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Nevaeh Williams of Pittsfield is competing this weekend in the Miss Massachusetts competition in Worcester.

Pittsfield Native Competing in Miss Massachusetts

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Taconic High graduate Nevaeh Williams is competing in the 2026 Miss Massachusetts Scholarship Competition this weekend in Worcester.

She said pageants have helped her step into her own self-confidence while helping others; her chosen community service initiative is the AYJ Fund of North Adams. 

"When I was younger, I had an issue with body image, and I thought I had to look a certain way. So, I joined pageants to try to help with my self-confidence, and I soon fell in love, and it helped me become a more well-rounded young woman," Williams said. 

"Along with it, it made me fall in love with myself and my body, no matter what I look like." 

The 2026 Miss Massachusetts Scholarship Competition is being held at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester on Friday, June 19, with finals on Saturday, June 20, at 7 each night.

Williams, holding the title of Miss Mayflower 2026, has continued her journey in pageants over the past four years and says she has truly come to learn so much about herself. 

"And have grown into, I believe, the best young woman I possibly could, because of the Miss America opportunity," she said.

A 2024 graduate of Taconic, she attends Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences in Boston, studying echocardiogram sonography. 

When Williams was younger, she wasn't sure what she wanted to do, but knew she wanted to make a difference in the community. Beginning the Miss America opportunity, she had to find a community service initiative to promote, and chose one that had helped her family years before. 

She unfortunately lost her younger brother to brain cancer at the age of 6 in 2016, and remembered the "Smile" package that the AYJ Fund sent him during this time. Williams then knew she wanted to represent the nonprofit on the stage, and for years to come. 



The AYJ Fund raises money for childhood brain cancer as well as other cancers, and provides gifts and experiences to brighten children's days. 

iBerkshires spoke to Williams on Friday morning, when she said she woke up "truly feeling so excited to hit the stage tonight."

Twenty-three contestants are vying for the 86th Miss Massachusetts title. On Saturday, the top 10 will be announced, and then the top five will compete for the crown. 

Williams explained that there are many different parts of the competition, including fitness, evening gown wear, talent, and onstage questions. All of these come together for judges to find the most well-rounded woman for the title. 

"And I'm hoping today on the stage that the judges can see exactly who I am as a young 20-year-old, and the difference I want to make in the community, and hopefully they find that I am the correct woman for the job," Williams said. 

She described it as a very hard process and believes that, at the end of the day, it depends on how hard she is willing to work on the stage and to get there. 

Williams has been practicing her walks and talent every day to ensure that when those spotlights are on her, she feels her best. 

"After all the hard work I've put in, I feel very confident going into the show tonight," she said. 

She highlighted her grandmother as one of her biggest supporters, spending countless hours altering her clothes so they would be perfect for competition day. 

Link to Williams' fundraising page. 


Tags: cancer support,   competition,   

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Thunder 16U Holds Off Force in Weather-Shortened Contest

By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com Sports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. -- The Greylock Thunder capitalized on an early offensive surge and held off a resilient Berkshire Force squad for an 11-7 victory in a game that was called after five innings because of weather in 16U division of the Battle of the Berkshires Tournament on Friday.
 
Greylock wasted little time getting on the board in the top of the first inning. Consecutive singles put runners on the corners before another base hit brought home the game’s first run. The Thunder continued to apply pressure as a fielder’s choice kept the inning alive and Bayleigh Tatro ripped an RBI double to left field. An ensuing sacrifice fly plated another run, giving Greylock a 4-0 advantage.
 
Berkshire answered immediately in the bottom half of the inning. After retiring the first two Thunder batters, Greylock pitcher Avery Lane saw the Force string together quality at-bats. A single put a runner aboard before Madilyn Demary’s RBI double got Berkshire on the scoreboard. Another run-scoring single followed, trimming the deficit to 4-2 after one inning.
 
The Force went ahead, 5-4, in the second thanks to RBI singles from Alliah DiPietro and Mollie Crawford.
 
The Thunder then scored four times in the third to take the lead for good. Gianna Witek got the rally started with a double to left, and Greylock took advantage of a couple of errors and a bases-loaded walk worked by Lane to go ahead, 8-5.
 
Berkshire continued to battle and nearly erased the deficit in the third. The Force put runners on base with a walk and aggressive baserunning kept the pressure on. A runner crossed the plate during a steal attempt, and Berkshire added more traffic on the bases before Greylock's Lane recorded a swinging strikeout to end the threat with runners on first and second.
 
Greylock was able to pull away with a pair of runs in the top of the fourth and one more in the fifth to go ahead, 11-7.
 
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