Complete Holiday Guide to Marion County
November 3, 2025Discover a West Virginia county with an Italian-Appalachian holiday flair. Marion County, West Virginia is an Italian-American epicenter beloved by locals yet virtually unknown to Italians and Americans alike.
History
Italians immigrated to Fairmont, West Virginia because it reminded them of home. When they got here, they went into the coal mines, powering the nation with coal and powering West Virginians with their ingenious creation: the pepperoni roll.
Today
Most of Fairmont and much of Marion County is of Italian descent, with many of the locals having had parents, grandparents or great-grandparents who worked in the coal mines. Coal mines are harder to come by these days, but Italians aren’t and neither is the pepperoni roll. (We’ll share. Find the simple but mouth watering food on the WV Pepperoni Roll Trail.)
Today, the children, grandchildren and great-children of those Italian immigrants help to spark a month-long holiday celebration with Italian and holiday activities.
Events
Market in the Park
The holiday season kicks off with Market in the Park, where folks from all over can see hundreds of Christmas light displays. This one day only, you can also enjoy an open air strip of local artisans, bakers and makers all in the park surrounded by beautiful lights.
Where: Shuttle: East Fairmont High School, 1993 Airport Road, Fairmont; East Marion Park, 35 City View Terrace, Fairmont
When: 5-9 p.m. Nov. 22
Cost: $5/person
Details: Celebration of Lights
Celebration of Lights
You can enjoy those 500+ Christmas lights through the end of November and throughout all of December. The 1.3 mile loop at Morris Park glows bright every night and sees thousands of cars. Drive through the lights with a perfectly curated Spotify Christmas playlist, a seasonal drink and family and friends. Drive through nights are Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday. The cost is $10 per car and $30 per bus. (Turn your headlights off!)
Wednesdays, however, are for the walkers. Park at Fairmont Federal Credit Union and wait for the shuttle to take you to the Celebration of Lights. Pay at the gate, buy a cup of coffee or hot chocolate and walk with your family and friends through hundreds of holiday lights. At the end of the loop, you’ll be back at the beginning where the shuttle will pick you up. Cost is $5 per person.
Special events are planned for Tuesday evenings.
The Celebration of Lights is closed on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
Where: Walker Wednesdays: Fairmont Federal Credit Union, 2 The Credit Union Way, Fairmont
Drivers nights: Morris Park, 1 Morris Park Pleasant Valley, WV 26554
When: Nov. 22 – Dec. 29; Get the schedule
Cost: $5-$30
Details: Celebration of Lights
Christmas Village and Light Show
After creating an annual Christmas light show at their house for six years, the Lenhart family is bringing the festivities downtown for the inaugural Christmas Village and Light Show. The village will be built on the prominent greenspace in downtown, in front of the courthouse, with custom models of local businesses built by local university students. The entire scene will feature Christmas lights synced with music. The event is free, but donations to the local United Way are encouraged. The event begins Nov. 29 in conjunction with the Tree Lighting.
Where: Downtown Fairmont
When: Nov. 29 – Dec. 31
Cost: Free – Donations welcome
Details: Main Street Fairmont
Pricketts Fort Christmas Candlelight tours
Bundle up for a colonial Christmas. Pricketts Fort State Park hosts tours of and demonstrations at the Fort and Job Prickett House just four times throughout the month of December. Two Christmas Candlelight tours and three day-time Christmas tours allow you to experience how the settlers celebrated their traditions and how they maintained the fort and home for the wintry weather.
Check out our Complete Guide to Pricketts Fort State Park to prepare for your visit.
Where: Pricketts Fort State Park, 88 State Park Rd, Fairmont
When: Nov. 29, 30; Dec. 5, 6, 7
Cost: $8
Details: Pricketts Fort Memorial Foundation
Winter at Woodlawn
Woodlawn Cemetery is a historic place where West Virginians, invaluable to our past and present, have been laid to rest. On this day, drive or walk through the cemetery and take a tour of the restored Superintendent’s house where you’ll learn about the history stored there. Warm up with holiday tea. Purchase a small wreath, books and get your copy of “Harry Powers Trial” signed by author Ray Alvarez.
Where: Woodlawn Cemetery, 335 Maple Ave, Fairmont
When: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dec. 6
Cost: Free
Details: Woodlawn Cemetery
Glow Bowl
The Celebration of Lights stays up throughout the holiday season for drivers, walkers – and disc golfers! Play your way through the Seth Burton Memorial and Orange Crush Disc Golf Courses using the holiday lights to guide your throws.
Where: Morris Park, 1 Morris Park Pleasant Valley, WV 26554
When: 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 2
Cost: $25
Details: Celebration of Lights
Coal Miners Day
It’s not about Christmas, but it is about the Italian American coal mining heritage and the history that lives in these Appalachian hills. This day focuses on a swap meet, where coal miners, history lovers and others can sell, buy and trade memorabilia and books. It’s a great way to share history with one another.
Hosted on or near Dec. 6, it remembers the Italian and miners who died in the Monongah Mine Disaster in 1907. Learn more about that fateful day. While you’re here for the holidays, take a trip out to Monongah to see the memorials: the Monongah Memorial, the Monongah Mine Memorial Bell, gifted from the Italian region of Molise, and the Monongah Heroine, a statue dedicated to the miners’ widows.
Where: Arts & Antiques
When: 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 6
Cost: Free
Details: NACHMA
Reindeer Run 5K
Sign up for the annual Reindeer Run and dash your way through the Celebration of Lights. (Walkers are also welcome.) It’s one of the most beautiful holiday and running experiences you can have. Take the shuttle to the park! (Shuttle location TBD.)
