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

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Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
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.

You never truly finish a family tree.

That’s how genealogist Leslie Greene Kittenbrink describes her calling to trace ancestry – 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’s 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 – the caber toss, stone put, and hammer throw – 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.

“It gives me a sense of belonging and pride,” 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.

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

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
PLAID PAD: Bruce Boutwell greets visitors inside Clan Rose’s 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’s 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’s 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.

For more visual storytelling that captures communities, traditions, and cultures around the globe, visit The World in Pictures.

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