Home » News
Community events in city celebrate Thanksgiving
MANCHESTER - Thanksgiving Day in Manchester will be more than just eating turkey and shopping at Walmart.
Several organizations have scheduled community events for Thanksgiving Day in the Queen City. Hundreds are expected for a pancake breakfast, a high-school football game and a foot race that will close down streets in the Millyard.
The events offer outdoor activities on the morning of a day designed for people to engorge themselves with a family meal anytime from early afternoon to early evening. This year, critics have complained that the giant retailer Walmart will be open all day, and Walmart and other retailers are pushing Black Friday sales into Thursday night.
"This is one person you won't find shopping on Thanksgiving Day," said Greg Hunt, commander of the Sweeney American Legion post. The Maple Street organization holds a traditional Thanksgiving Day pancake breakfast from 7 to 10 a.m. The cost is $3.50, and Hunt said the event is open to the public.
Some of the breakfast customers usually include fans watching the Turkey Bowl, the annual football game that puts the best two high school teams from Manchester schools onto the Gill Stadium gridiron. This year's game, which features Manchester High School-Central and Trinity High School, is slated to begin at 10:15 a.m.
For those who prefer to participate rather than spectate in an athletic event, the Fisher Cats Thanksgiving Turkey Trot, a 5-kilometer run, starts at 9 a.m. and is expected to involve 1,500 or more runners. It is put on by Millenium Running, which organizes runs associated with Christmas, St. Patrick's Day and the Merrimack Ribfest.
Manchester police said motorists should avoid Grante Steet and the Millyard during the race time. Southbound lanes of Commerical and Canal streets will be closed to traffic for the runners, and police especially urge motorists to avoid the Granite Street brige, which runners will cross twice.
- - - - - - - -
Mark Hayward may be reached at mhayward@unionleader.com.
- Deroy Murdock: Corruption aside, the IRS has too much Obamacare authority - 1
- Thomas Sowell: There's lots of bad economic thinking in the immigration debate - 0
- Roger Simon: The slacker who came in from the cold - 3
- Charles Krauthammer: Pushing the envelope, NSA-style - 4
- George Will: Slipping the Constitution's leash - 0
- Sally C. Pipes: Obamacare's exchanges are on a collision course with reality - 26
- David Harsanyi: Liberals are hypocrites when it comes to freedom - 14
- John Stossel: Didn't we give up privacy already? - 0
- Dave Campbell: As a biker, I have loud pipes, so what? - 37
Jonah Goldberg: Freedom: the unfolding revolution
READER COMMENTS: 0- Driver rescued after Franklin crash, 50-foot plunge - 0
- Storms knock out power to about 3,600 PSNH customers - 0
- Nashua couple's deaths called suspicious - 0
- American Medical Response back in good graces of key Manchester officials - 0
- Lebanon’s Colette Schmidt captures N.E. girls’ golf tourney crown - 0
- Sixteen make cut at State Am qualifying - 0
- Granite Stater Matt Bonner in position for another NBA title - 0
- Clippers, Celtics resume talks on Doc, Garnett deal - 0
- Hampton man indicted for distributing child porn - 0
Enfield fire leaves one burned
READER COMMENTS: 0- Should adultery remain a crime under U.S. military law?
- Yes
- 42%
- No
- 58%
- Total Votes: 641



