Boston, the “cradle of liberty,” juxtaposes
sleek skyscrapers and Colonial churches,
beautifully manicured parks and pulsating
urban bustle, and genteel college campuses
and diverse, blue-collar neighborhoods.
The always-proud city is riding high these
days, thanks to recent landscaping and
beautification, the almost-completed highway
upgrade known as the Big Dig, and, most
importantly, the long-awaited World Series
victory of the beloved Red Sox. Civic
pride is abundant, and, fortunately for
visitors, citizens and officials are taking
great pains to ensure that modern growth and
change do not squelch the city’s colorful
past.
Bostonians are proud of the city’s claims to
fame – nation’s oldest public park, first
public library, first subway system, and
first public school – not to mention the key
role the city and its denizens played in the
American Revolution. The Freedom Trail
takes familiar characters from schoolbooks –
Revere, Adams, Hancock, Hawthorne, Emerson,
and Longfellow – and turns them into living,
breathing heroes, highlighting the
extraordinary contributions they made to
America’s foundation and its culture.
The city also has a historic commitment to
education and is home to dozens of colleges
and universities, including Harvard and MIT,
which are considered among the best in the
world. These educational institutions
provide an intellectual flavor to the city,
not only attracting politicians, artists,
and writers but bringing in an annual deluge
of youthful enthusiasm.
Boston’s beginnings trace back to 1629, when
the Massachusetts Bay Colony was founded by
1,000 Puritans escaping religious
persecution in England . First governor John
Winthrop named the town in honor of his
hometown of Boston, Lincolnshire.
Today, the city is divided into distinct
neighborhoods, and each offers restaurants,
museums, leisure activities, historic sites,
shops, and pursuits befitting a flourishing
metropolis. In Back Bay, hip folks
congregate in cutting-edge galleries and
cool cafes and frequent Boston’s best
collection of boutiques and shops. The
South End section of Back Bay, whose
population represents more than 40
nationalities, showcases the city’s ethnic
diversity.
For a taste of the upper crust, head to
Beacon Hill, a gorgeous, tree-lined section
with posh restaurants and shops, and
historic sites like Boston Common and the
State House. Chinatown – the third largest
Chinese neighborhood in the US – is known
for its plethora of eateries, the city's
theater district, and for Downtown Crossing,
one of Boston’s top shopping destinations.
You have to try Legal Seafood for "True" New
England Clam Chowder.
The downtown area and financial district are
home to skyscrapers full of lawyers, bankers
and executives, as well as a Colonial
section featuring many of the most popular
stops on the 2.5-mile Freedom Trail.
Here, you’ll find Faneuil Hall Marketplace,
Dixie's personal favorite, a landmark where
Samuel Adams stirred public interest in
independence that’s now the city’s most
popular destination, full of shops,
restaurants, and bars.
The Italian-flavored North End also features
historical standouts, including Paul
Revere’s House and the Old North Church that
he made famous at the start of the
Revolutionary War. And no sightseer
will want to miss the waterfront, home to
Boston’s active seaport and to attractions
like the USS Constitution, better
known as Old Ironsides.
Boston is ideally suited to visitors, thanks
to pedestrian-friendly streets and a compact
size that allows ambitious sightseers to
explore the city’s wealth of offerings in
just a few days. Longer stays allow
tourists to peel back the city’s layers and
explore the impressive diversity of the
country’s original melting pot.
Numerous cultures, ethnicities, commercial
offerings, and recreational opportunities
only strengthen Boston’s rich Colonial
character and showcase a dignified city that
manages to keep one eye on its bright future
and another on its revered past.