A long Memorial Day weekend visit to Boston proved a positive revelation on many levels. The old city is one often depicted in movies, TV shows, books and other media. This was my first time in Boston and I left impressed and hopeful to return in the future.
THE HOTEL
Alesia booked our room at the Marriott Vacation Club at Custom House. Wow is this a grand hotel!
Our room on the 23rd floor is a villa. It has huge windows overlooking the harbor and Logan Airport on one side, and the city skyline on the other. It also has a kitchen.
Our villa, room 2302, is part of the clock tower just below the clock where you see windows.
The Classical Revival tower, nearly 500 feet tall, was added in 1915 to top the massive Custom House built in 1847.
This was Boston's tallest building for decades. Click here for more on this landmark's interesting history.
Alesia and I were enthralled right away when we entered the hotel lobby and looked up to see this decorative dome.
The Custom House hotel downtown in the Financial District is within walking distance of many of Boston’s most popular attractions and restaurants.
A nearby park, called Rings Fountain, offers a colorful show at night. We enjoyed comfortable weather the five days we were here. We did lots of walking. I logged 16,000 steps one day, according to my iPhone’s health app.
Daylight comes early in late May in this Northeastern metropolis. I snapped this photo just after 5 a.m. from the hotel. Two ships are passing in Boston Harbor. Logan Airport is in the background.
Speaking of Logan Airport, I captured this image of Boston's Seaport District that we had visited on foot the day before. Boston, then and now, is a shipping and fishing hub.
The long white structure is called the Innovation and Design Building. We saw it on our way to the Harpoon Brewery (keep reading) and I remarked that it is one of the longest buildings I’ve ever seen. I think it has its own zip code! Occupants include Reebok’s world headquarters.
Also, the port behind it was a surprise revealed from this photograph I took from our Delta 737.
Here's the street-level view of the big Innovation and Design Building. Our travels included the South Boston Seaport District. More on that later in this post.
Back to the hotel for a minute. It has many unique and interesting features such as this display on the 24th floor of the mechanisms that keep the clock on time. That floor also has a pool table and free washers and dryers for guests.
On the 25th floor is a panoramic observation deck. Greater Boston can be viewed from all directions!
On the Observation Floor is also this display about how Peregrine Falcons have nested for years in a nook somewhere at the top of the clock tower. More details here.
A live camera (check it out here!) shows what the little ones are up to 24/7. We saw the parents flying overhead. Wish I had been able to photograph that!
Marriott has done a great job of incorporating the history of the Custom House with many display highlighting its important past function in maritime business.
“A Spire to Commerce” is the headline of this display showing tower construction in 1915.
And, oh yes, there’s a nice bar too!
For first time visitors like us it’s helpful staying at a place that stands out and can be seen from great distances away as we wandered Boston’s streets.
Boxer Tony DeMarco “The Flame and Fury of Fleet Street” is immortalized in this statue on Hanover Street in the North End. The Boston native was welterweight champion of the world in the mid-1950s.
The Marriott Custom House where we are staying is seen in the background.
Our Boston trip was the idea of Alesia and Joseph. Joseph lives in New York City and was interested in going somewhere new. Alesia said we could meet him and Boston became the destination. He took Amtrak and we flew Delta.
Joseph’s birthday is on May 28. Lucky guy had two birthday desserts! On May 26 at Mamma Maria, a fine Italian restaurant, our server surprised him with this delicacy and candle. This restaurant is very close to the Paul Revere House (keep reading).
Then on his birthday he blew out another candle at the steakhouse Abe & Louie’s.
We had a great time with Joseph and enjoyed spending several days with him, especially his birthday which included a treat we all enjoyed at the Harpoon Brewery (keep reading).
Our first day we met up in Cambridge at the Residential Inn where we spent the night before moving downtown to the Custom House hotel.
Here the Charles River is behind us. We’re in Cambridge and Boston is across the river.
THE HISTORY: FREEDOM TRAIL
Where to start in this city of so many American first this and oldest that! Well, Boston makes it easy to absorb its rich history with a 2.5 mile 16 stop Freedom Trail.
