Marshfield
LATEST NEWS
Wickedly large Halloween festival opens in Boston for the first time
Boston’s first-ever, large-scale Halloween festival — featuring three haunted houses, an Oktoberfest-style beer garden and family-friendly fall activities — is open. Wicked Haunt Fest, located at Hood Park in Charlestown, opened on Friday and will run until Nov. 3. Spanning two acres, the immersive Halloween experience features...
A legacy of service: Middleboro police chief retires after 35 years of public service
MIDDLEBORO – After 35 years of public service, Middleboro Police Chief Joseph Perkins quietly retired from duty last week. “It has been an honor and a privilege to work my way up the ranks of my hometown police department and serve the Middleborough community for nearly three decades,” Chief Perkins said in a press release. ...
Two winning $100,000 Mass Cash tickets sold in Mass. on Saturday
Two winning Mass Cash tickets worth $100,000 were sold in Massachusetts on Saturday. One ticket was purchased at Pit Stop Gas on Winthrop Avenue in Lawrence. The other was purchased at Charlestown Liquors at Thompson Square in Boston’s Charlestown neighborhood. In Mass Cash, players choose five numbers between 1...
If you didn't get enough of the Levitate Festival this summer, this show might be for you
10th edition of the Mad Love Music Festival on tap Along with the Flannel Jam this Saturday, Sunday marks the 10th edition of the Mad Love Music Festival, at the South Shore Conservatory in Hingham. An event founded to memorialize Scituate's late David Jodka, the afternoon soiree is a benefit for the music...
Community Alert: Legal Harborside Posts About Possible Drink Tampering on Social Media
On Monday, Legal Harborside posted the following message on social media about a guest believing one of her drinks may have been tampered with during a recent visit. See the post below:. This is an excellent time to remind the public about the dangerousness of drinks getting drugged. It’s a...
This technology could keep students safer, but state law stands in the way
Over five weeks last year, about 860 drivers sped around Peabody school buses when their red stop signs were extended, signaling students may be crossing the street. How did city officials know? They had placed cameras on 10 buses, which recorded as hurried motorists illegally drove around the halted vehicles.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.