An afternoon of strawberries and sousaphones
“In 1943, a boys’ band from Nashua came out to Hollis and gave a concert, and a lot of the parents and the kids were very enthusiastic and wanted to do a band of their own because at that time there was not music in the public school,” said David Bailey, conductor of the Hollis Town Band. “1946 was the first mention of the Strawberry Festival, and it was put on to help raise money for what was at that time called the Hollis Church School Band.”
Since then, Bailey said, the Band, eventually in partnership with Hollis Woman’s Club and the Hollis Congregational Church, has raised money every year by inviting the public to listen to the Band perform and eat strawberries. This year’s Festival will take place Sunday, June 28, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Hollis Town Commons.
“There will be strawberries and shortcake,” Bailey said. “There will be hand-whipped cream. There will be ice cream and people can have strawberry shortcake with whipped cream or strawberry shortcake with ice cream or even just strawberries in a bowl.” The point, he said, is to support the Hollis Town Band, while eating the strawberries.
Bailey said this event has its roots in Hollis’s history as a farming community.
“It’s a great throwback to old-fashioned small-town agricultural New England,” he said, “when people would get together and pause because being farmers would be from sunup to sundown and even later, seven-days-a-week kind of job. And so they would take like one afternoon out of a busy season. At this point in the year, the crops are in the ground. They’ve been planted. Strawberries are an early crop, so that’s one of the reasons why we can have the festival now. But they could take an afternoon off and not put themselves back time-wise because of not working for the day. This is a lot like that, and when the weather’s nice — my fingers are crossed — we get between 1,000 and 2,000 people coming to listen and enjoy the desserts.”
The Festival is also a reminder of what an important institution the Band is to the local community.
“We have about 65 members,” Bailey said. “And while the band is called the Hollis Town Band, the members come from around 20 different towns in this surrounding area and we rehearse once a week in Hollis. I’m in my 41st year as the conductor of the band. It’s really close to my heart.”
The Hollis Strawberry Festival and Band Concert
Where: Hollis Town Common (3 Monument Square, Hollis) or at Middle School in case of bad weather.
When: Sunday, June 28, from 2 to 4 p.m.
Admission: The concert, which will feature patriotic and popular instrumental music, is free. The money raised will come from the purchase of strawberry desserts.farm-a-q.
Featured photo: Photo from cultivatenewengland.com/farm-a-q.
