Leicester Archives - The Crazy Tourist Wed, 03 May 2023 10:39:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.3 15 Best Things to Do in Leicester (MA) https://www.thecrazytourist.com/15-best-things-to-do-in-leicester-ma/ Wed, 03 May 2023 10:39:06 +0000 https://www.thecrazytourist.com/?p=115913 Just west of Worcester, Leicester is a town at the northern end of the Blackstone Valley, with a compelling industrial history. From the early days of the American Industrial Revolution, ...

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Just west of Worcester, Leicester is a town at the northern end of the Blackstone Valley, with a compelling industrial history. From the early days of the American Industrial Revolution, Leicester was a center for the production of cards, which were tools for disentangling cotton fibers before being spun into thread. At the turn of the 19th century Leicester was responsible for one-third of all the hand and machine cards produced in North America.

Today, Leicester is a rural suburb of Worcester, with several family farms, and a refined old center, home to a portion of Becker College. In the disc golf community Leicester is known for two excellent 18-hole courses on the same stretch of road along Maple Street.

1. Washburn Square–Leicester Common Historic District

Washburn Square–Leicester Common Historic DistrictSource: Belia Koziak / shutterstock
Washburn Square–Leicester Common Historic District

Dating back to the early 18th century, Leicester’s old core is an archetypal New England town center, set around a rectangular common (Washburn Square).

This space is shaded by beautiful mature trees, and has a bandstand that has hosted a weekly summer concert series for more than three decades now.

On the north side is a line of public buildings like the Colonial Revival Town Hall (1939), the Leicester Unitarian Church (1834), and the First Congregational Church (1901), in a rare Gothic Revival style.

The south side is lined with elegant mansions going back to the 18th century. Many of these are owned by Becker College, including the home of Emory Washburn (1800-1877), the Governor of Massachusetts, abolitionist and Leicester native, for whom the district is named.

On the west side stands the stately Swan Tavern (1768), the oldest building on the common. This local icon opens to the public during special events, and there’s a long-term plan to turn it into a history museum for Leicester.

2. Breezy Gardens

VegetablesSource: Jacob Lund / shutterstock
Vegetables

With a cozy store and greenhouse, this family farm has been in business for some 50 years.

Breezy Gardens uses sustainable and responsible farming methods, such as Integrated Crop Management and no GMO, to produce a wide selection of plants, fruits and vegetables.

In that spirit, the farmstand’s selection is completely seasonal so there’s always something new if you come between spring and fall.

Pumpkin season is surely the highlight of the year for families, when as well as a pumpkin patch there are hayrides, friendly goats to feed, rustic playground rides, a pumpkin bounce house, a corn pit and much more.

3. Southwick Pond

Southwick PondSource: Southwick Pond / Facebook
Southwick Pond

Near the Cascades on the Leicester-Paxton line there’s a picturesque property also in the care of the Greater Worcester Land Trust (GWLT).

All told, Southwick Pond is 118 acres, with trails weaving through a diversity of landscapes on the northern and western shores.

As well as mixed woodland, there’s a beautiful meadow with wildflowers in spring and summer, and a large wetland area growing jack-in-the-pulpits and lush ferns.

Crossing the log bridges in the damper sections, look out for amphibians like red efts and salamanders. June is a wonderful time to come, when the mountain laurel is in bloom, while the fall foliage is always a treat.

4. Worcester

Worcester, MassachusettsSource: Sean Pavone / shutterstock
Worcester, Massachusetts

In Leicester you’re moments away from the second most populous city in New England, noted for its greenery, youthful population and social progressivism.

Worcester has a big footprint, with scores of natural spaces and parks interspersed with nine college campuses and diffuse population centers.

Downtown Worcester has bounced back in a big way over the last few decades and is home to cultural and entertainment institutions like the world-class Worcester Art Museum, and the Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts.

The most happening place in the city has to be Shrewsbury Street on the Eastside, held among the best food districts in New England, complemented by live entertainment and a vibrant events calendar.

