It's Holiday Time in Amenia

AMENIA — Big holiday doings will take place in the town of Amenia and the hamlet of Wassaic this Sunday, Dec. 3.

Amenia’s holiday of lights festivities will start at the United Presbyterian Church’s parish hall at noon, when a free soup and sandwich lunch will be served.

There will be face painting for the younger crowd and an antique decorating workshop provided by the Amenia Historical Society.

An ecumenical service will take place at the church at 3 p.m.

At 2:30 p.m., Santa Claus himself will ride to the Amenia Free Library atop one of the Amenia Fire Company’s firetrucks. Children will receive a free picture of themselves with Santa, as well as a gift.

Santa’s visit runs concurrently with the library’s holiday open house, which is in its 16th year.

At 4 p.m., Santa will arrive at the Wassaic firehouse to take pictures with children and give them gifts. Free refreshments will be available. Tree lighting ceremonies at the Wassaic Center will follow Santa’s visit. Wassaic’s citizen of the year will be announced and a new peace pole, courtesy of Wassaic’s World Peace Sanctuary, will be unveiled.

Once 4:30 p.m. rolls around, Santa will walk to Fountain Square, where children will decorate the town tree with ornaments handmade by the Feathers and Fur 4H Club. Webutuck High School’s chorus will sing a medley of holiday songs and carols for the crowd. The ceremony will conclude with the announcement of Amenia’s Citizen of the Year and the lighting of the town tree.

In Amenia town Supervisor Janet Reagon’s opinion, the holiday of lights ceremonies really help "kick off" the holiday season.

"We’re basically going to have a lot of fun and get into the Christmas spirit," she said. "To be part of the holiday season is a very heartwarming thing."

Preparations for the two ceremonies are basically complete.

"I recently drove through Wassaic and a lot of people have stuff up. Everything’s ready," Reagon said.

Last year, holiday festivities took place in Amenia the first Sunday in December, and in Wassaic the Saturday after.

"It was a little anticlimactic to have tree lightings on two separate days. We wanted to get a sense of the community as a whole by having them on the same day," Reagon explained.

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