Where: Shuttle location TBD
When: 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9
Cost: $30
Details: Celebration of Lights
The Movie
The Feast of the Seven Fishes is a Catholic tradition, but the Feast of the Seven Fishes Festival and Festival Cucina were started by Italian-Appalachian filmmakers and brothers Bob and Jeff Tinnel in 2005. Since then, they’ve made many movies, but one sticks out: The Feast of the Seven Fishes. Watch it at the Robinson Grand this Christmas season! If you can’t make it, find it on Amazon, Roku, Tubi and YoutTube.
Written and directed by Bob, the movie follows an Italian teenager and his non-Italian crush through the holidays. Filmed right here in Marion County, you can see the scenes, take part in the festival, try the foods and watch the movie.
Like most good films, before it was a movie, it was a book. Bob Tinnell and his wife Shannon wrote the graphic-novel, Feast of the Seven Fishes: The Collected Comic Strip and Italian Holiday Cookbook.
Where: Robinson Grand, 444 W Pike St, Clarksburg
When: 7 p.m. Dec. 10
Cost: $9
Details: Marion CVB
Feast of the Seven Fishes Festival
This is the Italian American event of the holiday season! The Feast of the Seven Fishes Festival is an inclusive weekend where snuffies (defined as non-Italian people) can join in the tradition of eating fish, frittis and wine.
The Feast of the Seven Fishes (Esta dei Sette Pesci) is an Italian-Catholic tradition of abstaining from meat on holy days, including Christmas Eve. Why seven fish specifically? It might be a representation of the seven holy sacraments of the Catholic Church – or not. Some families have more than seven kinds and some have fewer. Common types of fish eaten in the feast include baccala (salted Cod), clams, whiting, calamari, eel and many other seafood delectables.
During the Festival, Monroe Street in downtown Fairmont is filled with vendors serving delicious foods, like fish, frittis, kettlecorn, wine and more. Because it doesn’t take place on Christmas Eve, we don’t keep the Christmas Eve rules of only fish; there are also pepperoni rolls and Italian sausage.
There will be plenty of tables and chairs located in the firehouse and heaters dispersed throughout the area to keep warm.
The Gatherings, a historic church located downtown, hosts music and tours.
Where: Monroe St., Fairmont
When: Dec. 12 and 13
Cost: Free
Details: Main Street Fairmont
Hometown Christmas Market
In conjunction with the Festival, the Hometown Market takes place across the street, turning the Feast into an eating and shopping festival. Peruse the long tent halls of cookies, candy, cakes, books, toys and so much more. Get all your holiday shopping done here!
Where: Monroe St., Fairmont
When: Dec. 12 and 13
Cost: Free
Details: Main Street Fairmont
Festival Cucina
On the first night of the Feast of the Seven Fishes Festival, Festival Cucina allows you to experience the real thing. Watch and learn as Italians prepare seven fish dishes (and dessert) right in front of your eyes. Taste test each recipe alongside plenty of wine and jokes. Grab your tickets before they sell out.
Where: Fairmont State University Falcon Center Cafeteria, 1201 Locust Ave, Fairmont
When: 7 p.m. Dec. 12
Cost: $51.25
Details: Main Street Fairmont
Women’s Club Tea
Just up the street from the Feast of the Seven Fishes Festival, the Women’s Club of Fairmont hosts a Christmas tea in the historic Fleming Mansion. Enjoy cookies and other Christmas treats, coffee, hot chocolate and Wassail, served using dinnerware and cups from the house. The house will be fully decorated on all three floors and a beautiful sight.
Thomas Walter Fleming was born in 1846 and spent his life building Fairmont into an industrial center in the northern part of the state. Tour the stately home, complete with a billiards room, a library, dining room, kitchen, servant’s quarters, widow’s walk and 14 closets allowing all the rooms to connect. See how many buttons you can find. Buttons are in the floors and would summon the maids and servants who would travel private staircases to remain unseen.
Where: Fleming Mansion, 300 1st St, Fairmont
When: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dec. 13
Cost: $10
Details: Women’s Club of Fairmont
The Great Pepperoni Roll Drop
End the new year the Italian-Appalachian way. It’s a newer tradition (seven years old to be exact), but pepperoni rolls have never failed us yet. Come out to Mannington on New Year’s Eve to play pepperoni roll themed games, eat pepperoni rolls and pepperoni roll themed foods, listen to good music and wait. At the countdown to midnight, cue Country Roads and a giant pepperoni roll lowering from the sky. It’s a sight to behold and an experience you’ll never forget.
While you’re here, download the WV Pepperoni Roll Trail app, and grab your 30 points at The Great Pepperoni Roll Drop! Stop by our bakeries for more pepperoni rolls and more points to get pepperoni roll swag.
Where: Wintergarden Park, 100 Water St, Mannington
When: 7 p.m. to 12 a.m. Dec. 31 – Jan. 1
Cost: Free
Details: Mannington Main Street
Where to stay
Make Marion your Christmas Getaway. Find a cozy stay at one of our hotels, vacation rentals or RV sites.
The Great Pepperoni Roll Drop is a late night event, ending after midnight. Stay at one of our hotels (all are 28-30 minutes away from the drop).
*The Fairfield Inn and Suites is running a discount for visitors who book to stay for any of the holiday events throughout December (including the Great Pepperoni Roll Drop). Book under the Marion County Chamber rate for a 20% discount!