There’s nightlife aplenty in the Canal District, at the head of the Blackstone Canal, which spurred Worcester’s development in the 19th century.

5. The Cascades

WaterfallSource: Wirestock Creators / shutterstock
Waterfall

Leicester is on the edge of an extensive green corridor, made up of a chain of reservations managed by the Greater Worcester Land Trust (GWLT).

There are five contiguous parcels of land at The Cascades, crossing portions of Paxton, Holden and Worcester. If you want you can start close by at Boynton Park and walk for miles through the woods, almost forgetting you’re in the suburbs.

There are streams and vernal pools rich with life, as well as a beautiful meadow. The best part is Cascading Waters at the eastern end, where Cascades Brook tumbles 60 feet down a steep, rocky slope. This waterfall is at its best after a spell of rain, but is worth seeing at any time of year.

6. Hot Dog Annie’s

Hot DogSource: Lara Red / shutterstock
Hot Dog

At the time of writing, this hot dog stand at 244 Paxton Street was coming up for 70 years old.

The mark of a great fast food spot is simplicity in its menu, and that is exactly what you get at Hot Dog Annie’s, where the choice is simply hot dogs, burgers, old-time cream soda and root beer, and chocolate milk.

You have to order your dog with BBQ sauce, which is homemade with a secret recipe. Bordering the parking lot there’s a welcoming outdoor dining area, with picnic tables, flowers in barrel planters, and plentiful shade from the trees. Stop by on a Wednesday when you can get 4 hot dogs for a discount.

7. Disc Golf

Disc GolfSource: Diego Trabucco / shutterstock
Disc Golf

Along Marshall Street in Leicester there’s a pair of highly-rated disc golf courses in close proximity.

Open all year, except when there’s snow, Maple Hill (132 Marshall St) is a technical championship course, laid out on a variety of habitats, including open fields, woods, and ponds.

This track dates back to 2002 and has four sets of baskets. A stone’s throw away you’ve Pyramid (103 Marshall St), which has 18 holes, mostly in the woods, although the fairways are relatively open.

With two sets of baskets, Pyramids dates back to 1988, and is renowned for its excellent store, also known as the Marshall Street Disc Golf Pro Shop.

8. Cooper’s Hilltop Farm

Cooper’s Hilltop FarmSource: Cooper's Hilltop Farm / Facebook
Cooper’s Hilltop Farm

Going back to 1918 this fourth generation dairy farm rests atop a verdant hill in Leicester’s Rochdale section. In its first few decades Cooper’s Hilltop Farm was dedicated to wholesale and delivery, and eventually opened its store to the public in the 1950s.

This is in a gambrel-roofed barn, constructed in the 1930s as a facility for the farm to pasteurize its milk. Milk continues to be the staple here, and is still pasteurized and homogenized right behind the store.

You can get whole, low-fat and skim milk, as well as flavored milks and light and heavy cream. The farm also sells its own bread, eggs, and pasture-raised meats, including beef, pork and chicken, along with a slew of locally made artisanal products, from pastries to gourmet cheeses.

9. Leicester Country Club

GolfSource: photoinnovation / shutterstock
Golf

Praised as one of the best public courses in the Worcester area, Leicester Country Club has made a lot of improvements in the last few years, including improving drainage to ensure better playing conditions.

There’s real variety to the challenges at this track, and you’ll need to use every club in the bag. One remarkable hole is the 8th, a short par 4, with a dogleg right, a creek, and a tricky uphill approach shot.

The signature is the par 3 17th, playing uphill along a tight, tree-lined fairway to a green guarded by bunkers. After your game you can recharge your batteries at Grille 19 serving sandwiches, wraps, burgers, salads and shareable appetizers like wings and chicken tenders.

10. Sargent Pond

Sargent PondSource: Belia Koziak / shutterstock
Sargent Pond

Directly east of Leicester Country Club there’s a scenic pond that can be reached on foot down the slope from the center of town.

Something special about Sargent Pond is how little of the shoreline has been developed. The southern shore is edged by lakefront homes, but the northern half has nothing but unspoiled woodlands.

