Private tour in Boston Edward B
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Edward B.
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Welcome to Boston, Massachusetts! Do you remember when you went on field trips in grade school and the last thing that you were interested in was the tour or the tour guide? Well full disclosure: I was the nerd in the back of the school bus with his face pressed to the glass, taking notes in a spiral ring note book and hanging on every word the guide said at the Old North Church! More than half a century later, I have not lost my passion for history, art and architecture, and I am so excited to show it all to you! A bit about me, I grew up in west suburban Boston and am a recently retired administrator from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, MA. I began doing guided tours of Boston on weekends and holidays in 1980. I was an art history major as an undergraduate, and of course I love talking about the art and architecture of the city, but also Boston's pivotal role in the events that led to the American Revolutionary War. My work at MIT awakened an interest in civil engineering, so I'll talk about projects like "The Big Dig" or the filling of the Back Bay. My tours will also recognize the cultures of the First Nation peoples who had been living in our area for at least 2, 000 years before even Europeans arrived! Along the way, you'll make some nifty discoveries. Did you know that Boston has the oldest underground transit in the Western Hemisphere? Or that native people used finely woven fences made out of branches and twigs called "fish weir" to catch fish in the tidal areas? In my free time, I enjoy all this city has to offer. I love biking along the Charles River Esplanade. I live about 5 blocks from Fenway Park, and can easily hear the crowds roar from my open windows when there's been a home run or a base hit. I love to go to our lovely Museum of Fine Arts and the English and American "Period Rooms" have been my favorites since I was a kid. Boston is compact but delivers a historical bang for the buck that cannot be matched! Bachelor Degree in Fine Arts and French from the University of Massachusetts. Master's Degree in Education from Simmons University. Regular contributor to the Fenway News (neighborhood newspaper) under the byline, "The Urban Detective". 40 years plus experience navigating the legend and the lore of Boston. For the Boston based tours we will be walking or in the case of the Cambridge Tour, we will be traveling by MBTA Red Line subway.
Have a question or want to customize this tour? Message Edward B.
Like its neighbor the Back Bay, the Fenway is landfill. Up until 1900, this was a brackish water tidal estuary where the Stoney Brook and the Muddy River (still) empty into the Charles River. Starting in the late 1870's, Frederick Law Olmstead was engaged by the city of Boston to devise a sanitary solution for this polluted water course and provide a park for the expanding city. With more room to grow, the Fenway quickly became the home for museums, schools and our baseball stadium Fenway Park (1912). Today, the Fenway is the most culturally rich neighborhood in the city of Boston. Choose the 10 AM-1PM tour if: You are headed to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts or the Isabella Stewart Museum. (note: these two museums are CLOSED on Tuesday!). Choose the 2-5 PM tour if you are going to an evening Red Sox game!
Begin in Copley Square in front of the Dartmouth Street entrance to the Boston Public Library (BPL). Pass through the library and by the Boston Marathon Finish Line. Head southwest past the Prudential Center and into the quaint Saint Botolph Street neighborhood, cross into the Christian Science Plaza. Visit the Mapparium, a little-known Boston attraction and my personal favorite. A short walk on Massachusetts Avenue takes us past Boston's Symphony Hall (1900) and not far, see where Martin Luther King Jr. lived when he was a student at Boston University in the early 1950's. A short walk past the New England Conservatory of Music to the campus of Northeastern University and see the location of the first World Series game in 1903. Proceed into the Back Bay Fens designed by Frederick Law Olmstead and pass along the Fens façade of the Museum of Fine Arts/Boston (MFA) and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Ending point can vary depending on your plans "post tour".
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This is a walking tour. Total distance covered is during this 3 hours is approximately 2 miles (3.2 km)
Airport: ,Cruise: ,ByGuide: Dartmouth Street Entrance to the Boston Public Library, Copley Square
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If your tour is valued over $200 USD and booked at least 45 days before the tour date, you can book with a deposit!
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