CA 220624

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Applefest returns to Northborough Sept. 15-18

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Vol. 48 | No. 25 | June 24, 2022

‘Hopefully, we’ll be back here’ Westborough tennis programs eye future after state finals losses By Dakota Antelman Managing Editor WESTBOROUGH - Even in defeat, Westborough High School (WHS) achieved a rarity in high school sports this past weekend when it sent both its boys and girls tennis teams to the Division II state finals. Held on the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, both the boys and girls competitions resulted in 3-2 final scores. The weekend marked the boys team’s second consecutive year with a finals appearance, one year after a loss to Burlington last spring. As the boys saw their finals decided in just one match, the girls team, similarly, was moments away from a championship this weekend, with doubles teams battling on razor thin margins after all other matches had wrapped up. Speaking after the loss, WHS Girls Head Coach Scott Henderson acknowledged that teams were unable to bring home a state title in either the boys competition or the girls competition. That, he said, simply leaves a goal for the future. “Hopefully, we’ll be back here again with this quality tennis community,” Henderson said. See full coverage of this weekend’s tennis finals beginning on page 25.

Westborough celebrates Nourse Farm’s 300th anniversary By Laura Hayes Senior Reporter WESTBOROUGH - After 300 years of operation, Nourse Farm is filled with history. Evolving over the decades, it has remained a feature of Westborough life since 1722. It then celebrated its 300th anniversary this past weekend, running a weekend of events and receiving a commemorative plaque from U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern and other local, state and agricultural leaders. “The whole family is filled with pride thinking about the legacy and many generations here and the fact that we’re one of the oldest farms in the country,” said Marsha Nourse in an interview last week. Jon Nourse, who is Marsha’s husband and part of the eighth generation of Nourses, reflected on how his ancestors went through everything from world wars to epidemics to keep working at the farm. “It’s a chance for us to show off our farm and talk about all of the challenges that our family must have gone through over the last 300 years,” Jon then said of this celebration.

Aly Abayazeed, of Northborough and Omneya Elmasry, of Worcester help their children pick strawberries during the Nourse Farm 300th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday in Westborough. Jon Nourse speaks during Nourse Farm’s 300th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday.

Nourse Farm celebrates 300 years The farm was established in 1722 by the descendants of Rebecca Nurse, who was one of the 20 people executed during the Salem Witch Trials. Over three centuries, the site had remained a family farm, Jon said. Nourse Farm | 9

PHOTOS/JON RATNER


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