It won’t be long now, and already we’re getting all kinds of notices we’ve been adding to our special calendar for a special time of year: The East Cobb Holiday Guide is your one-stop community resource.
We’ve got all the holidays here: Thanksgiving, Christmas and Hanukkah, as we keep adding to our calendar listings, and provide coverage of holiday events.
They include Santa visits, religious services, arts and entertainment events, caroling, tree lightings, holiday sales, meals, fundraisers and more.
If you have holiday events to share with the public, e-mail us at calendar@eastcobbnews.com.
For photos and news related to the holidays, get in touch with us at editor@eastcobbnews.com.
If you’re interested in running holiday advertising, let us know at advertising@eastcobbnews.com.
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Thank you to Gina Duncan of the Georgia Metropolitan Dance Theatre for the information and photos about its presentation of “The Nutcracker” over the Thanksgiving weekend at the Cobb Civic Center.
She says more than 150 young local dancers will be involved in the classic holiday ballet performance, and they range in age from seven to 18. Their training takes place at the Georgia Dance Conservatory on the Marietta Square, with professional dancers D Patton White as Godfather Drosselmeyer and Alex Barros as the Cavalier joining the cast.
Here the dates and times:
Friday, Nov. 23 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 24 at 2 and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 25th at 2 p.m.
The venue is the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre at the Cobb Civic Center (548 S. Marietta Pkwy) and tickets are $10 to $30. For information visit: www.georgiametrodance.tix.com.
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Early holiday shoppers will have more opportunities to beat the crowds, discover the best finds and help out local charitable efforts with an array of holiday markets leading off upcoming East Cobb Weekend Events.
The Good Mews Holiday Decor Market has been underway for a couple of weeks now and continues every weekend until mid-December at the Sandy Plains Exchange shopping center (1860 Sandy Plains Road at Scufflegrit). Hours are 10-5 Saturday and 12-5 Sunday and all proceeds go to shelter operations;
The Mt. Zion United Methodist Women Craft Show returns (photo above from last year) from 9-5 Friday and 9-4 Saturday at the church (1770 Johnson Ferry Road). It’s the 32nd year for the event, which will have items from more than 100 vendors, door prizes, a bake sale, a quilt drawing and Santa pictures. Proceeds go to UMW programs.
On Saturday, the Ribbons and Holiday Handcrafted Market takes place at Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church (4385 Lower Roswell Road), with goods from more than 50 vendors, face painting for kids, food and more. Mt. Bethel’s mission projects are the beneficiary.
Well before dawn on Saturday many will be lining up for Free Dental Day at Mansouri Family Dental Care (4720 Lower Roswell Road). It’s the 8th year for the first-come, first-serve service, which provides free cleanings, extractions and fillings for those who can’t afford them. Treatment numbers will be given out starting at 5:30 a.m.
Friday Night Lights have been extended for three East Cobb high school football teams that have qualified for the Georgia High School Association playoffs. Two are playing at home: Camden County is at Walton, while Carver of Atlanta visits Kell. Pope will be playing at Creekview in Canton. Kickoff times are all at 7:30 p.m.
On Sunday, the East Cobb-based Play Me Again Pianos non-profit is having a family-friendly fundraiser from 5-7 p.m. at Red Sky Tapas and Bar (1255 Johnson Ferry Road), as it continues to provide refurbished pianos to communities across metro Atlanta. Two are located at East Cobb Park and Egg Harbor Cafe, and another will be presented soon at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.
Monday is Veteran’s Day, and there are plenty of events slated around the county to mark the 100th anniversary of the armistice ending the First World War. The closest to East Cobb is the Marietta Veterans Day Parade that will be held on Saturday, starting at 10 a.m. at Roswell Street Baptist Church (774 Roswell Street) and traveling to the Marietta Square, where speakers and commemorations will take place. The parade is in its 14th year, and is put on by the City of Marietta and the Marietta Kiwanis Club.
Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar item you’d like to share with the community? Send it to us, and we’ll spread the word! E-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com, and you can include a photo or flyer if you like.
