2 minute read

Sheffield

sheffield a quiet town, with ukuleles and cannabis canopy

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Clockwise from left: Bartholomew’s Cobble Reservation, Campo de’ Fiori, Sunset Meadows Vineyards.

The town of Sheffield lies just north of the Connecticut border in the Housatonic River Valley, with gentle mountains on both sides. It’s only 100 miles from New York’s Central Park as the crow flies, or two and a half hours by car, and it’s where the Berkshires officially begins. After almost 300 years, it’s still a rural town with a comfortable pace of life. Second homes both new and old mix in nicely with working farms. Part of the town lies along Route 7, and the charming village of Ashley Falls is just a few miles to the southwest. The Colonel John Ashley House there, where the enslaved Mum Bett (later Elizabeth Freeman) lived before suing for and winning her freedom in 1781, is a stop on the Upper Housatonic Valley African American Heritage Trail. The grounds of the Ashley House are open now, but the house itself is not. Sheffield is also home to visitor-friendly Big Elm Brewing and the Berkshire Mountain Distillers and the new Massachusetts branch of Sunset Meadows Vineyards (all offer tastings), a prominent clay works (Sheffield Pottery), a surprising number and variety of antiques dealers, and a great place for furniture upholstery and window treatments at M Designs. Campo de’ Fiori has hand-made terra cotta pots (complete with moss) and a range of decorative and useful items. There’s always something going on at Dewey Memorial Hall, an impressive fieldstone and marble structure on the Sheffield green, with many activities now outdoors.

The Stagecoach Tavern, as its name implies, got its start in an earlier age; now it’s a place to go not only for food and drink but jazz and events; it’s part of the Race Brook Lodge cluster of buildings in a woodsy setting off Route 41.

If you like your music with strings attached, you might like to visit the Magic Fluke, where they make ukuleles, banjos, violins, and more. The shop is open for visitors and orders are also accepted by phone and online. Many visitors head straight to the Marketplace Café on Elm Court in the center of town for indoor and outdoor dining and takeout. The chef-owners created a popular catering business in 1993—the first such farm-to-table enterprise in the Berkshires—and have branched out into four “retail” locations, each with its own style (the others are in Pittsfield and Great Barrington). Two hot new shops started by young entrepreneurs, right next to each other on Main Street, are causing a buzz—Roberto’s Pizza and Bakin’ Bakery. And, should you get a yen to go fishin’, visit Berkshire Bass on Main Street for tackle, apparel, and guided tours. They legalized it: Sheffield is the site of Massachusetts’s first licensed outdoor cannabis growing facility, Nova Farms, “boasting 80,000 square feet of sun-grown, organic cannabis canopy,” according to the company. Cannabis canopy is simply the extent of contiguous vegetative growth—like the rain forest, but with marijuana. Theory Wellness is also undertaking outdoor cultivation at Sheffield’s Equinox Farm, well known as the first organic market garden in western Massachusetts. And a new retail and cultivation facility called The Pass is now open on Main Street (Route 7) north of town. In Sheffield, the times, they have a-changed.