Grey Towers Honored With Do 6 Partnership Award Grey Towers Heritage Association was honored on September 10 with the “Do 6” Partnership Award, bestowed by the PA Route 6 Alliance. Linda Pinto of Grey Towers Heritage Association (second from left) accepts the “Do 6” Partnership Award from Dan Glotz, PA Route 6 Alliance Board President, James Hamill, Pocono Mountains Visitors Bureau Senior Correspondent & Media Relations and PA Route 6 Board Member, and Candace Hillyard, PA Route 6 Alliance Executive Director. Over one hundred statewide leaders, business owners, and stakeholders gathered in Kane, Pennsylvania, on September 10–11 for the PA Route 6 Alliance 2025 Educational Workshop, Annual Meeting, and “Do 6” Awards Program. The Annual Meeting featured the “Do 6” Awards, honoring outstanding individuals, organizations, and communities that exemplify the Alliance’s mission to protect, preserve, and promote the scenic, cultural, historic, and recreational resources of PA Route 6. Each year, six awards are presented. This year, the Heritage Partnership Award was bestowed upon Grey Towers Heritage Association in Pike County. Linda Pinto of Grey Towers Heritage Association accepted the award, saying, “This event truly showcased the power of collaboration and the shared commitment to preserving and promoting the unique character of our heritage area. The PA Route 6 Alliance aligns perfectly with our mission at Grey Towers.”
Grey Towers, Finger Bowl Held at Pinchot Dining Room Come enjoy a unique and historical dining experience at the outdoor Finger Bowl at Grey Towers National Historic Site in Milford, PA, home of two-time governor and conservationist Gifford Pinchot, on July 19 at 5 p.m. Considered Grey Towers’ most popular feature, The Finger Bowl served as the Pinchot family’s outdoor dining room. Added in 1934 to the French-style mansion and gardens constructed in the 1880s By James and Mary Pinchot, the unique water-filled table was the site of many lively discussions about politics, social issues, and conservation efforts. “The food was passed to guests by floating filled wooden bowls and balsa rafts on the water. The opening in the wisteria-covered pergola permitted moonlight to radiate across the water. This recreation of those dinners, which we first did last year with a sold-out audience, is a very romantic and magical evening for everyone,” promises Linda Pinto, GTHA Board member and one of the event’s organizers. Grey Towers Heritage Association invites members and the general public to enjoy a tribute to this lovely tradition in mid-summer as they savor delicious foods prepared and served in the tradition of the Pinchot family’s dinner celebrations. A wine and hors d’oeuvres reception starts at 5 p.m., with dinner seating at 6 p.m. around the water-filled Finger Bowl table, and at tables that line the perimeter of the pergola. Only pergola seats are currently available, and those seats provide an equally magical evening. Seating is limited, so reserve yours now at https://greytowers.org/event/finger-bowl-candlelight-dinner/. A second Fingerbowl dinner will take place on September 5 as a fundraiser for the Heritage Association’s Legacy Scholarship, which awards scholarships to tri-state public high school students who plan to study natural resources, science, economics, ecology, education, and social sciences. Tickets for that dinner are also on sale now at https://greytowers.org/events.