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Stretching throughout Boston from the Boston Common in Downtown all the way up to Charlestown, the Freedom Trail is the ...
Plan Ahead: If you have a Go Boston Card, standard guided tours given by the Freedom Trail Foundation are covered by your pass. Stretching 2½ miles, the Freedom Trail weaves past 16 of Boston's ...
This vibrant neighborhood near Boston is well-loved for its incredible food scene, street art, and quirky festivals. Here's ...
The Freedom Trail in Boston is offering tours about women of the Revolutionary War in March; The tours are being offered in the spirit of Women's History Month, which lasts all of March ...
Join us as we stroll along the historic Freedom Trail in Boston, exploring the deep roots of American history. 🏙️ Experience the sights and stories that led to the Boston Massacre and shaped ...
Last Tuesday (Nov. 12), the Boston Women’s Heritage Trail officially launched Sidewalk Stories, a series of trail markers highlighting historic women at the Codman Square branch of the Boston Public ...
With the holiday season just around the corner, you can immerse yourself in the festive spirit with a holiday stroll on the Freedom Trail in Boston. They will be offered on select Fridays and ...
The Freedom Trail Foundation’s several daily 90-minute group tours are led by costumed guides (thefreedomtrail.org) and based on what I heard in passing over the course of my time in Boston, the ...
Boston’s restaurant scene ... to sustain passersby walking along the Freedom Trail. Go big and order a whole pie with a can of Pepsi to enjoy on the bench out on the sidewalk. 69 ...
What are Freedom Trail lantern tours? These annual tours offer guests the opportunity to learn about local history and explore the Freedom Trail in Boston by lantern-light. Each tour lasts 90 minutes.
Boston newspapers first pitched plans for a proto-Freedom Trail in the 1930s. But the idea didn’t catch on until after World War II. By that point, most of the city’s once-massive textile ...
The history behind the Trail shows what gets left out when profit, rather than the public, drives historical tourism.