Budding Poet Wins Contest

May 16, 2025
1 min read

Maeve O’Hara read her prize-winning poem to baseball fans on May 3 at Worcester’s Polar Park. O’Hara, 11, is a fifth-grade student at Claypit Hill Elementary School in Wayland. She was one of twenty elementary school students from across the state who won the contest sponsored by the National Baseball Poetry Festival. It was a celebration of poetry which focused on either a baseball or softball theme.


According to Jacqueline Moquin, O’Hara’s teacher, although her students enter many writing contests throughout the school year, O’Haha was the only student in her class who was interested in entering this poetry contest. “I am thrilled that she won this contest,” Moquin said. “I was impressed that her poem not only focused on the theme of baseball, but also on the feelings of the player. Maeve is an empathetic person who cares about her classmates’ feelings, so the theme of her poem didn’t surprise me at all!”


The budding young poet likes to write and play soccer. Her favorite animal is a dog.


This was the third annual National Poetry Festival which takes place in Worcester the first weekend after National Poetry Month. There were multiple winning categories: elementary, middle school, high school, little leaguers, college students and adults. Entries were evaluated for creativity, originality and style. Winners are awarded a certificate of achievement, a festival t-shirt and two tickets to the Woo Sox game. Polar Park is the home of the Worcester Red Sox, nicknamed the Woo Sox . They are a professional minor league baseball team that is a Triple-A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.

What Would You Rather?
By Maeve O’Hara

Whether you pitch
whether you swing
or whether you catch.
You matter.
They would rather
you be a batter,
rather you catch.
You’re still incredible.
Win or lose
you keep standing up
on those shiny shoes.
Boy or girl,
they or them
Keep moving forward.
Root for your own team
not theirs.
Do what you want
even if it gives you a scare.
I will always and forever
be on your team
and watch you catch those
beautiful dreams.

Latest from Blog

Andrew “Andy” Pickens Johnson, age 99

Andrew “Andy” Pickens Johnson, 99, formerly of Wayland, died on October 6, 2025 at the Hebrew Senior Life and Rehabilitation Center in Boston following a period of declining health. He was born

Public Safety Log

Monday, Jan. 58:13 a.m. — A traffic accident involving two vehicles on Commonwealth Road near Old Tavern Road was called in by 911. There were no injuries reported.8:19 a.m. — A disabled

ZBA needs more time to decide on Veritas appeal

By June Vallierejune.valliere@waylandpost.org The Zoning Board of Appeals voted on Jan. 13 to continue the appeal hearing on the issuance of a building permit for the Veritas Christian Academy, construction project. The

Snow at last!

A snowman seems to be directing traffic on Nolan Farm Road. (Photo by Brad Spiegel)

Community Calendar

January 24 – February 8, 2026 Saturday, Jan. 2411 a.m.–2 p.m.35 Andrew Ave.Paint a Fairy Tale on SilkArts Wayland presents “Silk Painting: A Winter Fairy Tale,” led by artist Lidia. In this

Sound quality at town meetings is a frequent issue

By Dave Watkinsdave.watkins@waylandpost.org Anyone who regularly attends or watches Wayland public meetings has likely heard some version of the same exchange. “Can you hear me?”“You’re muted.”“Try moving closer to the microphone.”“Can the

Response to racism incidents based on school policy

By Carole Plumbcarole.plumb@waylandpost.organd Leslie Castilloleslie.castillo@waylandpost.org Following repeated incidents at Wayland High School, School Superintendent David Fleishman and Assistant Superintendent Betsy Gavron outlined the department’s policy on how it handles possible racism incidents.The

Hayes works on creating ‘brave space’

By Isabel RavennaWayland Post Contributor When Dr. Eden-Reneé Hayes was in kindergarten, all of her classmates were like her — Black. Until one day, when a white girl enrolled in her class, and