Holliston, Massachusetts, is a town of approximately 15,000 residents in Middlesex County — one of the most authentically New England and most quietly community-spirited towns in the MetroWest region, a place whose walkable village center, working mill buildings repurposed for art and community use, historic shoe manufacturing heritage, and genuinely neighborly character distinguish it from the more suburban communities that surround it. Incorporated in 1724, Holliston developed as a shoe-making town in the 19th century — one of the key nodes in the greater Framingham-Milford corridor where the shoe industry employed thousands of workers and built the civic institutions, church steeples, and Main Street commercial blocks that still define the town’s visual character today. The town sits between the Charles River watershed and a network of glacial ponds and conservation lands that give it a natural richness unusual for a community so close to the Route 495 corridor, and its downtown along Washington Street has maintained the kind of small-scale, locally rooted commercial character that many Massachusetts towns have lost. The Holliston Historical Society at 547 Washington Street is the town’s most important keeper of civic memory — a community-focused organization whose events like the beloved annual Pie Night draw volunteers and new faces together around the town’s history, with a board of directors described as involved and active, and an overall mission of celebrating the community’s shoe-manufacturing heritage, agricultural roots, and civic evolution across three centuries. The Holliston Mill Studios at 24 Water Street is the town’s most creatively exciting and most visually arresting arts destination — housed in a great historic mill building described as really cool, with local artists to meet and 3D city scenes in metal with lights described as incredible work by resident artist Bill — a place described as a great place to view art and meet local artists in a setting that gives the work exactly the kind of industrial-romantic context it deserves. WSK at 24 Water Street — sharing the Water Street mill complex — is Holliston’s most distinctive and most joyfully participatory culinary and cultural experience — open for events and classes with a Bagels & Schmears class described as each participant mixing dough, shaping and boiling their own bagels, learning about boiling and garnishing while the dough rose, making flavored cream cheese while the bagels baked, and leaving with fresh bagels, two schmears, and salt-cured salmon — a sourdough class, high tea luncheon and demonstration, and six-course dinners also described as excellent and superbly executed — described as an all-around great experience and as something Holliston is very lucky to have.
Holliston’s outdoor landscape is defined by the Friends of Holliston Trails network, Wenakeening Woods, and the broader MetroWest conservation corridor — a collection of properties that together give residents and visitors an outdoor experience that rewards both casual walkers and dedicated mountain bikers equally. Wenakeening Woods off Highland Street is Holliston’s most trail-rich and most beloved mountain biking and hiking destination — with single-track trails described as flowy and well-marked and mostly easy to follow, trails 1, 2, 3, and 6 making a good loop with a much more extensive network to explore, narrow at times with beautiful ponds and streams visible throughout, dog-friendly, and accessible in all seasons including frigid winter weather — described as a very nice place to go hike at about 4 miles and as a trail where visitors meet great people and well-behaved pups on every visit. Ashland State Park at 156 West Union Street in adjacent Ashland is the region’s most varied and most family-friendly state park — open from 10 AM with very clear water described as having lots of visible fish, several grilling areas, a trail walk option, picnic areas, and a reservoir described as beautiful in fall with leaves changing color — described as a great place to hang out for a picnic and cookout and as an amazing place to walk around, hike, and enjoy nature without too many other people. The Mass Central Rail Trail — Holliston section connecting through town is the region’s most accessible and most community-cherished linear park — part of the developing cross-state trail connecting Boston to Northampton, running through Holliston’s wooded and agricultural landscapes with the kind of flat, easy surface that makes it perfect for walking, running, biking, and family outings in any season and any weather.
Holliston’s dining scene has taken a significant leap forward in recent years with several exciting new additions complementing established community institutions, making Washington Street and its surrounding neighborhood one of the most interesting restaurant corridors in MetroWest for its size. Rushford and Sons Brewhouse at 747 Washington Street is Holliston’s most warmly embraced and most community-defining new gathering place — open Wednesday through Friday from 4 PM and Saturday from noon and Sunday from noon with a Slush NEIPA described as especially delicious, a Bees Knees honey ale described as truly the bees knees, non-alcoholic options described as plentiful, a beautifully done interior described as great for winter, a great open outdoor space, staff described as warm and accommodating, food trucks coordinated on select days with Purple Pig described as a favorite, and a community energy described as bringing a breath of fresh air to a town that desperately needed something different — described as the best addition to Holliston and as a place where visitors have met lots of young couples and feel excited to continue frequenting. Dream Breakfast & Lunch at 770 Washington Street is Holliston’s most warmly personal and most genuinely homey breakfast destination — open seven days a week from 7:30 AM with potatoes described as delicious with great seasoning, bread described as appearing to be home baked, coffee described as very good, low guitar instrumental music described as very mood setting, bacon described as cooked perfectly, scrambled eggs and egg bacon cheese sandwich described as delicious by visiting couples who returned twice, staff described as very sweet and kind, and an atmosphere described as serene and relaxing — described as a great breakfast experience and as certainly a cut above the greasy spoon with a pleasant relaxed atmosphere and food that was good enough at a reasonable price. Stone’s Public House at 179 Main Street in adjacent Ashland rounds out Holliston’s dining picture as the region’s most atmospherically distinctive and most enthusiastically reviewed pub — open seven days a week from 11:30 AM with an exposed beam interior built inside a barn described as one visitor’s favorite type of restaurant, smoked haddock and clam chowder described as perfect — not a broth and not too thick, with plenty of clams and a slight smokey flavor described as just right — lamb shepherd’s pie described as so delicious with such tender lamb that you can’t go wrong, Irish pizza described as setting the standard, warm lobster roll with butter described as a go-to, dark chocolate lava cake described as a must, prices described as ridiculously reasonable given the region, and service described as very friendly — described as a place that a visitor loved so much after a first visit that their husband declared it their new favorite restaurant before they’d even sat down.