There are two places where you can launch a boat on the pond—at the northern tip of Lake Avenue, and behind the Castle Cantina on Main Street.

Close by, on the southern shore is the Rawson Broom Burial Ground, where you’ll find the final resting place of Colonel William Henshaw (1735-1820).

In a meeting of the Committee of Safety in 1774 he called for “…companies of the men ready to march upon a minute’s notice”, which is the origin of the term, Minutemen.

11. Rochdale Park

BaseballSource: David Lee / shutterstock
Baseball

This lovely public park can be found in Leicester’s southern Rochdale section. What stands out about Rochdale Park is its location, on the shore of a pond, with pleasing views, and glimpses of wildlife including waterfowl, herons, turtles and muskrats.

The park is also a place for active recreation, with a fenced skate park, basketball court, a volleyball court, and a baseball diamond used by competitive leagues. Activities like swimming and fishing are not permitted at this pond.

12. Cotyledon Farm

VegetablesSource: Kitreel / shutterstock
Vegetables

On a mosaic of forest, meadows, wetlands, pasture and arable land, Cotyledon Farm is a small-scale, organic vegetable and herb farm.

This is a progressive, community-oriented place, offering work shares, work trades, internships, regular volunteer work days, and a variety of special project work days.

As well as providing a community-supported agriculture (CSA) program, Cotyledon Farm maintains a roadside farm fridge.

Call ahead to find out what’s in stock, whether it’s the farm’s seasonal fruits and vegetables, local ice cream, local meat, eggs from the farm’s own chickens, or other delicious local products.

13. Tatnuck Driving Range

Golf Driving RangeSource: amenic181 / shutterstock
Golf Driving Range

Close to those disc golf courses on Marshall Street there’s a golf attraction combining a lineup of practice facilities.

The centerpiece is a 250+ yard driving range, with a mix of grass and artificial hitting stations, as well as sand traps around the greens. There’s also a short range, with flags at 30 to 60 yards, perfect for working on your approach play.

Families will be thrilled with the 18-hole mini golf course, which is designed to test your putting skills, with holes up to 50 feet in length.

Finally, there’s an ice cream stand, serving more than 30 flavors of Gifford’s Ice Cream, along with jumbo Kayem hot dogs.

14. Burncoat Pond Wildlife Sanctuary

Mountain LaurelSource: Hunter Kauffman / shutterstock
Mountain Laurel

On the town line with Spencer is Burncoat Pond, which was once home to Leicester’s town beach. Now the western portion of the lake is part of a Massachusetts Audubon Society wildlife sanctuary.

This property is on almost 250 acres, but is one element in a cluster of conservation areas, so you can spend several hours exploring the landscape, or continue through Spencer on the Midstate Trail.

Around Burncoat Pond you’ll enter pine-oak woodlands, cross streams and travel along the edge of wildlife-rich wetlands. In late spring the scenery is magnificent, when the mountain laurel is in bloom.

There’s also a grand view of the pond from Richard’s Overlook, a giant boulder on the Flat Rock Trail.

15. Leicester Harvest Fair

Live MusicSource: mRGB / shutterstock
Live Music

Traditionally taking place on the 3rd Saturday in September, this heartwarming annual event is held on the Town Common.

Marking the start of Fall the Leicester Harvest Fair is a free event featuring a wide assortment of exhibitors and demonstrators, comprising live music and family-friendly games, as well as a walking tour of the town common.

There are booths for everything from baked goods to textiles, eggs, home brews, photography, flower arrangement, and homegrown vegetables. In previous editions there’s also been an open house at the Swan Tavern, with an art show inside.

 

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15 Best Things to Do in Leicester (Leicestershire, England) https://www.thecrazytourist.com/15-best-things-to-do-in-leicester-leicestershire-england/ Tue, 15 May 2018 09:03:30 +0000 https://www.thecrazytourist.com/?p=49889 The largest city in the East Midlands made international news in 2012 when the body of King Richard III was discovered under a car park. Richard had been slain in ...

