The City
Boston has grown up around Boston Common , which was set
aside as public land in 1634. The obvious first stop on any tour of
the city, it is also one of the gems in the string of nine parks
(six of which were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, America's
foremost landscape architect) known as Boston's Emerald
Necklace . Another gem is the lovely Public Garden ,
across Charles Street, where the two-ton swan boats ($1.50),
which paddle across the main pond, are a less-than-natural, though
whimsical, focal point.
The visitor center - the start of the Freedom
Trail - is near the tapering north end of the Common. As you
stand here, facing up Tremont Street with the State House
away to your left, the main shopping district, Quincy
Market , and the waterfront are slightly ahead and down
to the right. The modern concrete wasteland of Government
Center is straight up Tremont Street, with the North End
beyond - first Irish, then Jewish, and now very definitely Italian.
A short way behind you on the left rises Beacon Hill , every
bit as elegant as when Henry James called Mount Vernon Street "the
most prestigious address in America" (and far removed from its
eighteenth-century nickname of "Mount Whoredom"). Heading away from
the center down Tremont Street brings you to Chinatown and
the Theater District , while grand boulevards such as
Commonwealth Avenue lead west from the Public Garden into the
Back Bay , where Harvard Bridge runs across the Charles
River into Cambridge .
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