Whatever you’re doing this weekend, make it a great one! Enjoy!
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A full slate of winter and spring classes begins soon at The Art Place, and you can sign up starting Wednesday.
A complete list of youth and adult classes can be found here, with course details, fees, dates and other relevant information.
The Art Place also has announced its schedule of holiday events, and tickets are available for them, including the St. Nick’s Cafe and the Empty Bowl Brunch, which is a fundraiser for MUST Ministries.
The Art Place also will begin its annual Artist Attic on Thursday, featuring items produced by class participants for sale through the holiday shopping season.
The sneak-a-peak for the Artist Attack also will be on Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.
Also on Saturday, there will be a gift-giver’s workshop from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. You’ll get step by step instruction for three projects for handmade pieces to place under your holiday tree.
The workshop is for those age 16 and older. The class fee is $30 and the supply fee is $10.
The Art Place is located at 3330 Sandy Plains Road, next to the Mountain View Regional Library and the East Cobb Senior Center.
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Today’s the first day of fall, and it’s starting to feel a little bit like it. Many East Cobb organizations have already begun autumn- and holiday-themed events, and they’re continuing this weekend.
The Good Mews Holiday Decor Market gets under way Friday and continues every weekend through early December, returning to the Sandy Plains Exchange Shopping Center (1860 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 202). They’re open this Friday and the last Friday of the sale, on Dec. 7, from 12-5; otherwise the hours are Saturdays 10-5 and Sundays 12-5. The kitties like the one above who are the beneficiaries of the sale won’t be onsite, but you can get an early start on gently used goods for holiday shopping. Good Mews also is accepting your donations starting Friday and through Nov. 25;
Church fall festivals are starting to gear up too, and coming up is the Eastminster Presbyterian Church Fall Festival from 12-8 Friday and from 10-4 Saturday at the church (3125 Sewell Mill Road). Games, crafts, kids activities and BBQ are on tap, and the proceeds benefit several local charities, including MUST Ministries;
If you want to get out and stretch your legs while soaking up the beautiful weather and tap into the holidays, Halloween Hikes at the Chattahoochee Nature Center (9135 Willeo Road, Roswell) is an ideal event for the whole family. They’re guided half-mile walks along lighted trails and with crafts and other Halloween decorations. The times Friday and Saturday are from 7-9:45 p.m., and the cost is $12 a person;
The high school football season is drawing to a close, with several East Cobb teams still vying for playoff position. Friday’s games kick off at 7:30 p.m, and they include Cass at Kell, Woodstock at Lassiter, Sequoyah at Sprayberry, Roswell at Walton, Campbell at Wheeler and Pope at Cambridge.
By the way, that Walton-Roswell game is going to be shown live from Raider Valley on Georgia Public Television, as the No. 2 Raiders look to stay unbeaten on the season and in region play.
If high school band music is your thing, you’ve got all day Saturday to take in the 35th Southern Invitational Music Festival, which goes from 10-10 at Sprayberry High School (2525 Sandy Plains Road). Admission is $10 for adults; $5 for students with an ID and free for kids 6 and under.
Did we miss anything? Do you have a calendar item you’d like to share with the community? Send it to us, and we’ll spread the word! E-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com, and you can include a photo or flyer if you like.
Whatever you’re doing this weekend, make it a great one! Enjoy!
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Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
We’ll be updating this list of East Cobb July 4 openings and closings as we receive information, but there are a couple of public facilities that you (and especially your kids) can enjoy on the holiday.
The pool at Sewell Park (2051 Lower Roswell Road) will be open from 1-5 on Wednesday. There’s a splash pad for kids that ought to add extra refreshment on what’s supposed to be a hot, humid day (and with the chance of thundershowers).
Admission fees for the pool are $3.50 for children ages 3-7; $4.50 for adults 18-54, and $3 for seniors 55 and older.
Sewell Park pool is open daily through the end of July: M-Th 1-7:30; F-Sun 1-5.
