Millerton loves a festival
Lily Fallon, 5, who attends school in Red Hook, shows off a completed cookie Friday, Nov. 24, at the North East Community Center.  
Photo by John Coston

Millerton loves a festival

MILLERTON — The lights were strung, the fire trucks were manned and ready,  festooned with lights, holiday decorations and blow-up Santas, and Main Street was cordoned off. 

At a few minutes after 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 24, the village once again became energized with sirens and lights as the 2023 Festival of Lights got underway. Looking down the stretch of spectator-lined sidewalks, the big tree was lit and the long line of fire trucks, four-wheelers, floats and antique motor cars edged their way up Main Street. 

Children ran to collect candy tossed from the passing armada as their parents hovered close behind ready for any overly eager move. 

This year’s parade was extensive, drawing fire companies from across Dutchess County and Connecticut. Revelers called out to the crowd, cheering everyone on in high holiday spirit. 

The parade wound its way through some village streets and back along Century Boulevard before eventually dispersing into the night. 

Friday was a daylong festival that began at 10 a.m. with a free screening of “The Grinch” at The Moviehouse. Approximately 300 children received free popcorn and soda. 

By the time they poured out of the cinema, Main Street was coming alive with parents, some with strollers, couples walking their dogs and cupping Irving Farm coffee cups, and clusters of adults showing off their town to Thanksgiving visitors. 

Shops sometimes have their best day of the year, offering seasonal sales and discounts.

At Veterans Park, Jeff Scarpa was busy turning a block of clear ice into a stunning, glistening moose sculpture. And just as he put the finishing touches  on his work of art, a brass band was setting up. The Salisbury Band’s Christmas Brass & Hot Chocolate Society filled the scene with traditional holiday favorites — “Jingle Bells” put just the right accent on the street scene. 

As the afternoon stretched out and the temperature fell into the low 30s, the line for a hot drink at Irving Farm stretched out, too.

There were hayrides, a children’s raffle, and a snowman scavenger hunt sponsored by the Millerton Business Alliance. There was a woodworking expo at the Irondale Schoolhouse. 

The North East Community Center hosted a cookie-decorating party with music from Roger and Lenny (Roger Cohn and Lenny Sutton, of rogerandlennymusic.com).  Between 90 and 100 children had plied their cookie-decorating skills.

The crowds huddled close to get a good view of the passing fire trucks lighted up like Christmas trees. Photo by John Coston

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