Boston
Although the metropolitan area of BOSTON has long since
expanded to fill the shoreline of Massachusetts Bay , and
stretches for miles inland as well, the seventeenth-century port at
its heart is still discernible. Forget the neat grids of modern
urban America; the twisting streets clustered around Boston
Common are a reminder of how the nation started out, and the
city is enjoyably human in scale.
Boston was, until 1755, the biggest city in America; as the one
most directly affected by the latest whims of the British Crown, it
was the natural birthplace for the opposition that culminated in
the Revolutionary War . Numerous evocative sites from that
era are preserved along the Freedom Trail through downtown.
Since then, however, Boston has in effect turned its back on the
sea. As the third busiest port in the British Empire (after London
and Bristol), it stood on a narrow peninsula. What is now
Washington Street provided the only access by land, and when the
British set off to Lexington in 1775 they embarked in ships from
the Common itself. During the nineteenth century, the Charles River
marshlands were filled in to create the posh Back Bay residential
area. Central Boston is now slightly set back from the water,
separated by the John Fitzgerald Expressway that carries I-93
across downtown. The city has been working on routing the traffic
underground (a project a decade in the making known as "the Big
Dig"), though the monumental task won't likely be completed before
2004, much to the frustration of locals.
There is a certain truth in the charge leveled by other
Americans that Boston likes to live in the past; echoes of the
"Brahmins" of a century ago can be heard in the upper-class drawl
of the posher districts. But this is by no means just a city of
WASPs: the Irish who began to arrive in large numbers after the
Great Famine had produced their first mayor as early as 1885, and
the president of the whole country within a hundred years. The
liberal tradition that spawned the Kennedys remains alive, fed in
part by the presence in the city of more than one hundred
universities and colleges, the most famous of which Harvard
University actually stands in the city of Cambridge, just
across the Charles River, and is fully integrated into the tourist
experience thanks to the area's excellent subway system.
The slump of the Depression seemed to linger in Boston for years
even in the 1950s, the population was actually dwindling but these
days the place definitely has a rejuvenated feel to it. Quincy
Market has served as a blueprint for urban development
worldwide, and with its busy street life, imaginative museums and
galleries, fine architecture and palpable history, Boston is the
one destination in New England there's no excuse for missing.
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