Previous Next 1 2 3 4 5 6 … The largest area of the city, Downtown is rich with historical and iconic sites in Boston. Continue on through the Gardens and take in some open green space at the Boston Common, where you can spend time throwing a frisbee, sitting on a park bench, or, in the winter time, skating on the frog pond.
Head north from the end of the Common to see the golden dome of the State House, and travel through government center to Quincy Market and Faneuil Hall, both a historic and popular destination worth a quick visit for a first time to Boston. Nearby Hotels See all 89 nearby hotels. Nearby Restaurants See all 3, nearby restaurants. Nearby Attractions See all nearby attractions. See all 89 nearby hotels See all 3, nearby restaurants See all nearby attractions.
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You can start at the information center on the Boston Common on Trement Street. It is a bit of a walk from the Hilton so taking the green line train the T inbound to Park street is the easiest way to get there. You can get on at the Massachusetts Ave stop or the Prudential stop. Both are very close to the Hilton. You can follow the trail without a guide.
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I would recommend that you do the whole trail and go into Charlestown to see the Bunker Hill Monument and the famous ship, The Constitution. But to get back to down town I would take the ferry every 15 minutes from the Navy yard where the ship is docked back to the Aquarium T stop so that you do not have to repeat your steps back into the down town area.
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And the ferry is great. It is a short 15 minute trip across the harbor and it is beautiful. Places to stop for a drink or a meal include the Warren Tavern in central Charlestown, Pier Six next to the ferry stop in Charlestown, or in the North End try Neptune for the freshest fish. Is there car parking available near the freedom trail? Response from cannonater Reviewed this property.
Uber or use public transportation. Response from tjwilson Reviewed this property. We parked at the Boston Commons which is the beginning of the trail.
It is underground parking. TripAdvisor LLC is not responsible for content on external web sites. More about King's Chapel Burying Ground. Born poor in Boston in , Benjamin Franklin became a printer, publisher, political thinker, scientist, writer, inventor, and statesman.
He got his start by writing for his brother's newspaper under the name of Mrs.
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More about Benjamin Franklin in Boston. Built in and one of Boston's oldest brick buildings, the Old Corner Bookstore has always been a commercial space. Once occupied by the company that published famous 19th century authors Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and many others, the mellow red brick building now houses a fast food chain. More about the Old Corner Bookstore. On December 16, , Boston's Old South Meeting House , scene of many speeches supporting liberty, a crowd of 5, Colonists waited tensely to hear if ships carrying British tea would be allowed to leave Boston Harbor and go back to England.
When the answer came back as "No! More about Old South Meeting House. Patriots made some of their most compelling arguments against British tyranny here, and on July 18, , Colonists gathered around an outside balcony to hear the Declaration of Independence read aloud for the first time in Massachusetts.
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More about Old State House. The British occupied Boston in and tension filled the tavern-lined streets - an explosive combination. On March 5, , a street brawl left 5 colonists dead, killed by Redcoats in what the local Sons of Liberty quickly called the Boston Massacre. More about the Boston Massacre. Back in , wealthy merchant Peter Faneuil decided Boston needed a marketplace so he built Faneuil Hall and donated it to Boston.
More about Faneuil Marketplace and Faneuil Hall. Crafted from carved timbers and wooden pegs, Paul Revere's house, a medieval-style structure in Boston's historic North End neighborhood, is the only 17th century wood dwelling still standing in its original Boston site. Open today as a museum, the house displays examples of Revere's metal work - spoons, bowls, dental wiring, bells, engraving plates - as well as late 17th century maps, furniture, and furnishings.
More about visiting Paul Revere's house. Built in , it is the oldest place of worship still existing in Boston and has an active Episcopal congregation. In , sexton Robert Newman, a friend of Paul Revere, hung 2 lanterns from the steeple to warn Charleston Patriots about British plans to go by water to Concord. The best way to access Old North Church: More about the North End neighborhood.
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You can still see gravestones with pockmarks from musket balls, made when Redcoats used Copp's Hill Burial Ground , dating from and the 2nd oldest cemetery in Boston, for target practice. Generals watched from this hill in as their troops burned Charlestown to the ground - and continued watching in horror as half of their men died during the Battle of Bunker Hill.
Boston mayor John Hynes decided to put Schofield's idea into action. By , 40, people were walking the trail annually. The National Park Service operates a visitor's center on the first floor of Faneuil Hall, where they offer tours, provide free maps of the Freedom Trail and other historic sites, and sell books about Boston and United States history. Some observers have noted the tendency of the Freedom Trail's narrative frame to omit certain historical locations, such as the sites of the Boston Tea Party and the Liberty Tree.
The official trail sites are: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Freedom Trail Special markers implanted in the sidewalk denote the stops along the Freedom Trail. Retrieved November 1, Boy Scouts of America. Archived from the original on 22 April