Seasonal & Holidays

New Year’s Eve 2022 In Northampton Twp: Spring Mill Manor, Parx Casino

We will ring in the new year of 2023 with lots of parties and pomp and circumstance.

NORTHAMPTON TOWNSHIP, PA —It's time to celebrate 2023. But if you're not staying home to watch the ball drop at Times Square in New York City, numerous places are offering festivities that include buffets, party hats and streamers, and midnight champagne toasts.

One area business is even going back to the 1920s to the days of flappers and speakeasies. There's also "noon" New Year's Eve celebrations for children. Others are offering three-course meals, DJs and dancing to kick off the new year.

Here is a look at some additional events happening in the Northampton Township Area:

Find out what's happening in Northamptonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

See other New Year's Eve celebrations around Pennsylvania.

In the United States, one of the most popular New Year’s Eve traditions is, of course, the dropping of the giant ball in New York City’s Times Square. Various cities have adopted their own iterations of the event — the Peach Drop in Atlanta, the Chick Drop in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and the giant Potato Drop in Boise, Idaho.

Find out what's happening in Northamptonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The end of one year and beginning of another is often celebrated with the singing of “Auld Lang Syne,” a Scottish folk song whose title roughly translates to “days gone by,” according to Encyclopedia Britannica and History.com.

The history of New Year’s resolutions dates back 8,000 years to ancient Babylonians, who would make promises to return borrowed objects and pay outstanding debts at the beginning of the new year, in mid-March when they planted their crops.

According to legend, if they kept their word, pagan gods would grant them favor in the coming year. If they broke the promise, they would fall out of God’s favor, according to a history of New Year’s resolutions compiled by North Hampton Community College New Center in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

Many secular New Year’s resolutions focus on imagining new, improved versions of ourselves.

The failure rate of New Year’s resolutions is about 80 percent, according to U.S. News & World Report.

There are myriad reasons, but a big one is they’re made out of remorse for gaining weight, for example, and aren’t accompanied by a shift in attitude and a plan to meet the stress and discomfort of changing a habit or condition.

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