Merry Christmas Downtown Statesville
December: DOWNTOWN EVENTS
🍂That's a wrap on the 2025 Statesville Pumpkin Festival🍂
The 22nd Annual Statesville Pumpkin Festival was a big win for downtown this year, filling the streets with families, live music, and fall color from one end of Broad and Center to the other. Historic Downtown Statesville welcomed thousands of visitors who enjoyed two entertainment stages, a packed Kids Zone, a classic car cruise-in, and more than 200 arts, crafts, food, and local business vendors. The strong turnout and full vendor rows made it one of the standout community events of 2025, showcasing exactly why Pumpkin Fest remains a favorite tradition in Statesville. If you are interested in becoming a sponsor or vendor for the 2026 Pumpkin Festival please click the here!
Shop Small. Shop Local!
This Small Business Saturday, keep your holiday shopping close to home by supporting Statesville’s local shops and restaurants. From unique gifts and handmade goods to cozy cafés and hometown favorites, every dollar you spend downtown helps our neighbors, strengthens our community, and keeps Main Street glowing all season long. Not sure where to start? Check out our Holiday Gift Guide (link here) for ideas from right here in Statesville.
Rolling Out the Red Carpet
Join us at 4 PM on Wednesday, December 3rd at 213 S. Tradd Street, Statesville for Ripple Fiber's Red Carpet Rollout!
Enjoy complimentary food and drinks, meet the Ripple Fiber team and help us welcome them to downtown Statesville! Clickhere for more information!
A letter from our Director
Two years ago, a friend of mine ran for county office in Pender County. Night of the election, I wanted to check returns. I knew he lived in Hampstead. I knew Burgaw was the County seat. For the life of me I couldn’t remember the county name too look up the returns. (Did I learn this in seventh grade? Yes. Was seventh grade a long time ago? Also Yes.) Somehow trying to figure out the county name got me curious about county seats. I’ve spent many a weekend in the past two years walking around the downtowns of North Carolina’s county seats. I’m up to 85 or so now. Each of the towns has at least one remarkable feature. Lenoir has a really neat layout with some very cool older buildings. Graham and Pittsboro have traffic circles around their old courthouses. Clinton’s downtown encircles the old courthouse like a defensive perimeter. Accustomed to the way our towns in the western Piedmont look (most of them very 1870-1930), Edenton’s buildings from the colonial period stand in such clear contrast. Old, abandoned mills at the edge of downtown are not uncommon. Sometimes these get “adaptively reused” for new purposes (Asheboro). Sometimes they still sit empty await a next step (also Asheboro). I’ve driven away from a few—and forgive me, I won’t name them here—that just left me wanting to cry. Marshall is a neat place, with its downtown nestled between the French Broad and a cliff, more or less. It’s still recovering from the French Broad rising so high that the river literally ran through it. I enjoy exploring downtowns, getting ideas to bring back here (well-lit, active alleys, anyone?). But this week, thinking back on all these towns makes me thankful. Thankful to work with a downtown with such amazing historic buildings. Thankful to work in a community that has invested in creating a beautiful, walkable downtown. Thankful to the score of volunteers and City staff whose time makes a beautiful downtown and its event possible. Thank you all, and Happy Thanksgiving!
Matthew Lawrence Pierce, AICP
Executive Director
Downtown Statesville Development Corporation
5.0 (1 Review)
Downtown Statesville Development Corp
104 Court St., Ste B, PO Box 205 (28687)
Statesville, NC 28677
704-878-3436
downtownstatesville.com
Mon 8:30am- 5:00pm
Tue 8:30am- 5:00pm
Wed 8:30am- 5:00pm
Thu 8:30am- 5:00pm
Fri 8:30am- 5:00pm