There is no beauty without some strangeness.
Edgar Allen Poe

Today, Hollygrove has embraced the strange and has made it a hallmark. While not the most popular of travel destinations, for those who know where to look and are seeking a taste of the supernatural, the quirky little town has its appeal. Every so often, it makes the rounds of social media, YouTube videos, and even the local news and a new wave of visitors swell the seasonal population of the small town significantly.

It’s a place that embraces its tourist trap nature. There are holiday celebrations throughout the year that highlight the lore of the town and embrace its oddity. And if there are people who wander about with undeniably inhuman features from time to time? Well, it is a haven for those who love to cosplay, makeup and costume designers alike. Handmade crafts from Hollygrove are always big sellers so that people can take a little part of the town home with them. Visitors often compliment what an amazing job the locals do at pulling off the year-round entertainment.

The Truth Is…

Hollygrove is home to a very active supernatural community, people who have been touched by the otherworldly, some of whom have chosen to live mostly ‘out and proud’ in a world that does not embrace the supernatural as real. So they’ve decided to capitalize on the situation by allowing their little town to be known as a kitschy tourist spot, while serving as a relatively safe haven for Inhuman Americans.

Hollygrove has always been a center for supernatural activity from its very early days in the mid 1600s. Early sailors and fishermen who settled the area spoke of ghostly presences and strange occurrences. There are records in journals dating back to those times about mermaids off the coast, otherworldly lights in the woods, and unusual animals that could be seen from the windows of homes at night, lurking on the edges of town. The forests are haunted. Don’t walk alone at night.

Soon, the residents who settled the area began showing signs of what the locals call The Curse. It was unpredictable. Sometimes it would strike everyone in an entire family, sometimes a single member. There was no predicting when it would happen either—in childhood, adulthood, and even, very rarely, the elderly in the town. A transformation would begin, and they would find themselves gradually changed into something more than human.

At first, the locals tried to hide it. They protected their cursed members by hiding them and keeping it secret for a very long time. The town did everything it could to discourage people from settling there including being downright unfriendly to those passing by on their travels. And for quite a while throughout the 1700s and into the 1800s, this was very effective. Most people avoided Hollygrove, not even stopping on the road that passed through if they could avoid it. Those who stayed at the inn or ventured into businesses reported the service was near non-existent and the locals strange, suspicious, and unfriendly.

But times were changing, and as the 1900s came, Hollygrove became a bit of a tourist destination quite in spite of itself. The town’s population swelled in the summer months and tourists flocked to the Cape Cod shoreline to enjoy the beaches, the breezes off the Atlantic Ocean, and Hollygrove’s beautiful forests and conservation areas. Unfortunately, a lot of tourists also went missing during those times. Developers who came to the area found that their projects met with a lot of strange sabotage, sabotage that they largely suspected was the work of disgruntled locals, but that they could never quite pin on anyone specific. Despite efforts to stop it, the tourist industry only continued to grow in the area, with people moving in from out of town to set up shop and serve the needs of vacationers.

This meant that it became harder and harder to hide an increasing supernatural population. The number of strange “sightings” drew far too many curious “ghost hunters” and locals seeking to poke about in places where they oughtn’t. And so it was in the 1980s that the town as a whole decided that they would do something radical: they’d simply embrace who they were and tell the world that, yes, the supernatural is real and that it can be found in Hollygrove, MA. What happened wasn’t quite what they’d intended. Tourists did embrace the town, but they still didn’t believe it was real. And so Hollygrove found itself advertised as a “reenactment” area similar to destinations all over the US like Old Sturbridge Village, an 1830s Massachusetts settlement.

So it remains to this day. Popularity of the town waxes and wanes, Hollygrove falls in and out of the news every so often. The occasional “ghost hunter” style show will highlight it, renewing interest, and then it will drop off again. There are families that summer in the town every year as they have since the 1950s, and then there are those who are “true believers” who come seeking the truly unusual, and never leave.

Town Facts

Hollygrove sits out near the far end of the arm of Cape Cod, just south of Provincetown and north of North Eastham in Barnstable County. It is flanked by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Cape Cod Bay to the west. The main way of reaching Hollygrove is via the Mid-Cape Highway, otherwise known as U.S. Route 6. It is roughly a two hour drive to both Boston, MA and Providence, RI from Hollygrove.

The population of Hollygrove is approximately 3,500 people which swells to nearly 21,000 people during the tourist season, which runs from about Memorial Day (May 31st) through Halloween (October 31st), particularly due to the popularity of its fall foliage and Halloween-related events. For the other half of the year, the town seems eerily sparse in its population given that so many properties stand vacant.

Hollygrove has a single post office, fire department, police station, and medical center. The nearest major hospital is Cape Cod Hospital, 45 minutes away in Hyannis, MA. The nearest major Airport is Logan International Airport, 2 hours away in Boston, MA. A ferry from Provincetown to Boston runs in the summer months, and is a 90 minute one-way trip. Ferries do not run during winter.

There is a small university that students can attend both in-person and online, the Hallows Haven University, which serves a population of undergraduate and graduate students. The nearest colleges include Cape Cod Community College in Barnstable (45m), Massachusetts Maritime Academy in Bourne (1hr), and Anna Maria College in Falmouth (1hr 20m). There is one primary school (K-8) and one high school (9-12).

There are no high-rise buildings in Hollygrove. Buildings are rarely more than two to four stories in height even in the most populated areas.

Public transportation is provided by a local bus route that connects to a bus station at Route 6 that will take passengers north to Provincetown or south to the rest of the Cape. Ferries also run from the marina up to Provincetown and south to other points along the Cape. Rideshares are very popular during tourist season. Many residents don’t drive very often, instead walking and cycling around town. There are bicycle and electric scooter rentals that are available during tourist season.

Hollygrove has excellent internet service. Underground fiber was installed all the way out to Provincetown, completed in early 2022. If only the power infrastructure was as new. Cell reception is good save for in some deeper parts of the forested areas and out on the far points to the southwest, though it does drop off sharply in places.

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