at 10 A.M., the parade at the village green at 11 A.M. with ceremony to follow, then the UCC Carnival on Bolton Hill Road.

NO MOW MAY

NO MOW MAY:Join a national campaign to let lawns grow in May to support bees and other pollinators who are a critical part of the food-web for birds and other wildlife, which in turn bolsters biodiversity and environmental health. Partial lawns help too. If someone mows for you, consider paying as usual or tipping them [Read More...]

Community/Senior Breakfast – Parish House

UCC Parish House 8 Bolton Hill Road, Cornwall, CT

Community/Senior Breakfast, Tuesday, May 28, 9 A.M. UCC Parish House, Must RSVP by May 24 to park.recreation@cornwallct.gov or 860-480-0600.

NO MOW MAY

NO MOW MAY:Join a national campaign to let lawns grow in May to support bees and other pollinators who are a critical part of the food-web for birds and other wildlife, which in turn bolsters biodiversity and environmental health. Partial lawns help too. If someone mows for you, consider paying as usual or tipping them [Read More...]

Recurring

Afterschool Art Program – Library

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

We will open registration every Monday at noon for Wednesday's program that runs from 3:30-5:00pm (and 1:30pm-3:00pm on Region 1 Early Dismissal days). We cap registration at 15 participants and will have a waitlist for cancellations. Those who are registered are welcome to utilize bus drop off from CCS (please contact provezzi@cornwallschool.org to request). We will allow walk-ins [Read More...]

Recurring

Beginner’s Tai Chi

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.

NO MOW MAY

NO MOW MAY:Join a national campaign to let lawns grow in May to support bees and other pollinators who are a critical part of the food-web for birds and other wildlife, which in turn bolsters biodiversity and environmental health. Partial lawns help too. If someone mows for you, consider paying as usual or tipping them [Read More...]