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The largest city in the East Midlands made international news in 2012 when the body of King Richard III was discovered under a car park.

Richard had been slain in 1485 at the Battle of Bosworth Field, a few miles west, and was buried hastily at an abbey, has long since been defunct.

In 2015 he was given a more fitting burial at Leicester Cathedral, where you can view his tomb.

Fast forward 500 years and modern Leicester hosts the UK’s National Space Centre, an uplifting day out for young astronauts, while there are dinosaur fossils and Egyptian mummies at the New Walk Museum and Art Gallery.

A superb vestige from the steam era can be found at the Abbey Pumping Station, where four Victorian steam engines are in working order, while in 2016 the local football team shocked the world by winning the Premier League against all odds.

Let’s explore the best things to do in Leicester:

1. King Richard III Visitor Centre

King Richard III Visitor CentreSource: facebook
King Richard III Visitor Centre

The last Plantagenet monarch, immortalised as a villain by Shakespeare, King Richard III was killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485. His body was then paraded 15 miles into Leicester and unceremoniously buried at the Greyfriars Friary.

This was demolished during the Reformation and by the 20th century the site had become a car park.

The search for Richard III’s body began in August 2012, and within weeks his remains were rediscovered, easily identified by the scoliosis in his spine.

The visitor centre at the former car park maps out Richard’s life and death, and details both the hunt for his body and the genome sequencing of ancient DNA to ensure the archaeologists had found the right man.

2. Leicester Cathedral

Leicester CathedralSource: Joe Dunckley / Shutterstock.com
Leicester Cathedral

In 2015 Richard III’s remains were officially reinterred at Leicester Cathedral.

You can find his tomb in the chancel, comprising a large block of light Swaledale limestone, deeply etched with the shape of a cross, on top of a darker limestone plinth quarried from Kilkenny.

The cathedral goes back to 1086, but most of its architecture is from a neo-Gothic overhaul in the Victorian period, calling on some of the foremost designers and craftsmen of the day.

The beautiful wooden rood screen was by Charles Nicholson, while the Vaughan Porch on the southern entrance to the church is named for its designer, J. L. Pearson.

This depicts seven figures in ogee headed niches, from the 7th-century St Guthlac of Crowland to Robert Grossteste, Archdeacon of Leicester in the 13th century and a trailblazing scholastic philosopher.

3. National Space Centre

National Space CentreSource: Jason Benz Bennee / Shutterstock.com
National Space Centre

Leicester university is one of the few institutions in the country offering courses in the space sciences, so the city is an apt location for the National Space Centre.

Most of the exhibits are in the Rocket Tower, an outlandish building clad with bubbles of partially transparent EFTE plastic.

In the six galleries you can see one of the only Soviet Soyuz spacecraft in the west, as well as all manner of interactive displays dealing with cosmology, astronomy and the science of space flight.

The museum’s restaurant is in an unforgettable spot, below the noses of the PGM-17 Thor and Blue Streak Rockets.

The National Space Centre also has the largest planetarium in the UK and regularly welcomes space scientists and astronauts to give talks.

4. Leicester Guildhall

Leicester GuildhallSource: shutterstock
Leicester Guildhall

Leicester’s town hall until the 1870s, the timber-framed Guildhall was founded at the end of the 14th century as a meeting place for the Corpus Christi guild.

This was an association of businessmen and men of high social status, all with connections to the church.

The Guildhall has an absorbing history, as Shakespeare is believed to have appeared here in the 16th century, while records show that Cromwell used the building during the English Civil War in the mid-17th century.

This was also the site of the UK’s third-oldest public library, while in 1836 the building became Leicester’s first police station.

There are still cells in place on the east wing’s ground floor, where you can hear about infamous Victorian pickpockets like Emma Smith and Crankie Gemmie.

5. New Walk Museum and Art Gallery

New Walk Museum And Art GallerySource: NotFromUtrecht / wikipedia
New Walk Museum And Art Gallery

Founded in 1849 as one of the UK’s first public museums, the New Walk has the country’s outstanding collection of German Expressionist art, with pieces by stars of the movement like Paul Klee and Kandinsky, going back to when the German Hans Hess was assistant curator.

