New England

5 Best Town Greens in New England

The New England village green is one of the region’s most memorable sights. We asked This Old House producer Bruce Irving to share his picks for the 5 best town greens in New England.

5 Best Town Greens in New England

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine

Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan
Village greens — and just about every other part of New England’s built environment — have been grabbing Bruce Irving’s attention for a long time. He produced television’s This Old House for 17 years before launching a career in the Cambridge, Massachusetts, area as a real estate agent and home renovation consultant. His book New England Icons reveals the hidden histories of the region’s familiar sights. If he had a spare moment to spread out a picnic, here’s where he’d go …
5 Best Town Greens in New England
Woodstock, Vermont
Photo Credit : Erika Mitchell/Istockphoto

5 Best Town Greens in New England

Cambridge, Massachusetts

In the center of a hotbed of modern innovation is a site with roots in the hotbed of the American Revolution. On July 3, 1775, General George Washington rode onto Cambridge Common and assumed command of the Continental Army. Hard by Harvard Yard, it’s a great place to stroll — especially after the $6 million renovation that wrapped up in 2016, marking Cambridge Common’s first major face-lift since the Bicentennial.
Woodstock, Vermont
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Vermont Chamber of Commerce

Woodstock, Vermont

Standing in this lovely ellipse, a visitor can, in one rotation, take in a dozen examples of great American architecture. Exquisite Georgian, Federal, and Greek Revival homes line the town green, the centerpiece of a streetscape declared one of the “Great Places in America” by the American Planning Association.
The monuments scattered about a green offer a narrative of a town’s past—like the cube of granite with the hook poking out of its top in Amherst, New Hampshire's green. Read more about Amherst, New Hampshire's town common.
Amherst, New Hampshire
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

Amherst, New Hampshire

This is a village that keeps its heritage alive, with two museums and the largest historic district in the state: 120 buildings on 1,600 acres. In the middle of it all, Amherst’s beautiful oval green is as hardworking as ever: In a typical year it hosts a Christmas tree lighting, band concerts, an antiques show, farmers’ markets, an Easter egg hunt, and a big July Fourth celebration.
Craftsbury Common, Vermont
Photo Credit : Julia Shipley

Craftsbury Common, Vermont

Perched on a hilltop, this two-acre rectangle has escaped the heavy-traffic necklace that so many greens suffer, thanks to the rerouting of a state highway back in the 1950s. Featured in Alfred Hitchcock’s The Trouble with Harry, the village green is ringed by a gleaming white three-rail fence, faithfully maintained since the early 1900s by Village Improvement Society volunteers. The second Saturday of every August finds townspeople at Old Home Day, complete with potato-sack races.
New Haven, Connecticut
Photo Credit : GK tramrunner/CC BY-SA 3.0

New Haven, Connecticut

The Puritans measured the settlement’s green to hold 144,000 people. Why? Such was the number of souls prophesied to be saved in the Rapture, and the town fathers wanted a good spot for the airlift. When Hurricane Sandy descended in the fall of 2012, it toppled an old oak tree. Among its roots was a human skeleton, likely dating to colonial times, when the green was the town’s burying ground.

More Favorite Town Greens from Yankee’s Editors

Though it’s easy to see the merits in Bruce Irving’s choices, it’s impossible for us to leave off two Connecticut gems — Guilford and Litchfield — while those who’ve visited Lexington, Massachusetts’s green will certainly want their votes tallied too.
Best Town Greens in New England
Guilford, Connecticut
Photo Credit : Lisa Sacco
What are your picks for the best town greens in New England? Let us know in the comments below.

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  1. While Southington’s Green is of modest size, I would submit that no Green anywhere receives both the hardy work-out and splendid care than ours does.

  2. Weston, Massachusetts! A beautiful Town Hall sits at the top of the green and the highschool graduations (on sunny days) are all held there. I grew up there and played on the green, picnicked on the green and attended many fairs, concerts and events there. Thanks!

  3. The Guilford Green is an iconic New England Green surrounded by beautiful old homes and churches!

  4. The Guilford, CT green is lovely. I remember, as a kid, attending a wedding at the Congregational (what else?!!) there. But I have to admit my heart-felt favorite is Lancaster, NH. Band concerts in the summer, people honking their horns when Gardner Wentworth conducted the band with his inimitable flair. (I think I’m homesick).

  5. My best is Guilford Ct. My grandfather had a cottage there when I was growing up. Every summer my sister and 2 or 3 female cousins would spend a whole week with grandfather without any parents. It was GREAT!! We thought we were taking care of him!! Soooo many good memories there!!

  6. I don’t think it’s cliché to mention the green at Lexington, Massachusetts perhaps one of the most famous of greens.

    1. Lexington Green was my first thought as the other greens may still have existed at this point but the chances are they would not have been American.

  7. Love Woodstock VT. Walpole NH has a great common, very classic New England. Harvard MA common is nice in the fall…grab a coffee at the General Store, walk the common and see the old houses, then walk down to the Bare Hill Pond.

  8. Oh my, Milford CT has 3 Greens. One surrounded by retail, middle green has a river to large pond to beautiful falls with the old Milford High Scool over looking it and in front of the falls the old town Hall and the third as tranquil river with ducks surrounded by some beautiful homes. Three for one!

    1. I completely agree that Milford Ct. has beautiful greens. I have lived here for most of my life and it is the most beautiful town I have ever lived in. So many activities at our main green. And let’s not forget the annual Oyster Festival. Oh, and it is the second longest green in New England. Wonderful place to live.

  9. Growing up in southern NH, on the MA border, we always referred to these areas as town commons. I would be interested in knowing how the terms town common and town green differ – whether it is a geographical thing, or if other factors distinguish the two.

  10. Georgetown MA. The green is tiny. My son’s house in on the edge of it, and dates from the early 1800’s

  11. I think the greens in the towns you know best, in my case, Norwalk, CT, Stockbridge, MA and Wiscasset, ME.

  12. I think if you are lucky enough to have a town common or village green you are lucky. The Common, North Andover MA.