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Great Scots! This New Hampshire festival celebrates heritage and connection.

THE CLAN-DO SPIRIT: Scottish clans line up for the opening parade and roll call at the New Hampshire Highland Games & Festival in Lincoln, New Hampshire, Sept. 20.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

October 29, 2025

You never truly finish a family tree.

That鈥檚 how genealogist Leslie Greene Kittenbrink describes her calling to trace ancestry 鈥 a pursuit that branches and blossoms with every discovery. And to Ms. Kittenbrink and the tens of thousands who gather each September for the New Hampshire Highland Games & Festival, this event is more than a party. It鈥檚 a way of reconnecting with their Scottish heritage.

On a sunny afternoon, the sounds of bagpipes float across Loon Mountain. What began in 1975 as a picnic among Clan Murray members has grown into an annual weekend festival. It still highlights traditional feats of strength 鈥 the caber toss, stone put, and hammer throw 鈥 but now also includes Highland dancing, sheepdog trials, and parades of tartans.

Why We Wrote This

What began in 1975 as a picnic among Clan Murray members has grown into the annual New Hampshire Highland Games & Festival. Cue the bagpipes.

Clan tents line the grounds, offering history and hospitality. For Stephen Boutwell of Clan Rose, each year feels like a reunion. Visitors often ask him for help tracing their clan connections.

鈥淚t gives me a sense of belonging and pride,鈥 he says. He recalls how his grandmother created a nearly 200-foot family tree on paper, a legacy that continues to inspire him and his father, Bruce.

Shutdown hits government workers already reeling from Trump鈥檚 cuts

Ms. Kittenbrink has traced her family into the 1700s. When the clan lacked a tartan, she designed one, drawing on her father鈥檚 work as a textile engineer in Lowell, Massachusetts. Today, three generations wear the tartan proudly 鈥 the past and present stitched together.

PLAID PAD: Bruce Boutwell greets visitors inside Clan Rose鈥檚 booth.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
CATTLE ROYALE: Jeffrey Patterson (right), of Bristol, Maine, walks his Highland bull Winston through the crowd. Winston will gain 1,000 pounds by the time he鈥檚 full-grown.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
MERRY QUEENS OF SCOTS: Young women compete in the dance contest.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
ON THE HUNT FOR HERITAGE: Scottish deerhounds, known as the royal dog of Scotland, were originally bred for hunting and coursing deer.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
JOY STICK: A competitor participates in the caber toss with a 19-foot pole.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
KILTY PLEASURE: A man wears his clan鈥檚 tartan plaid and sporran. Each clan has its own distinct patterns, with several variations worn on different occasions.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
SCOT TROT: A pipe band marches onto the field at the festival.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

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