The Holiday Season is almost upon us! We can barely gobble down Thanksgiving leftovers before it starts.
Coming up are concerts, caroling, movies and plays, house tours, parades, tree trimmings, candle lighting, Santa and elves, school programs, office parties, decorations everywhere, and shopping, shopping, shopping!
It’s hard to keep track of it all.
But we have listed some highlights, mostly in early December. For more events through New Year’s and January, there is a link at the end of this article to holiday-related happenings on the Eastern Shore, including events in Delaware and Virginia.
Though many events are free, some are ticketed. Some limit audience size and require reservations. Tickets for most can be purchased or reserved online.
The Mid-Atlantic Symphony Orchestra’s traditional Holiday Joy concert will be presented on November 30 in Easton, December 2 in Lewes, Del., and December 3 in Ocean City.
The Rescue Fire Company’s model Train Garden has been a December tradition in Cambridge for 89 years.
“Christmas Train Gardens,” as they are called, originated in Baltimore and are still popular there. They have evolved far beyond the single-track model train that ran in a simple circle around the Christmas tree. Many have expanded to fill entire rooms or even buildings, both in homes and businesses. The train gardens became especially popular in fire departments, where they drew large crowds.
A train garden usually has multiple tracks with several trains that toot as they pass each other. Along the tracks are villages with miniature houses, stores, animals, people, and landscaping. The tradition was imported by German immigrants in the late 1800s and took hold in Baltimore, spreading across Maryland. Other areas also have train gardens, but Baltimore remains the capital of the Christmas Train Garden.
The Cambridge fire station’s Christmas Garden is the longest continuously operating fire department train garden in the U.S. and is still at its original location. Open on December evenings and weekends. Closed Christmas Day. Located in the historic old firehouse at 307 Gay Street. Free.
On December 1 and 2, Chestertown will celebrate its sixth annual A Dickens of a Christmas festival, featuring horse-drawn carriage rides and costumed character guides along with music, food, oysters, bonfires, book talks, and house tours. See what Christmas was like in Charles Dickens’s day in the 1840s. The weekend begins Friday at 5pm and continues all day Saturday, starting with a 5K Run Like the Dickens Run/Walk. The Baltimore Pipe Band and American Rogues play music of the era. Victorian costumes are encouraged. Most events are free.
On December 2, in Rock Hall, Santa arrives in a lighted boat parade. Festivities begin at 6pm as Santa and Mrs. Claus travel by fire truck to Main Street where they will help light the crab basket Christmas tree. There will be a campfire with s’mores and Santa visits. Free.
On December 2-3, Mount Harmon Plantation on the Sassafras River near Earleville, in Cecil County, celebrates its Yuletide Festival & Holiday Marketplace. The Georgian brick manor house built by the duPont family around 1730 is set in a beautiful 200-acre nature preserve with over five miles of nature trails. In its heyday, the plantation exported tobacco to Europe. The Yuletide Festival features a colonial Christmas. Admission charged.
On December 3, the Massey Aerodrome and Museum will hold its annual holiday party, open to the public. Weather permitting, as many as a hundred small planes may fly in for the festivities. Visitors can tour the early aviation museum. There will also be an exhibit of vintage cars, trucks, hot rods, and motorcycles next to the museum’s DC-3 plane. If you have a vintage vehicle, come early to the aerodrome to park it with the others.
The Open Hanger party runs from 10am-2pm with lunch starting at noon. Free.
On December 8, in Elkton from 5-8pm, is the annual Christmas Cookie Throwdown. Visitors go from store to store, booth to booth, to see all the Christmas cookies and discover which recipe will win the coveted prize of Best Christmas Cookie 2023.
December 8 starts the Christmas in St. Michaels weekend, including holiday music, tour of homes, breakfast with Santa, boat parade, parade on Talbot Street, firing of the cannons, and community supper. The parade kicks off Saturday at 10:30am. The lighted boat parade begins at 6pm.
The St. Michaels Homes Tour may be the best on the shore. The in-town houses are within walking distance of each other. Most were built in the 18th and 19th centuries for watermen and seafarers. Many have been restored, expanded, and adapted for a modern lifestyle.
The country homes, located just outside of town, are not to be missed. Most are on beautiful waterfront properties with exquisite architectural details. A professional, licensed shuttle service ferries visitors to the country houses. The bus is included in the tour ticket.
December 8 and 9 are the dates for SantaCon XIII, bringing a weekend of fun, food, and music to the streets and stores of Ocean City. It’s Christmas at the beach at its best!
A community theater production of Elf the Musical will run for two weeks, December 7 to 17, at the Avalon Theatre in Easton. Shows are on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings at 7pm with a 2pm Sunday matinee.
Church Hill Theatre presents a stage production of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, one weekend only, December 15-17. The play is adapted to a modern setting in a radio station. They expect to sell out, so get your ticket early. Friday and Saturday evenings at 8pm, with Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2pm.
An expanded listing of holiday happenings across the entire Delmarva peninsula can be found on the Secrets of the Eastern Shore website. This excellent site includes events in Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia.
References and More Information:
Jane Jewell is a writer, editor, photographer, and teacher. She has worked in news, publishing, and as the director of a national writer's group. She lives in Chestertown with her husband Peter Heck, a ginger cat named Riley, and a lot of books.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk