Pepperell offers exciting outdoor adventures for all ages.

Pepperell provides something for everyone’s interests and enjoyment. With over 2,800 acres of protected land, outdoor enthusiasts will discover fun and adventure in every season.

Explore the great outdoors on the Nashua River Rail Trail.

This 11-mile accessible bike trail spans four towns. The Pepperell section runs along the Nashua River, offering scenic rest spots, interesting geology, and great wildlife viewing opportunities. During the fall months, enjoy the bright colors as the leaves change. Don't want to bike? The trail is open to walking, rollerblading, and horseback riding.
You can access the trail by foot, bicycle, MBTA commuter rail, or car. The primary access point in Pepperell is on Groton St., featuring an unpaved lot with about 20 spaces located between 7-Eleven and Kemp's Service Station. The restroom at Kemp's is available for rail trail users.

The Pepperell section of the Rail Trail has several spots to stop for coffee, breakfast, lunch, or ice cream in Railroad Square on Main Street.
Photo Credit: Deb Fountain

Diverse flora, fauna, and bird-watching for nature lovers.

Recognized as a Massachusetts birding "hotspot," Heald Orchard combines a former orchard, grasslands, and early forests, creating a rich habitat that benefits wildlife, especially over 170 bird species seeking refuge during migrations.
The orchard trails lead down to Heald Pond, which offers a chance to view waterfowl. Other popular local birdwatching locations include the Keyes and Parker Conservation Land, the Nashua River Rail Trail, and the Marion Stoddart Canoe Launch.

Get the most out of your trip with our guide to Pepperell's open spaces.

Pepperell Trail Guide

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Bemis Road Conservation Area

This is a prime spot for pine, prairie, and chestnut-sided warblers, as well as tracks of Eastern cottontail rabbits, deer, turtles, and coyotes.
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Heald Pond

This beautiful pond is surrounded by 32 acres of protected woodlands, home to turtles, frogs, herons, hawks, and beavers.
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Gulf Brook Conservation Area

This beautiful 50-acre wooded parcel is home to hemlocks, beeches, white pine, a beaver pond, and several streams.
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Keyes Parker Conservation Area

This 70-acre area has a walking trail that showcases diverse habitats. Wildlife includes deer, foxes, brook trout, and birds like bobolinks, bluebirds, and herons.
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Nashua River canoe Launches

The Conservation Commission holds two parcels on the Nashua River suitable for launching small boats and canoes.
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Nissitissit Meadows Conservation Area

Nissitissit Meadows is 63 acres of town-owned conservation land featuring fields, ponds, wetlands, floodplains, and the Nissitissit River frontage.
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Pepperell Springs Conservation Area

This 265-acre property features rare species habitats, tranquil woods, and excellent walking and hiking trails linking Heald Pond to the Gulf Brook Conservation Area.
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Stewart Brook Conservation Area

Stewart Brook flows between ridges, showcasing views of a 42-acre hemlock forest and diverse wildlife like beavers, porcupines, fishers, foxes, deer, hawks, and amphibians.
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Nashua River Westside Trail

Although it is just a mile, this railbed offers a wonderfully picturesque walk along the Nashua River, past ponds, and through lovely woods.
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Explore Pepperell's wild & scenic rivers.

Visitors to Pepperell can explore two federally designated “Wild and Scenic” rivers: the Nissitissit and the Nashua Rivers. Wild and Scenic Rivers are preserved for their exceptional natural, cultural, and recreational value, offering visitors thrilling adventures.
Over 30 bass fishing clubs hold annual tournaments on the Nashua River, and more than 8,000 kayakers and canoeists enjoy the Nashua year-round. The Massachusetts Scenic Landscape Inventory highlights long stretches of the Nashua as a “distinctive scenic resource.”

The Nissitissit River is renowned for having some of the best fly-fishing in Central Massachusetts and Southern New Hampshire. Mass Wildlife stocks the cool waters of the Nissitissit with brook, brown, and rainbow trout. Anglers can also expect to catch common shiner, white sucker, yellow bullhead, chain pickerel, largemouth bass, pumpkinseed, and American eel.
Photo Credit: Nissitissit River Land Trust
Photo Credit: Judy McDermott

Your canoeing & kayaking adventure starts here.

The Conservation Commission manages two parcels on the Nashua River for launching small boats and canoes. Wildlife abounds, and the water is calm. Don’t forget your camera and binoculars!
One parcel, on Canal St., near Main St., provides canoe access in the Pepperell Pond area. A narrow slope allows for a small boat trailer launch. Follow Main St. to Canal St. The launch is about 0.1 miles on the left with a wooden sign. Park on the side of the road near the river.

The second canoe launch is off River Rd, marked by signs to the Marion Stoddart Conservation Area. This area, while off the main road and convenient for parking, has a steep slope suitable only for hand-launching small boats or canoes.

Don’t have a canoe or kayak? Rentals are available upstream at Nashoba Paddlers, 398 West Main Street in Groton.
Groton Street
Pepperell, MA 01463
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Prudence Wright Memorial Stone

During the American Revolution, men defended colonial rights in battles at Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill. Meanwhile, local women supported the cause in their communities.

Amid rumors of spies, Prudence Wright of Pepperell led women dressed in their husbands’ clothes, armed with pitchforks and muskets, to defend the river crossing to Boston. They captured a Tory spy carrying British messages at Covered Bridge in Pepperell.
Watch Pepperell Historical Society's video
Video Credits:
Videographer: Spencer Parente
Narrator: Diane Cronin Keating
Groton Street
Pepperell, MA 01463
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Covered Bridge

One of only three covered bridges on public Massachusetts roads that is open to vehicular traffic (and the only one east of the Connecticut River) is located on Groton Street in Pepperell.

The current bridge officially opened on July 30, 2010, replacing the aging Chester H. Waterous Bridge which was closed to vehicles on April 7, 2008, and demolished beginning July 30, 2008. It took two years to construct the new covered bridge.
Read the full history of the bridge
1 Main Street
Pepperell, MA 01463
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Town Hall

Town Hall, constructed in 1874 in a Wooden Gothic style, is Pepperell's first and only town hall (town meetings were previously held in the Unitarian Church).

During WWII, the eagle was taken down from the cupola to prevent it from becoming a target for enemy aircraft. The cupola was updated with windows to function as a lookout tower for potential enemy planes. Sadly, the gold-leafed eagle was lost, never to be seen again. Many years later, in 1989, the Prudence Wright Chapter of the DAR had the eagle recreated and placed atop the cupola.
Read the full history of Town Hall
2 Main Street
Pepperell, MA 01463
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Bunker Hill Monument Bench

On the 249th anniversary of Bunker Hill, this memorial honors the men from Pepperell who fell at the Battle of Breed's Hill, famously known as The Battle of Bunker Hill.
Photo Credit: https://www.massmilitarymonuments.com/
Watch the Pepperell Historical Society's video
1 Hollis Street
Pepperell, MA 01463
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Global War on Terror (GWOT) Memorial

The Middlesex GWOT Monument Committee honors the veterans who served in the Global War on Terror (GWOT) post-9/11, including Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom, New Dawn, Inherent Resolve, and Freedom Sentinel. This monument represents the sacrifices made by these veterans and their families, as well as those who made the ultimate sacrifice.
Photo Credit: https://www.facebook.com/MiddlesexGwot/

Nashua River Westside Trail

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (easy to moderate)
Mountain Biking
Horseback riding
Nature Observation

The Town of Pepperell owns a little less than one mile of the rail bed in this location, purchased in June 2002 for Conservation with State Self-Help funds from the Massachusetts Division of Conservation Services.

Though only a mile, it is a wonderfully picturesque walk along the Nashua River, past ponds, and through lovely woods. You can access it from the dirt driveway on River Road, which leads directly to the Town Forest and Picnic Area, or from Rt. 119, across from the Wilkins farm stand.

Yale St. also bisects the trail, but this private road has no parking area. Because a paved rail trail on the east side of the river provides a long stretch of recreational space, the Conservation Commission does not intend to modify this trail significantly from its current state.

It will provide access to fishing, short hikes, and nature observation (water birds such as Great Blue Herons and ducks are commonly seen, and turtles bask on logs in the ponded areas).

Stewart Brook Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (easy to moderate)
Mountain Biking
Horseback riding
Nature Observation

Stewart Brook cuts through two ridges, creating scenic views of the 42-acre hemlock forest and Brook. Various wildlife can be found here, including beaver, porcupine, fisher, fox, deer, hawks, and amphibians. This land connects with the Gulf Brook Conservation Area, with the Jeff Smith Trail running through both.

Follow Park St. away from Main St (Rt. 113) about 1 mile. Bear left onto Oak Hill St and follow for 1.3 miles. Turn right onto Lawrence St. and follow for another 1.3 miles. Look for the wooden sign for Stewart Brook on the left. Park at the Nashoba Conservation Trust on the right just before you reach this parcel.

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Pepperell Springs Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (easy to challenging)
Horseback riding
Bird watching
Nature observation
Hunting & Fishing

The Town of Pepperell now owns this lovely 265-acre property, which has a Conservation Restriction held by the Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game. The land features habitats for rare and endangered species, tranquil woods, and beautiful walking and hiking trails, including a Jeff Smith Trail section that connects Heald Pond to the south with the Gulf Brook Conservation Area to the north.

The section running through the scenic Gulf Brook ravine offers some of the most beautiful hiking in Pepperell. The trail into the ravine starts directly across Heald St. from Heald Pond. Once the trail enters the ravine a few hundred feet from the road, it becomes steep and narrow in places but is worth the effort, presenting views reminiscent of hiking trails in northern New Hampshire and Vermont.

Pepperell Springs can be accessed from several points: at the end of Heald Pond on Heald St. and via walking trails off Maple, Oak Hill, and Chestnut Streets. All trail entrances are marked with Conservation Land signs.

To reach the central parking lot for Pepperell Springs, from Town Hall (at the corner of Main St. and Park St.), take Heald St. (off Park) for about a mile to Maple St., then turn right. After about a quarter mile, Maple St. forks, with Maple St. continuing to the right and Chestnut beginning to the left. Follow Chestnut for about half a mile to just past where the road turns to gravel. A gravel parking area is located across from the old Pepperell Springs bottling building. You can enter the property across the street from the parking area along a gated dirt road or any of the marked walking trails along Chestnut St.

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Nissitissit Meadows Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking
Birdwatching
Horseback riding
Cross-country skiing
Mountain biking
Picnicking
Fishing
Nature observation

Nissitissit Meadows is 63 acres of town-owned conservation land boasting rolling agricultural fields, ponds, forested wetlands, floodplains, and Nissitissit River frontage. It's a pleasant 0.75-mile walk around the hay field to the left of the swale, along the long wetlands that protect its southern and western edges, and back to the parking area. A wooded trail adds another 0.5 miles into the woods on the right of the pond. Nissitissit Meadows also abuts Massachusetts Fisheries and Wildlife land and connecting trails. Birdhouses in the swale in the center of the meadow and the wetlands around the exterior of the field make Nissitissit Meadows a wonderful spot for watching bluebirds and sparrows. There are also bobolinks, eastern meadowlarks, and hawks.

From Town Hall, take Park St. to Prescott St., follow Prescott across Brookline St. (or follow Brookline St. away from Hollis St. for 1.2 miles and turn right onto Prescott St.), and go for 0.3 miles to the parking lot for Nissitissit Meadows on the left.

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Nashua River Canoe Launches

Recreational Uses:
Boating
Fishing

Canal St. Kayak/Canoe Launch
The Conservation Commission holds two parcels on the Nashua River suitable for launching small boats and canoes. The first is an 8000-square-foot parcel on Canal St., a short distance from Main St., that abuts the river and provides canoe access for the Nashua River in the Pepperell Pond area. A very gradual, albeit very narrow, slope allows for a trailer launch of a small boat. The second canoe launch is located off River Rd. Follow signs leading to the Marion Stoddart Conservation Area. This area is off the main road and may be more convenient for leaving a car; however, the slope to the river is steeper and is appropriate only for a hand launch of a small boat or canoe.

For the first parcel, follow Main St. to Canal St. The launch is about 0.1 miles on the left with a wooden sign. Park on the side of the road near the river.
River Rd. Kayak/Canoe Launch
For the second parcel, follow River Rd. south from the town-center rotary 1.6 miles to the common dirt driveway for the Marion Stoddart Conservation Area, just across the street and north of the Town Forest and Picnic area. As the driveway arcs around to the other side of the oval track, take the second left. That leads to the river. Park near the launch, but not blocking it for others.

Keyes Parker Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (easy)
Picnicking
Bird watching
Horseback riding
Fishing
Cross-country skiing
Sledding

This 70-acre area includes woodlands and open fields, including a great hill for sledding, frontage on Sucker Brook, and a vernal pool. A walking trail leads around the perimeter of the property, bringing you through all its various habitats. Wildlife abounds here, including deer, fox, brook trout, and many birds such as bobolinks, blue birds, herons, kestrels, and hawks.

Follow Park St. away from Main St (Rt. 113) about 1 mile. Bear left onto Oak Hill St and follow for about 0.5 miles. Turn right into the dirt driveway at the sign for Keyes Conservation Area and park in the parking lot on the right side of the drive after crossing Sucker Brook.