Starting July 29, the pool will be open Sat-Sun only from 1-5, through Labor Day, Sept. 3.
Most other Cobb County public facilities are close on July 4, including libraries. The Mountain View Aquatic Center and The Art Place also will be closed. East Cobb Park (3322 Roswell Road) will be open during its usual hours, 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
The Cobb Emergency Management Office’s regularly scheduled test, which takes place around noon on the first Wednesday of the month, also is being cancelled.
Some restaurants and businesses have announced their plans for Wednesday, and what we have is listed below. If you want to share your information with the community, e-mail us and we’ll add it here: editor@eastcobbnews.com.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
There’s one major Memorial Day event in East Cobb on Monday, a 5K/10K run at the LA Fitness Center on Piedmont Road at Sandy Plains Road that’s free for veterans to enter. There are several official Memorial Day observances nearby, including the Marietta National Cemetery Memorial Day Ceremony.
That service starts at noon and the cemetery is located at 500 Washington Ave. It’s staged by the National Memorial Day Association of Georgia.
The event will be led by Georgia Army National Guard Brig. Thomas H. Blackstock, Jr., commander of the 78th Troop Command. Keynote speaker will be retired Army Maj. Gen. Charles M. Hood Jr. The reflections speaker will be Col. Edward “Rusty” Hightower, Georgia State Defense Force chief of staff at the Marietta cemetery.
The honoree organization is the Georgia World War I Centennial Commission, which will hold events around the state through November, the 100th anniversary of the end of the war.
Here are some other official Memorial Day events in Cobb and elsewhere:
At 9:30 a.m., Smyrna will hold its ceremony at the Twentieth Century Veterans Memorial, 2800 Bank Street (between Smyrna City Hall and the Smyrna Library). The event and parking are free and open to all. Scheduled speakers are retired Army Lt. Gen. Steve Arnold and retired Marine Gunnery Sgt. Victoria Turney. The ceremony will feature the Georgia Army National Guard Band, Campbell High School JROTC, and the U.S. Air Force Honor Guard;
At the Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield (900 Kennesaw Mountain Drive, Kennesaw), also at noon, artillerists explain the steps of firing a cannon by detailing the role of each person working the cannon. Afterwards, the process is performed in real time and the cannon is fired. The program is free and open to the public;
At 11 a.m. at Roswell City Hall (38 Hill Street, Roswell) is Roswell Remembers, which says it’s the largest Memorial Day ceremony in Georgia and includes a 21-gun salute. Live music and BBQ will be available after the ceremony.
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While a number of East Cobb restaurants are having special dinners Sunday night, there are quite a few places to ring in 2018 in public settings that aren’t far from home.
This first one is for kids only, and it’s in East Cobb: a quick Zumba celebration from 11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Sunday at the Northeast Cobb YMCA TRX Studio (3010 Johnson Ferry Road). There will be dancing, singing and a special countdown right around the noon hour.
This event is for kids ages 5-12, and there’s no registration or cost.
Making its New Year’s Eve debut is The Battery Atlanta (800 Battery Ave.), with two events with free admission.
The children’s/family party is from 5:30 to 8 p.m., D.J. Rekka on the Fox Stage, as well as stage show performances and other entertainment. The ice skating rink will be open until 7 p.m.
The adult party goes from 9 p.m. to 12:30 a.m., also with D.J. Rekka, aerialists and acrobats and fireworks. The featured music is by Charles Esten of the CMT “Nashville” program at the Georgia Power Pavilion.
All parking decks are open for both events.
The Marietta Square Winter Wonderland is back for another holiday season, and the ice skating hours are generous: from 10 a.m. to “late” on New Year’s Eve, and from 2-9 p.m. on New Year’s Day.
On New Year’s Eve, food trucks and kid’s events get underway at 5 p.m., the Chick-fil-A cow drop starts at 7 and live music fills the air from 7:30 to 11 p.m. The evening is topped off by the countdown to midnight at 11:59 p.m. and the chicken drop to follow.
