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Boston at a glance
The most European of American cities, Boston will charm the most discerning traveler. Perfect to be explored on foot, from the Freedom Trail to Faneuil Hall. Visit this ethnic melting pot of diversity.
Boston history
Puritan foundations Native Americans had been living on the
Boston peninsula for more than 2000 years when Captain John Smith,
famous for helping lead the settlement of Virginia to the south,
sailed into the harbor in 1614. Smith mapped the area between Cape
Ann to the north and Cape Cod to the south and called it New
England. He named the largest river in the area the Charles, after
the British prince. In 1620, the Puritans, chased out of England
for their religious beliefs, landed in nearby Plymouth, and founded
the first permanent European settlement in the Boston area.
Boston local information
State MassachusettsCountry:
United StatesBoston by the Numbers:
Population: City: 600,000, metro: 3.2 million Land Area: 48 square miles Elevation: 10 feet Average Annual Rainfall: 17 inches Average Annual Snowfall: 41 inches Average January Temperature: 36 degrees F, Average July Temperature: 82 degrees F Quick Facts
Major Industries: Tourism, Education, Government, Publishing and Printing Electricity: 110 volts AC Time Zone: Eastern, GMT - 5 Country Dialing Code: 1 Area Codes: 617 and 857 Did You Know?
Boston is home to the nation's first public park (The Boston Commons 1640), the first public library (1653), and the first subway (1897). Orientation Boston, the capital and largest city of Massachusetts, looms on the state's eastern edge along the shores of Massachusetts Bay. Its compact downtown area harbors some of the nation's greatest historical sites including Faneuil Hall, the Boston Tea Party Ship and Museum, and the Paul Revere House (The). New York City lies 200 miles southeast. Boston weather
Average Temperatures
Fah
Cel
Rainy Days
Average Annual
Rainfall:
42.5" / 108.1 cm
Puritan foundations Native Americans had been living on the
Boston peninsula for more than 2000 years when Captain John Smith,
famous for helping lead the settlement of Virginia to the south,
sailed into the harbor in 1614. Smith mapped the area between Cape
Ann to the north and Cape Cod to the south and called it New
England. He named the largest river in the area the Charles, after
the British prince. In 1620, the Puritans, chased out of England
for their religious beliefs, landed in nearby Plymouth, and founded
the first permanent European settlement in the Boston area.
A few years later, William Blackstone, a scholar and clergyman from the Plymouth settlement, set out in search of solitude. He found himself, his bull and several hundred books at the foot of Beacon Hill. In 1630, Blackstone lured other Puritans to Boston with promises of ample fresh water. He soon was in the middle of a bustling community that included the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, John Winthrop. The town was named Boston (Native Americans had called it Shawmut) after the town of the same name in England, which had been named after St. Botolph, the patron saint of fishing. From the beginning, the growing town used the Atlantic Ocean as its lifeline, and over the next 40 years, Bostonians built more than 730 ships. As Boston became a center for publishing, education and trade, the strict moral teachings of the Puritans clashed with the zeal of the emerging merchant class. The Redcoats are coming! By 1680, the once independent colony was firmly under British
control. As Paul Revere's famous engraving of 1768 shows, British
warships conveyed troops to the city in response to protests over
the Stamp Act of 1765, which required tax stamps to be placed on
any published materials. The act was later rescinded after protests
by the "Sons of Liberty," who included Samuel Adams, John Hancock
and John Adams. But the British Crown issued mandates that imposed additional taxes on the colony. By 1770, there was one British soldier in town for every four colonists. The powder keg exploded on March 5, 1770, with the Boston Massacre. The site where British troops fired into a crowd of colonists, killing five people, is marked today by a ring of cobblestones at Congress and State Streets. Beginning a war On December 16, 1773, a mob led by Samuel
Adams boarded three ships and dumped their cargoes of tea overboard
in "The Boston Tea Party". The British
parliament responded by sending even more troops to close off
Dorchester Neck, the only land entrance to Boston. The "shot heard
'round the world" was fired in Lexington on April 19, 1775, when a
group of colonial militiamen engaged in battle with British
regulars. The American Revolution had begun. The tide turned for the Bostonians with George Washington's first major victory on March 16, 1776. Using the cover of night, the rebel army moved much of their artillery to the top of Dorchester Heights. British troops awoke to find enough cannon staring down at them to destroy their fleet anchored in Boston Harbor. On March 17th, Evacuation Day, they fled the city, and the date has been a city holiday ever since. Rebuilding for a new century Post-Revolutionary Boston had
a population less than a third of what it had been just prior to
the war. But the early years of the 19th century were boom times
for Boston, which added thousands of new residents every 10 years,
along with mills, tanneries and factories. Eventually annexed by
the city were fast-growing suburbs: Roxbury, Jamaica Plain and
Dorchester. Landfill was another way to meet the ever-increasing
demands for more space: Mount Vernon gave up tons of dirt and
gravel to form Charles Street at the base of Beacon
Hill. The Back Bay, once a soggy bank along
the Charles River, was built on top of landfill. It was during these prosperous times that Frederick Law Olmsted, one of the nation's foremost landscape architects, designed the "Emerald Necklace." This is a series of green spaces that connects the Boston Common, Public Garden and Commonwealth Avenue Mall to parks of Olmsted's design like the Arnold Aboretum, Franklin Park and the Back Bay Fens. Boston's downturn The end of the Civil War signaled an end
to Boston's booming economy. Newly constructed rail lines
eliminated trade from Boston's waterfront. Factories around the
country produced goods more cheaply than in Boston, and the shoe
and textile industries vanished by the 1920s. With the arrival of
the Great Depression of the 1930s, Boston's economy seemed doomed.
The renovation of Boston finally came at the hands of Mayor John
Collins, who undertook a massive restructuring of the city in the
1950s. Many old landmarks were destroyed, but he also created many
jobs and helped pump dollars into the slowly reawakening economy.
Booming again The John Hancock Tower, designed by famed
architect I.M. Pei, soared skyward in 1975 as Boston's tallest
building. In 1978, renovated Quincy Market symbolized a new period
of growth. The 1990s saw the beginning of the giant urban
renovation program known as the Big Dig,
designed to bury Interstate 93. Boston, now one of the country's major centers of high-tech development and a popular tourist destination, has entered the new millennium with the energy, perseverance and heady spirit that have always been the city's trademarks. © Wcities |
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