Woodstock Marks Georgia Cities Week April 20-25 with Six Community Events
The city's lineup ties local festivities to the statewide Georgia US250 commemoration, with something for every resident across the week.
Woodstock Community News Staff||2 min read

Woodstock is celebrating Georgia Cities Week 2026 with a full slate of community events April 20-25, weaving together neighborhood traditions and a broader statewide milestone: the Georgia US250 commemoration honoring the 250th anniversary of American independence.
The week opens Monday, April 20, with Touch-A-Truck beginning at 4 p.m. on East Main Street, where children and families can climb on and explore the vehicles operated by Woodstock's first responders and city crews. It's the kind of up-close access that turns abstract civic pride into something a six-year-old can actually touch, and remember.
On Tuesday, April 21, the Woodstock Lions Club hosts its annual City Employee Appreciation Breakfast, recognizing the men and women who keep city services running day to day. The Lions Club is one of Cherokee County's longest-serving civic organizations, with a deep history of community recognition events and charitable work throughout the area. The breakfast is a quiet but meaningful tradition, a moment to acknowledge the people whose work residents depend on but rarely see celebrated.
The weekend brings the week's heaviest concentration of activity. Residents looking to clear out closets and garages, or score a bargain from a neighbor, can take part in the Citywide Yard Sale on Friday and Saturday, April 25-26. An interactive map of participating homes will be posted at woodstockparksandrec.com, making it easy to plot a route across the city.
Saturday, April 25, is the week's busiest single day. The Woodstock Farm Fresh Market runs from 8:30 a.m. to noon on Market Street, offering locally grown produce, handmade goods, and artisan items. A staple of Woodstock's downtown scene, the market draws vendors and shoppers from across Cherokee County each season and anchors the city's ongoing commitment to local agriculture and small-business culture.
Running concurrently that same morning, the Greenstock Day Recycling and Paper Shredding Event takes place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Woodstock City Church parking lot. The free event provides residents with on-site paper shredding and recycling services, a practical resource for households looking to safely dispose of sensitive documents and hard-to-recycle materials without a trip to a distant drop-off facility.
Woven through the entire week is a quieter initiative with a long shelf life. Residents can donate gently used books to support Woodstock's Little Free Libraries network, with drop-off available at the Woodstock Visitors Center during regular business hours. The effort, called "Pass the Story On," reflects the same spirit animating the week as a whole: that what a community shares, stories, services, Saturday mornings at the market, is what makes it worth celebrating.
Mayor Michael Caldwell has noted that the spirit of the American story lives right here in Woodstock's own community, a sentiment that fits naturally into a week designed not around spectacle but around the everyday rhythms of city life. The Georgia US250 commemoration is a statewide effort coordinated alongside national celebrations of the country's 250th birthday in 2026. Residents can find more information about Woodstock's participation at woodstockga.gov/250.
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