In downtown Atlanta, the Peach Drop, presented by the City of Atlanta, has an evening of free events starting at Woodruff Park from 5:30 p.m. until well after midnight. Performers include rappers Jeezy, TLC and Tyrese.
The location is new this year, at the Flatiron Building, and is accessible via the Peachtree Center and Five Points MARTA stations.
Wherever you go and whatever do, bundle up! Temperatures could dip into the low 20s and even lower to start 2018, and may not get above freezing on New Year’s Day and into the first week of the new year.
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On Christmas Day, the East Cobb Lions Club and the Marietta Lions Club prepared special holiday meals for elderly citizens and their families, and community volunteers helped deliver them around Cobb County.
More than 100 volunteers turned out at Powers Ferry United Methodist Church by mid-morning Monday to cook food, fill plates and fruit baskets, and deliver special messages for about the same number of shut-ins.
Longtime East Cobb Lions Club member Ray Moore said the Meals on Wheels program started when he and other Lions learned that the Cobb Senior Services Department didn’t make deliveries on holidays.
What began as a two-day turnaround before Thanksgiving in 1983 has turned into one of the lasting charitable Christmas traditions anywhere in Cobb County.
In early November, Moore contacts Cobb Senior Services for a list of those in need of meals, and starts making holiday delivery plans. If some recipients need extra meals, then the Lions volunteers make sure to note that.
“I’ve got food for 120 people here,” he said. “We’ve got to do something with it.” The Lions groups raise money throughout the year for the holiday deliveries, including selling $5 tickets for a homemade quilt that will be raffled off in May.
Pamela Williams, a member of the Marietta Lions Club, said she wanted to be a part of the program after her grandmother received Meals on Wheels in South Carolina. “I could see the light in her eyes,” Williams said. “It showed me that they cared.”
Each recipient is given a plate with sliced turkey and ham, green beans, sweet potatoes, dressing and gravy, cranberry sauce, rolls, small cakes and a fruit basket. The meals are cooked on-site in the church kitchen, which wafted with the savory smells of holiday food.
Santa Claus paid a visit as volunteers continued to create the fruit basket messages. A first-time volunteer is Dorie Gallagher of the Roswell area of East Cobb, who is spending Christmas alone after her husband died earlier this year.
She admitted it’s been a difficult few months since then, but said “I need to get out, and help the community.”
At the same table, former East Cobb residents Jay Levy and Debbie Cohen were returning as volunteers, for the fifth and third years, respectively. Both now live in Sandy Springs, after raising now-grown children who graduated from Pope High School.
“We come back and see people we recognize, but the most rewarding thing is when you deliver the meals,” Cohen said.
As volunteers filled the fruit bags and loaded food onto the plates, others were getting ready to roll out with the meals. Drivers raised their hands, then got maps for their deliveries.
Each driving volunteer is typically assigned two or three homes in relative proximity. Levy and Cohen were assigned two residences in the South Cobb area. Among them were an elderly woman with two high school seniors in the Mableton area, and a man living alone in Smyrna.
Levy said the biggest challenge often is squaring up the address on the map with what’s on the road. The latter meal recipient, James Dyer, lives in an apartment building on Sandtown Road, which stretches for miles and is located amid commercial and industrial buildings.
Dyer opened the door and was eager for some company, as Levy and Cohen placed his food on a kitchen countertop and chatted with him for a few minutes.
Moore said he’s gratified the holiday Meals on Wheels has grown from “a family thing” in his own household and Lions Club friends to many in the community who simply want to lend a helping hand on Christmas for those who can’t get out.
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Transfiguration Catholic (1815 Blackwell Road): Masses at 10 a.m. and 12 p.m.; Spanish Christmas Mass 2 p.m.
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Situated along Bishop Creek and a fairway at the Indian Hills Country Club is one of the more incredible Christmas light displays one could ever hope to see.
