The suffering fame of the Old North started on the night of April 18, 1775, when two lamps were hung in its steeple by church sexton Robert Newman and vestry member Captain John Pulling, Jr. This sign, conceived by Paul Revere,
Visit to the New England Aquarium for marine themed fun. Here you and your kids will appreciate investigating the maritime miracles that anticipate every step of the way.
Comprised of 34 islands and peninsulas, Boston Harbor Islands National and State Park is a metropolitan oasis only minutes from Boston's downtown area.
Boston’s Public Garden is the formal and prepped youthful cousin to the more tumultuous and casual Boston Common. The first public botanical garden in America, its structure, plantings, and sculpture inspire its Victorian legacy.
Boston’s most valued landmark isn’t the Tea Party Ships or Bunker Hill, but rather old Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox. A must-see for sports fans just as history and design buffs,
The beginning point of the Freedom Trail, Boston Common is the ancient park in the country. At 50 sections of land (20 hectares), it is the anchor for the Emerald Necklace, an arrangement of associated parks that breezes through huge numbers of Boston's areas.
Faneuil Hall is a clamouring marketplace is most popular for it’s steadily changing of street performers and its mid location on Boston’s historic Freedom Trail.
Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) houses one of the world’s most exhaustive art collections, with almost 450,000 works ranging from old Egyptian sculptures to contemporary masterpieces.
Taking in 16 of Boston’s most popular historical and cultural sites, Freedom Trail winds through downtown Boston! The red-brick way and its assigned quits, including pioneer period holy places, museums, and meeting houses,