Mount Holly, New Jersey, is canceling its Independence Day events due to safety concerns.
In a joint release, town officials and the Mount Holly Township Police Department said their decision came after monitoring events across New Jersey in recent months.
After seeing which events were canceled due to “alarming violence” and which were held with enhanced security, officials said in the release that “we could not enact a viable, actionable solution in such a short period of time to alleviate our security concerns without incurring additional, significant costs to the Township and our residents.”
Last month, two carnivals elsewhere in Burlington County, New Jersey, were canceled days early after teenagers started fights and caused chaos, according to Philadelphia’s WTXF-TV.
Organizers of another regional event had to bring in outside agencies, use drones and limit crowd size and entrances to keep it safe and orderly.
Prior to the cancellation, the Burlington County Policemen’s Benevolent Association Local #37 wrote a letter to township officials with the support of the chief of the Mount Holly Township Police Department explaining that they were worried about juvenile violence, according to local news Substack blog The Mount Holly Reporter.
The letter cited incidents that required police intervention and use of force amid youth fights, including one that saw a child get knocked out of a stroller at the 2025 celebration.
“The concern is that the current fireworks event, by its nature, attendance pattern, crowd behavior, location, and recent history, has outgrown the Township’s ability to manage it safely and responsibly,” the PBA wrote.
Some locals are disappointed. John Duffield told WTXF, “I’m upset because this is probably the only monumental one I’ll get to see. I doubt I’ll see the 300, but 250 is right now.”
Mount Holly, 20 miles east of Philadelphia, is not the only town in the area to rethink its plans. Officials in Gloucester Township canceled its summer festival for the second straight year over security worries, according to Cherry Hill’s Courier Post.

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