Shooting high into the evening darkness, and lighting up the sky along a portion of Indian Hills Parkway near Summit Drive, the residential display was stopping traffic in both directions when we went by earlier on Christmas Eve.
The intersection is closer to the Lower Roswell Road end of Indian Hills Parkway, and taking a first glimpse of the display in the clearing of the golf course was just stunning.
These photos can’t do it justice, but for all the impressive East Cobb Christmas displays, it’s hard to find any that rival this.
A little bit further north on Indian Hills Parkway, on the same side of the road, was another display that also had motorists stopping. This is between High Green Drive and Sentry Crossing.
The photos below are from homes on Club Valley Drive, off Holt Road.
Want to share your Christmas and holiday photos? Send them to us at: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post them through the New Year.
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We’ve previously rounded up the Christmas service schedule in East Cobb that has all the details, but wanted to note that several of them will be starting on Sunday morning, with a handful pushing into Christmas Day with late-night Candelight services.
Sunday is also the 4th Sunday in Advent, and a good number of East Cobb churches will be holding traditional Advent services in the morning, then offering special Christmas worship services later in the day. Click the link on the church name for that information.
On Monday, a few churches will be having Christmas Day services in addition to Christmas Eve, and we’ve pulled them out individually and listed them below:
Transfiguration Catholic (1815 Blackwell Road): Masses at 10 a.m. and 12 p.m.; Spanish Christmas Mass 2 p.m.
To report incorrect or updated information or to add a service you don’t see here e-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com.
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Submitted photos and information are from the Janice Overbeck Real Estate Team holiday event on Saturday, Dec. 16, in which Santa Claus visited with pets and children, and who took rides on the Christmas train. The photos were free and so were the refreshments.
The last weekend of holiday activities before Christmas is busier than usual since some were rescheduled due to the winter storm, and that’s where we’ll lead off in noting East Cobb weekend events over the next few days:
The Empty Bowl Brunch at The Art Place-Mountain View (3330) Sandy Plains Road) was to have taken place last Sunday, but it’s just been moved a week, and at the same time this coming Sunday 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m. as the original schedule. The cost is also the same; a $15 ticket gets you a handmade soup bowl to fill as often as you like, with the proceeds benefitting MUST Ministries;
Another delayed event is the final local holiday market of the season. The St. Nicholas Holiday Market goes from 12-4 on Sunday at Holy Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church (3431 Trickum Road), with gift items, crafts, jewelry and Greek food goodies;
Also in its final weekend is the Good Mews Holiday Decor Market (1860 Sandy Plains Road), which is open until 6 on Friday, and from 10-6 Saturday and 12-6 Sunday;
Santa’s been making plenty of rounds in East Cobb, even with the snow, but there’s a special visit he’s got in store for pets Saturday at the Janice Overbeck Real Estateoffice (2249 Sewell Mill Road). Bring your furry family member(s) between 12-2 for free photos with St. Nick and refreshments;
One of your last chances to see a live Nativity Scene takes place from 7-9 tonight and Saturday at Wesley Chapel Road UMC (4495 Sandy Plains Road), and it’s a drive-through set up so you can stay in your car, and out of the cold;
Music is in the air all over East Cobb, led by the Cobb Wind Symphony Orchestra holiday concert at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road). It’s free to get in but they’ll gladly accept donations;
The same Lassiter Concert Hall is the venue at 7:30 p.m. Sunday for the Pope High School Fine Arts Showcase, but you MUST purchase tickets in advance. They’re $10 each and can be ordered here; there will be NO sales as the door;
On Sunday at 6:30 p.m., East Cobb UMC (2325 Roswell Road) is having its musical celebration of the Christmas season. “Chosen” features the church’s children’s and adult choirs and orchestra. It’s free, and the 4 p.m. concert is sold out, with seating limited for 6:30 p.m.; get your online tickets here;
As Hanukkah comes to a close, the Chabad of Cobb congregation is once again holding a Coin Menorah event at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at East Cobb Park (3322 Roswell Road). Bring loose change and help what’s billed as the largest coin Menorah in the world; your contributions will benefit Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta;
This isn’t on the holiday list of things to do, but is festive in its own way: The 47th annual Cobb County Invitational Wrestling Tournament takes place starting at 6 p.m. Friday and continues through Saturday afternoon at Lassiter High School (2601 Shallowford Road); it features all six East Cobb high schools, including Pope, the reigning county and state champion. Saturday’s slate starts at 8 a.m. and the championship round gets underway at 2:30 p.m.
