Fredericksburg Events
Your weekly guide to what's happening in Fredericksburg, Stafford, Spotsylvania, and Prince William counties. Published every Thursday.
Mid-June is when this market earns its reputation — strawberries are at the tail end, the first decent tomatoes are showing up, and the...
Mid-June is when this market earns its reputation — strawberries are at the tail end, the first decent tomatoes are showing up, and the flower bouquets are absurd for the money. Get there before 9 if you want pastries from the bakers who actually sell out, and bring the dog (everyone does). Parking on Prince Edward fills first; try the Sophia Street lot and walk three blocks. Cash still moves the line faster at half the stands.
Event page →The Market Square courtyard behind the museum is one of the most underused downtown spaces eleven months a year, and on Food Truck Fridays...
The Market Square courtyard behind the museum is one of the most underused downtown spaces eleven months a year, and on Food Truck Fridays it absolutely sings. Free entry, food for purchase, and the museum stays open so you can wander air-conditioned galleries between bites. Go early — the trucks with the longest lines (usually the taco one) start running low around 7:30. Bring a folding chair if you want to actually sit; the picnic tables go fast.
Event page →Pratt Park is Stafford's answer to the question of whether the suburbs can do a summer concert right — and yes, they can. Bring a blanket...
Pratt Park is Stafford's answer to the question of whether the suburbs can do a summer concert right — and yes, they can. Bring a blanket, set up on the slope facing the stage, and let the kids run while a regional band plays through sunset. Food vendors are on site, but a cooler with drinks is allowed and most regulars bring one. Arrive by 5:45 to grab a good patch of grass; the prime real estate goes fast on a clear evening.
Event page →This is the kind of convention where the cosplay is the show — expect serious craft on the costumes, an artist alley worth slow-browsing...
This is the kind of convention where the cosplay is the show — expect serious craft on the costumes, an artist alley worth slow-browsing, and enough panels to fill an afternoon. $25 gets you in, and it's genuinely all-ages if your kids are into fantasy at all. Park in the Convention Center lot and bring cash for the vendors who don't take cards. The food situation inside is fine but not great; the Central Park restaurants are five minutes away if you want a real lunch break.
Event page →Riverside does the classic American musicals about as well as any regional theater on the I-95 corridor, and Guys and Dolls is exactly the...
Riverside does the classic American musicals about as well as any regional theater on the I-95 corridor, and Guys and Dolls is exactly the kind of brassy, big-hearted production they're built for. Dinner-theater format means you eat first, show after — arrive by 6 if you want to actually enjoy the meal rather than scramble. Tickets vary by seating tier; the closer-to-stage tables aren't worth the premium unless you've got a big occasion to mark.
Event page →A casual hour of live music on the library steps with downtown light fading behind you — it's one of those quietly perfect Fredericksburg...
A casual hour of live music on the library steps with downtown light fading behind you — it's one of those quietly perfect Fredericksburg things. Bring a chair or sit on the grass. It's free, it's short enough that you can pair it with dinner on Caroline Street after, and it's the rare evening event where showing up alone feels completely normal.
Event page →Free Saturday-morning yoga on the library lawn is the kind of thing that sounds like a cliché until you actually try it and realize how...
Free Saturday-morning yoga on the library lawn is the kind of thing that sounds like a cliché until you actually try it and realize how good a slow hour outdoors before the heat hits actually feels. Bring your own mat and water. Pair it with a walk down to the farmers market afterward — both end-points are within four blocks of each other.
Event page →The city parks department runs this as a no-stress family field trip — they handle the driving down to Triangle, you handle the kids. The...
The city parks department runs this as a no-stress family field trip — they handle the driving down to Triangle, you handle the kids. The Marine Corps Museum is genuinely impressive (the immersive Vietnam exhibit alone is worth the day) and avoiding the I-95 white-knuckle drive is the real value here. Register in advance through Parks & Rec; these bus trips cap out and they cap out early.
Event page →The second Saturday market in the window. Slightly shorter hours than the prior week; same vendors, same dog-friendly downtown energy.
The second Saturday market in the window. Slightly shorter hours than the prior week; same vendors, same dog-friendly downtown energy.
Event page →If you've lived here a while and somehow never actually gone inside, this is the week to fix that — FAMfare on Friday the 19th gives you...
If you've lived here a while and somehow never actually gone inside, this is the week to fix that — FAMfare on Friday the 19th gives you free entry alongside the food trucks, and the current exhibits are some of the best the museum has put together in years. The building itself (the old Town Hall) is worth the visit alone for the colonial-era architecture, and the rotating local history galleries do a real job of connecting Fredericksburg's strange, layered past to the streets you walk every day. Park in the William Street garage and walk a block; the meters on Princess Anne fill up fast on Fridays. Pair it with a stop at one of the Caroline Street wine bars after — Foode is two minutes' walk if you want a real dinner, but the food trucks on FAMfare night are good enough that you don't need to.
Visit →The house George Washington bought for his mother in 1772, where she lived out the last seventeen years of her life — and it's still one of...
The house George Washington bought for his mother in 1772, where she lived out the last seventeen years of her life — and it's still one of the most genuinely affecting historic sites in town because the rooms feel lived-in rather than museum-staged. The garden in mid-June is at its best, with the boxwood hedges crisp and the perennial beds going hard. Tours run on the hour and the docents here are the good kind — knowledgeable, not theatrical. Street parking on Charles is usually fine; if it's full, the lots behind the Visitor Center are a three-block walk. Combine it with a wander through the historic district and you've got an easy, low-stress afternoon that actually teaches you something about the town you live in.
Visit →Washington's boyhood home, reconstructed on the actual archaeological footprint, sitting on a beautiful stretch of the Rappahannock just...
Washington's boyhood home, reconstructed on the actual archaeological footprint, sitting on a beautiful stretch of the Rappahannock just across the river from downtown. June is the right time to go — the gardens are full, the river walk is shaded enough to be comfortable in the heat, and the reconstructed house is genuinely impressive once you understand the archaeology that went into placing every wall exactly where the original stood. Bring kids and they can do the hands-on colonial activities; bring just yourself and the riverbank trail alone justifies the trip. Free parking on site, and weekday mornings are the quietest time to go.
Visit →Before You Go
- Weather — Mid-June in Fredericksburg means upper 80s with humidity climbing through the week; if you're doing outdoor evening events, the hours after 6 PM are genuinely pleasant, but pack water for anything before noon.
- Pro tip — Saturday morning downtown is gridlocked between 9 and 11 because of the farmers market — if you're driving in for anything else, either come before 8 or after noon.
- Local resource — The Fredericksburg Parks & Rec activity portal is where the bus trips, summer camps, and city-run programs actually live; bookmark it if you have kids and want to stop missing things.