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Heald Pond Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (moderate, though steep in places)
Fishing
Boating
Bird watching
Nature observation

This beautiful pond is surrounded by 32 acres of protected woodlands and a field. A trail runs along the length of the west side of the pond, then wraps around the southern tip and connects either with Heald Street Orchard or continues along the Jeff Smith Trail through the Blood Brook Ravine to Jewett St. If you take the pond trail to the Orchard, you can complete a loop by walking through the Orchard to Heald St. and then heading left for about half a mile along the street. Turtles, frogs, herons, hawks, and beavers (be sure to look for the beaver lodge) can be found in and around the pond. The trail begins gently but becomes rugged as it narrows and follows a steep rocky outcropping.

Across the road from the Heald Pond trailhead, you can take the trail to the left of the stream along the Gulf Brook ravine into the Pepperell Springs Conservation Area. Canoe or kayak access to Heald Pond is available from Heald St. The islands within the pond contain poison sumac—beware.

Go about 2 miles on Heald St. away from Pepperell Town Hall (corner of Main St. and Park St.) or about 0.5 miles past the entrance to the Heald St. Orchard. Park on the side of the road.

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Gulf Brook Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (easy)
Nature observation
Bird watching
Horseback riding

This beautiful 50-acre wooded parcel is home to hemlocks, beeches, and white pines, as well as a beaver pond and several streams. It surrounds Gulf Brook and includes a portion of the Jeff Smith Trail (blue dots). Deer, beavers, coyotes, foxes, warblers, flycatchers, and more can be found here.

Follow Park St. away from Main St. (Rt. 113) for about 1 mile until you reach the fork where Oak Hill St. bears left. Continue for approximately 1.5 miles and look for the wooden conservation sign. You can park on the roadside or, preferably, across the road on or near dirt Chestnut St.

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Bemis Road Conservation Area

Recreational Uses:
Hiking (easy to moderate)
Nature observation
Fishing
Horseback riding

The west side of this 72-acre parcel is mostly wooded with hemlocks, pines,oaks, and hickories and follows Gulf Brook toward its convergence with the Nissitissit River. Deer, fox, coyote, beaver, mink, and many different birds can be found here. The main access to the land is the above-pictured and easy to hike path off Bemis Rd. However, one of the loveliest sections of the Jeff Smith Trail (blue dots) runs through this land on the other side of Gulf Brook with access from the Nashoba Conservation Trust's Day Land off Lawrence St.. That 0.6 mile section of trail starting from Lawrence St. eventually connects with the Beaver Brook Association land in Hollis, NH.

The area to the north of Bemis Rd is the site of a former sand pit. It contains a trail circling through a young stand of aspen, birch, and pitch pine and offers a variety of wildlife. The sandy trail makes for easy hiking and a great spot for mountain biking and horseback riding. The trail connects with the Beaver Brook Association trails in Hollis, NH, along an old railroad bed.

The Bemis area contains one of the loveliest sections of the Jeff Smith Trail (blue dots), which runs through this land on the other side of Gulf Brook from Bemis Road. Access to that trail is through the Nashoba Conservation Trust’s Day Land, off Lawrence St.

Follow Brookline St. northwest toward the NH border. Go 1.4 past the intersection with Park St. Turn left onto Boynton Rd. and take your immediate right onto Bemis Rd. Go 0.7 miles to the dirt road on the left just before the Water Department building. Park on either side of the road.

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15 Main Street
Pepperell, MA 01463
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Lawrence Library

The Lawrence Library’s was a gift from Pepperell native, Charles Farrar Lawrence, to the Town of Pepperell in 1901. The structure was built in the French Beau-Arts style combined with Colonial Revival characteristics. The impressive style was designed by renowned New York architect Ernest Flagg who designed several notable New York buildings that were among the first skyscrapers and tallest buildings built at the time, such as the Singer Building in Manhattan’s financial district. The library contains Charles Lawrence’s personal art and books and the antique collection of mounted birds by Sidney Shattuck. Today the town library, a local treasure to our community, regularly features a calendar of diverse events for all ages.

First Meeting House

Pepperell’s first public building was the town’s meetinghouse, constructed at this site in the Town Center in 1746 as the church servicing Groton West Parish. After Pepperell became the District of Pepperell in 1753, the building held town meetings and religious services. The building was replaced by a larger structure in 1770, and on August 29, 1774, this is the site where Pepperell raised a flag of blue and red outside the meetinghouse doors in response to the oppressions of British rule. It is said that the colonists stored gunpowder hidden under the floor during the Revolutionary War conflict. This church became the Unitarian Church in 1832 after separating into Unitarian and Congregational denominations. As of 1874, the Town's business was conducted in the newly constructed Town Hall, also located in the Town Center. The Unitarian Church was later destroyed by fire in 1917.