Weaverville Shamrock Festival Returns March 15 with Music, Kids Zone
Weaverville's Shamrock Festival returns Sunday, March 15, with free admission, Irish dance, and a $3 hand stamp letting you roam Florida Avenue with a drink.

Downtown Weaverville's second Shamrock Festival takes over Florida Avenue and Merchants Alley this Sunday, March 15, from 2 to 6 p.m., bringing Irish-inspired music, traditional dance, and a full afternoon of free family programming to the heart of town.
The event is free to attend. Guests who want to carry a beverage through the festival grounds can purchase a $3 event hand stamp on-site, a social-district arrangement that lets attendees walk throughout the celebration with a drink in hand. Stamp proceeds go directly toward funding the Shamrock Festival and other free community events organized by the Weaverville Business Association.
Trippin' Up the Stairs will supply the live soundtrack for the afternoon, with sponsorship credited to Century 21 / Foley Realty and Weaverville Realty's Joe Eckert. Dancers from the Carpenter Academy of Irish Dance will perform throughout the four-hour event, adding a cultural dimension to the St. Patrick's Day-themed celebration.
Families with younger kids will find a dedicated children's activity zone sponsored by Eluvium Brewing. Beyond the kids' area, the festival offers cornhole, giant Jenga, the Willbloom Book Bus, and a photo booth underwritten by Fifth Third Bank. Local food and beverage vendors will be set up along the Florida Avenue corridor, with participating businesses including Lion Dog Lounge, Zebulon Artisan Ales, Leveller Brewing Co., Well Bred, Maggie B's, Glass Onion Tavern, and LocalCollective, among others.

Additional festival sponsors include Curtis Wright Outfitters, Art Accents, and Alan's Pawn. The full sponsor and vendor roster is published on the Visit Weaverville events calendar.
The festival plants itself squarely between two community anchors: the Weaverville Tailgate Market season and the Music on the Knoll series at the Weaverville Community Center, which hosted a performance just the evening before on March 14. For a town of Weaverville's size, stacking two free public events on back-to-back days underscores how much the Weaverville Business Association has leaned into building a consistent calendar of no-cost programming.
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