You can do it as a guided tour or as we did on our own, using a map purchased at the tour starting point.
It was nice to see youngsters on these tours, by the way! We ran (or rather walked) into guided tour groups here and there.
And what better day to do a tour of one of America’s most patriotic cities than Memorial Day 2024.
The Freedom Trail focuses on America’s fight for independence from the British. Boston was a center of what became the Revolutionary War.
But this monument at Boston Common recognizes another flashpoint in American history a century later.
This pays tribute to the Black soldiers of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment who fought for the Union in the Civil War. The inscription here lists the names of the men killed in the July 1863 Battle of Fort Wagner (or Morris Island) which happened near where we live in Charleston. This was a bloody engagement in which Union troops unsuccessfully tried to break through a strongly defended Confederate position at Fort Wagner.
The monument’s other side shows the regiment on the move.
The 54th Massachusetts was lead by Col. Robert Gould Shaw, a Boston native as were many of his Black troopers.
Shaw died in the battle, among the 270 casualties (killed, wounded, captured or missing in action) of his unit’s 600 men at the battle’s start. Shaw is buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge which we also visited. I have a separate post about Mount Auburn.
The 1989 movie "Glory", starring Matthew Broderick, depicts Gould and his 54th Massachusetts Regiment.
The Freedom Trail is easy to follow thanks to the red brick path to the 16 points of interest. I don’t want to give you the stops one by one.
Instead, I’ll show you many of Boston’s historic sites on the list, plus other markers and sites that caught my eye.
Commodore John Barry, an Irish immigrant who became “Father of the American Navy.” Click on my photo or the previous link to learn more.
The gold-domed Massachusetts State House (1798). It was built on land owned by wealthy merchant John Hancock, a signer (with flair!) of the Declaration of Independence.
The dome was originally made of wood, then Paul Revere was commissioned in 1802 to cover it with copper to prevent water leaks. In 1874 it was gilded with 23-carat gold leaf.
It is the oldest building on Beacon Hill and is the seat of Massachusetts state government- and we were there!
The Boston Massacre- you’ve heard of it right?
British soldiers were being harassed by hundreds of Americans who were shouting and throwing things at them. Several soldiers would fire a single volley into the crowd, killing five and wounding six others.
A gold lion wearing a crown and a silver unicorn adorn the top of the Old State House. Part of the 1713 design, these are symbols of British imperial power and rule.
In the early 1900s metal replicas were erected and coated with gold for the lion and silver for the unicorn. In 2014 they were taken down and restored. Today they do sparkle and look like new.
King’s Chapel, its architecture Georgian, dates to 1749 when it replaced a wooden house of worship built in 1686 that was New England’s first Anglican church.
The historic sign says that after the Revolutionary War Kings Chapel became the U.S.’s first Unitarian Church and that affiliation continues to this day.
Kings Chapel has its own “burying ground” (I’d call it a churchyard or graveyard, but this is the term used here in Boston)/
The images engraved on it are strange and haunting. There’s an angel that looks evil. There’s a skeleton that is holding an arrow in one hand and with its other hand is extinguishing a candle (symbolizing an end to a human life). At the top (above) is a skull with an hourglass on its head.
The statue’s pedestal has depictions of a few of Franklin’s many accomplishments. From influential leader pushing for American independence…
Across from the Old State House Museum is the Boston Famine Irish Memorial. It is a comparatively new park opened in 1998.
The second sculpture in the park’s shows a healthy, prosperous Irish-American family. The message may be simplistic but it’s a notable recognition of the city’s prominent Irish influence.
Paul Revere’s fingerprints are all over historic Boston. He’s best known for his legendary midnight ride in April 1775 warning residents, “The British are coming! The British are coming!”
British Gen. Thomas Gage had his own pew box when he was in charge of things around here before American independence, per the signage. Click on the image to read about Gage.
Visitors are welcome to sit in the box pews. An employee stood at the pulpit (see her in the background) the whole time we were there. There are limits to what the visitors can do here- no big deal.
Old North also features the first sculpture of George Washington. The marble bust was carved in 1790 and donated to the church by member in 1815.