Did we miss something? Want to add a calendar listing? Please let us know! E-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it!
Have a great weekend!
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There’s still time to donate unwrapped toys in the Marine Toys for Tots Foundation holiday drive. Some locations have stopped accepting toys, but the following places in East Cobb are continuing as dropoff points through Monday, Dec. 18, the final day:
Appliance Smart, 1355 Roswell Road, 10a-9p;
Great Expressions Dental Center, 3823 Roswell Road, 730a-430p Tue-Fri;
Great Expressions Dental Center, 2211 Roswell Road, 7a-3p;
Great Expressions Dental Center, 1545 Powers Ferry Road, 7a-4p Mon-Fri;
Online financial donations also are being accepted and can be made by going here.
To report incorrect or updated information please e-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com.
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Several hundred East Cobbers—many of them young children happily dancing with glowsticks and awaiting the arrival of Santa—gathered around the pavilion at East Cobb Park Sunday for the annual Holiday Lights celebration.
Sponsored by the Friends for the East Cobb Park, the event also has the support of WellStar East Cobb Health Park, the East Cobb Rotary and other community organizations and businesses.
To see more East Cobb holiday events, please consult our Holiday Guide. Send your holiday news (including photos) to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.
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The 37th Apple Annie Arts & Craft Show takes place Friday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road), and on Thursday, we swung by the volunteer and VIP event to get a glimpse of what’s on store for the weekend.
It’s part of a big holiday weekend of events in East Cobb. See our earlier post here, as well as our full Holiday Guide for more.
More than 120 artisanal artists and craftsmakers are selling their wares at Apple Annie—some, but not all of it—with a Christmas theme. This is one of the bigger juried arts and crafts shows in the area, and vendors are lined up not only in the fellowship area but downstairs and in classroom and meeting room space.
In addition to the arts and crafts sales, a bake sale will be available and the Apple Annie Cafe will serve soups, sandwiches and beverages, with the proceeds going to the St. Ann’s preschool.
There also will be continuous raffle prizes every 15 minutes from show artisans and there will be a separate raffle for a handmade 98″ x 98″ quilt.
Admission is $3 (no strollers), and proceeds go to church parish and local charities. Free parking is in the church lot, with overflow space and shuttle service available at the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road).
To see more East Cobb holiday events, please consult our Holiday Guide. Send your holiday news (including photos) to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.
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The first full week of the holidays in East Cobb culminates with a weekend schedule bursting with seasonal activities. Our continuously updated Holiday Guide has plenty more, but here are a few highlights of what’s going on through Sunday:
Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show: Fri 9-7, Sat 9-2, admission $3; Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road), now in its 37th year, with more than 100 artisan vendors, bake sale, raffle, overflow parking at and shuttle service from Episcopal Church of St. Peter & St. Paul. We’ll have extended coverage on Friday;
Carriage Rides & Santa Visits: Back again at The Avenue East Cobb (4475 Roswell Road) from 3-7 on Friday, as well as Dec. 8 and 15;
“The Story” Christmas at Eastside Baptist Church: A theatrical production with a full orchestra, choir and ballerinas; shows Friday 7 p.m., Saturday 1 p.m. and Sunday 3 p.m. are free; 2450 Lower Roswell Road;
St. Nick’s Cafe: The Art Place-Mountain View’s annual holiday program, with this year’s show entitled “What Could Go Wrong the Night Before Christmas?” Saturday 9 & 11 a.m., 1 and 3 p.m.; tickets are $15 and include Chick-fil-A meals to follow; 3330 Sandy Plains Road;
Holiday Fine Arts Showcase: Two shows with the combined bands, chorus and orchestra of Wheeler High School start at 2 and 4:30 Saturday (375 Holt Road); Tickets are $5 students/$10 adults and are good for both shows;
Bethlehem Walk: In 1992, Mountain View UMC (2300 Jamerson Road) began these self-guided tours of the scene of Jesus’ birth, featuring local citizen/actors, and followed by cider and baked goods. Saturday, Sunday and Dec. 8 & 9 from 7-9 p.m. Admission is free, but donations are accepted;
Christmas Packages: Johnson Ferry Baptist Church’s annual holiday celebration, with games, music, carriage rides, crafts, and more; Sunday 4-7:30 p.m., 955 Johnson Ferry Road;
Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park: The community-wide tree lighting festival, with music from the Dodgen Middle School band and a grand entrance from Santa Claus. Hot chocolate and snack sales to benefit the Friends for the East Cobb Park; Sunday 5-7 p.m., 3322 Roswell Road. Overflow parking at Fullers Park.