In 2007 the actor Richard Attenborough donated a huge trove of art to the museum, including an exquisite set of Picasso ceramics.

Kids will be thrilled by the four Egyptian mummies, as well as the full skeletons of two dinosaurs, a plesiosaur and a cetiosaur.

Another scientific wonder here is the charnia fossil, found in 1957. It was the first fossil known to have come from Precambrian rocks (dating from the birth of the planet to 500 million years ago), a period previously deemed too early for such a large life-form.

6. Abbey Park

Abbey ParkSource: shutterstock
Abbey Park

Straddling the River Soar, Abbey Park is a 90-acre public park with exciting pieces of history dotted around.

The park opened in 1882 and is named for St Mary’s Abbey, which was set on the west bank of the Soar.

Founded in the 12th century, this Augustinian monastery was once the richest in Leicestershire, and was the place where Thomas Wolsey died in 1530 while heading south to face trial for treason.

The abbey was torn down during the Reformation and much of its stone was used for Cavendish House, a fine Tudor mansion burnt down in the English Civil War and now itself a spectral ruin.

There are loads of family activities in store at the park, which has a boating lake, “pets corner” with small animals, a lavender maze and a miniature railway.

7. Church of St Mary de Castro

Church Of St Mary De CastroSource: shutterstock
Church Of St Mary De Castro

On the grounds of Leicester Castle, the Grade I listed Church of St Mary de Castro is one of the oldest buildings in the city, dating to the start of the 12th century.

Big pieces of the original walls remain, as well as a host of elements from an expansion made in the 1160s.

The north and west doorways have superb Norman Romanesque zigzag ornamentation, while the piscina and sedilla (decorative recesses) in the chancel have been described as some of the UK’s finest surviving Norman decoration.

Also look out for the massive east window in the south aisle, blessed with astonishing tracery carved around 1300. As a young child, King Henry VI was knighted in the church in 1426. In the same ceremony, Henry then knighted Richard of York, 3rd Duke of York who would later become England’s Lord Protector when Henry was struck by insanity.

8. Great Central Railway

Great Central RailwaySource: Electric Egg / Shutterstock.com
Great Central Railway

At Leicester North you can take your seat on the UK’s only mainline heritage railway.

The Great Central Railway is the only line in the world where you’ll see full-sized steam locomotives passing one another.

The line is open every weekend, as well as bank holidays and certain weekdays during the school summer holidays.

Serving the line are 15 heritage locomotives (some of which are in storage for restoration), mostly from the first few decades of the 20th century.

It takes half an hour to reach the end of the line at Loughborough, but there are lots of special experiences to make the trip memorable.

You can sign up to “drive” the locomotive, or opt for one of the slower services for a Saturday or Sunday Luncheon, including a four course meal.

9. University of Leicester Botanic Garden

Diver - Entry By John W MillsSource: Phil McIver / flickr
Diver – Entry By John W Mills

To the southeast of the city, the University of Leicester’s Botanic Garden is run by the genetics department and has 16 acres of neatly manicured formal parterres, lawns, sculpture, ponds, pergolas and glasshouses.

In these buildings you’ll see the cactuses and succulents, as well as flowers being readied for the summer season.

The garden also hosts delightful Edwardian properties, like the Knoll, Beaumont House and Southmeade, all used as halls of residence by the university.

In the warmer months there are outdoor art exhibitions and live music, while the nearby Attenborough Arboretum in Knighton has a Medieval style ridge and furrow field, ponds and a forest of native trees.

10. Abbey Pumping Station

Abbey Pumping StationSource: zaphad1 / flickr
Abbey Pumping Station

Next to the Soar and moments from the National Space Centre is the city’s museum of science and technology.

The Abbey Pumping Station was established in 1891 as a sewage pumping station, sending this waste a couple of miles west to Beaumont Leys.