The church doesn’t have a churchyard. Member burials instead are under the church in a large crypt.
The Revere and Son company also operated a busy bell and cannon foundry. The bronze bell in this display was cast in 1804 and in 1805 was sold to East Parish Church in Bridgewater, Mass.
Spoons, bells, and brass cannon- Paul Revere had quite a range of products and a reputation for high quality with whatever he and his workers made.
As someone who has a passion for cemeteries, gravestones, and funerary customs (definition of a taphophile) I was excited that there are four old burial sites on the Freedom Trail. I previously covered the ones at King’s Chapel and the Old North Church’s basement crypts.
Too bad because several famous Americans are buried here. From the sidewalk we could see Samuel Adams’s massive boulder gravesite. This National Park service biography of Samuel Adams calls him "Boston's Radical Revolutionary."
The obelisk seen here between two tombstones in the foreground is the grave is Benjamin Franklin’s parents, Josiah and Abiah.
The name Granary Burying Ground came about because of its proximity to a granary, which is defined as a storehouse for threshed grain such as corn.
This is Copp’s Hill Burying Ground, established in 1659.
It was nice to walk among these very old stones. Only 2,200 markers remain of the 10,000 total burials. Most graves are before 1825.
You see here some of the best examples in the U.S. of the old style of winged or soul effigies (stone on the left).
A helpful display shows and describes these symbols that were popular in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Some markers are still easy to read, despite their age. This one says “Here lies interr’d the body of Mrs. Phebe Lane Consort (wife) of Cap (Captain) Ebenezer Lane who Departed this Life 12th Nov. 1781 in he 33rd Year of her Age.”
Because of Copp’s Hill’s high ground overlooking Boston Harbor, the British placed their cannons here to fire on American troops in Charlestowne during the Battle of Bunker Hill in June 1775.
Three hundred forty chests of British East India Company tea aboard three ships were cracked open with axes wielded by Sons of Liberty members and dumped into Boston Harbor.
…Samuel Adams. This statue of Adams stands tallThis statue of Adams stands tall and defiant in front of the Faneuil Building on Congress Street.
I was curious about the John F. Kennedy Federal Building. I walked several blocks to find that is part of a complex of government offices including Boston City Hall.
This is a very unique building! It is the 19-floor Boston University Center for Computing and Data Sciences. It was completed just a few years ago.
I captured this image the first day. We started our trip in Cambridge, across the Charles River from Boston. A big college sailing regatta was going on involving Ivy League schools.
Also spotted from that eagle nest is the U.S. lightship Nantucket (LV-12)U.S. lightship Nantucket (LV-12). It was in service from 1939-1983 safely guiding to Eastern seaboard ships such as the Queen Mary and United States ocean liners.
Quincy Market, named for a former mayor, dates to 1825. I walked past it early one morning when it was quiet and not yet open.
To be honest when I saw, I think, "fishing pier" on a map I thought it was, you know, a pier where people go out over the water with their bait and poles and try to catch fish.
For a nominal fee we were able to tour the brewery. It didn't take long as the operation is very compact.
The tour includes a 30-minute tasting opportunity. In this area in the back of the building is quite the beer can collection.
Our guide was also a "Beer Captain" as it says on his shirt sleeve. He is very knowledgeable and a bit of a jokester too.
This day was Joseph's birthday and what a treat it was for all of us to be able to sample as many types of Harpoon beer as we wanted!
Clown Shoes? That's the name of one of the brands. Never heard of that kind. I asked our Beer Captain about the origin of that odd name but he didn't really have an answer.
Our first evening in Boston we had dinner here, at Mamma Maria in the Italian district. It is not far from the Paul Revere House.
We also lunched on Boston clam chowder at an eatery that claims to be the oldest tavern in America.
Bell in Hand Tavern takes up a city block so it’s as big as it is old. Its address is 45-55 Union St.
Modern Pastry Shop, 257 Hanover St., is an iconic Boston eatery, among tourists at least. I learned of it through a YouTube video from a son and his father about their adventure on the Freedom Trail.
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