Did we miss anything? Have a holiday calendar item to share? E-mail it to: calendar@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it.
Have a great weekend!
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Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Santa Claus just couldn’t wait until December. Neither could Mrs. Claus. As they descended the main stairwell during the WellStar East Cobb Health Park holiday celebration Tuesday, young children gasped with delight.
A few moments later, they lit the tree and Old St. Nick allowed youngsters—and even a few grownups—on his lap to hear their Christmas wishes.
Tuesday’s free event was among the first of many scheduled holiday activities around East Cobb, and as we noted on Monday, there are several others through the first week of the season.
There will be many more times to see Santa Claus, too. On Friday, he’ll make the first of three visits to The Avenue East Cobb (also on Dec. 8 and Dec. 15). On Sunday, he’ll turn on the lights at another major community event, Holiday Lights at East Cobb Park.
We’ll update Santa’s East Cobb itinerary as we discover more of his whereabouts. Until then, please visit our Holiday Guide for many more events, services and celebrations. And please feel free to send your holiday photos and news to: editor@eastcobbnews.com.
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Usually we wait until a little later in the week for this, but the first full week of the holiday season has some early- and mid-week activities, as well as some on the weekend worth noting:
On Tuesday, WellStar East Cobb Health Park (3747 Roswell Road) is having a free public celebration from 5:45-7:45 p.m., with a visit from Santa, tree lighting, entertainment from the Dickerson Middle School chorus and refreshments;
On Thursday, the Georgia Festival Chorus will present the Carols by Candelight service (“Love Came Down at Christmas”), kicking off a busy slate of holiday events at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church (955 Johnson Ferry Road). It’s free and open to public. The doors open at 6:45 and the concert begins at 7:30;
The 37th Apple Annie Arts & Crafts Show returns Friday (9-7) and Saturday (9-2) at the Catholic Church of St. Ann (4905 Roswell Road). Admission is $3 and overflow parking is at the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road), from which shuttle service will be provided. More than 120 artisan vendors, a bake sale, lunch items and more will available, and it’s suggested that you plan ahead and plan to make something of a day about it;
At 7:30 p.m. Friday, Eastside Baptist Church (2450 Lower Roswell Road) will have a weekend-long presentation of “The Story,” a theatrical production for the whole family (with full choir, orchestra and ballerinas) that will be reprised on Saturday at 1 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.;
On Saturday, the Holiday Arts Showcase at Wheeler High School (375 Holt Road) will feature the school’s Band choral and orchestral groups with shows at 2 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tickets are $5 for students and $10 for adults, and they’re good for both programs. Proceeds benefit Wheeler’s fine arts programs.
To check out more East Cobb holiday events, check out our Holiday Guide calendar listings. We’ll have another update later in the week that will post to the East Cobb News main news column. If you have an item to share, please e-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com.
If you have stories/photos of an event that’s already taken place and would like to share it with the public, e-mail to: editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it.
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