What makes the station so special is its grand brick industrial architecture and the four Woolf steam-powered beam engines.

These beasts are each rated at 200 horsepower and could pump 909,218 litres of sewage an hour.

The engine house is the only place in the world where you can see four examples of the same steam engine in working condition.

These are in action on special “Steam with the Team” day held every few months, and the Urban Steam Festival, a full weekend in late June.

11. Leicester City F.C.

King Power StadiumSource: jeafish Ping / Shutterstock.com
King Power Stadium

The Foxes have always been a force to be reckoned with in English football, only spending one season outside the top two leagues in their entire history.

But in 2016 they did something that nobody could have imagined, winning the Premier League when they had been favourites to finish 20th, dead last, at the start of the season.

In August 2015 some bookmakers priced them at 5000-1 to win the league that year, making their victory one of the greatest sporting upsets of all time.

The club plays at the 32,315-capacity King Power Stadium, which has an ebullient, family-friendly mood on match days and sells out for almost every fixture so you have to book well in advance.

12. Bradgate Park

Bradgate ParkSource: shutterstock
Bradgate Park

On the northwestern edge of the city is an 850-acre expanse of beautiful rocky moorland.

There are a few reasons to head here for a country walk.

Bradgate is one of just a handful of places in the UK where you can see Precambrian basement rocks, formed some 560 million years ago, poking through the surface.

The fossils found here and close by are the only known Precambrian fossils to be discovered in Western Europe.

The park also has some 450 red and fallow deer, as well as some mighty oaks, hundreds of years old.

The ruins of the 16th-century Bradgate House are also a delight.

The property, abandoned in the 18th century, was one of the first post-Roman estates to be built from bricks and was home to Lady Jane Grey, Queen of England for just nine days in 1553.

13. Bosworth Battlefield

Bosworth BattlefieldSource: shutterstock
Bosworth Battlefield

If Richard III’s story has piqued your interest you can make the short trip west to the scene of a battle that changed the course of English history.

The Battle of Bosworth Field (22 August 1485) was the culmination of the Wars of the Roses, between the Houses of Lancaster and York.

The Lancastrian Henry Tudor won the day, becoming the first Tudor King, and his opponent Richard III was dumped in a crude grave.

The Heritage Centre not far away details the story of the day and the background of the war, but also shows how archaeologists determined the true site of the battlefield.

There are artefacts from the site, hands-on multimedia displays, replica suits of armour to put on, dioramas and guided walks to bring the battle to life.

In mid-August you can catch the Medieval Festival, which has re-enactments and market stalls.

14. Leicester Market

Leicester MarketSource: The Academy of Urbanism / flickr
Leicester Market

Eight hundred years old, Leicester Market moved to its current location about seven centuries ago.

With more than 270 stalls it’s Europe’s largest outdoor covered market, and as of 2018 is going through a major redevelopment.

The Food Hall is open 09:00-17:00 Monday to Saturday and has fresh fruit and vegetables, cheeses (try the regional red leicester), fishmongers and butchers counters, sourced their produce from around Leicestershire where possible.

The remaining stalls sell fabrics, clothes, jewellery, freshly cooked food, second-hand books, cosmetics and flowers.

At the centre of the market is the neo-Baroque Leicester Corn Exchange (1850), now housing a restaurant and pub.

15. Curry

CurrySource: shutterstock
Curry

After the Second World War Leicester swelled with immigration from South Asia but also received large numbers of people from Uganda and Kenya’s Asian communities in the 1970s.

This has had a transformative effect on the city’s culture, most noticeably in the northern and eastern suburbs.

The Golden Mile on the Belgrave Road, north of the city centre, is like a little India, with the best curry restaurants in the city next to lavish jewellery and sari shops.

Curry is such a part of Leicester’s identity that it even has an annual “Curry Awards” at a gala dinner to pinpoint the finest establishments.

Some of the picks from the last couple of years are Shimla Pinks, Chai Paani (vegetarian), Khyber, Masalas (takeaway) and Tadka.

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