Littleton, Massachusetts 01460
Littleton Conservation Trust Trail GuideNewtown Hill conservation land offers an opportunity to enjoy nearly 100 acres of variety. As you begin to climb the paved access road, your eye is drawn upward across the rolling meadows to watch a broadwing hawk soaring and searching for food. On the right, grapevines and bittersweet nearly hide an old stone wall, the first of many surrounding the property. Daisies, Queen Ann’s lace, Indian paintbrush, clover, milkweed, butter-and-eggs, black-eyed Susans: the pages of your wildflower book will move as fast as those of the birder’s ‘Peterson’.
When you reach the large boulder near the crest, sit awhile and enjoy the view eastward. On a clear day, Boston’s skyline rises straight ahead. Rested, begin to descend toward the old apple trees on the right and continue onto the dirt road which leads you through the woods to the second meadow and a sylvan treat: a magnificent specimen beech tree, a friend of lovers for generations, if you believe the carvings. Please don’t add to them.
In the springtime, as you leave the beech grove you may glimpse below through the trees of the flooded meadow. This is a quaking peat bog and a refuge for migrating Canada geese and ducks of several species. The meadow dries to a small pond in summer and tall grasses grow to invite the migrants on their fall return. The woods surrounding you are part of the Town Land but no trails have been cut. Pine, hemlock, ash, maple, birch, and other trees grow by natural selection.
This land has always been useful to human activity, a meeting place, a lookout, a hidden spring, a fort, and an apple orchard: each in its turn. Now under the management of the Conservation Commission, the meadow is hayed in summer by a local farmer and skied on by hardy enthusiasts in the winter.
The AllTrails website has a description and map of a hike at Newtown Hill.
Restrooms on site
Wheelchair accessible trail
Entrance fee
Content from Littleton Conservation Trust Trail Guide
Last updated January 6, 2024