The Boston Freedom Trail
eBook - ePub

The Boston Freedom Trail

In Words and Pictures

  1. 112 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Boston Freedom Trail

In Words and Pictures

About this book

A Moving and Informative Guidebook and Keepsake Worthy of Coffee Table Display! Through lyrical paragraphs and poignant black and white images, The Boston Freedom Trail reveals the essence of each site along the Freedom Trail, thereby allowing the reader to be moved and to connect more intimately with the splendor of liberty itself. Said to be the soul of the city, Boston's Freedom Trail embodies the remarkable and courageous spirit of America's unyielding quest for Independence and makes Boston a popular and endearing tourist destination. Beginning within the elegantly manicured grounds of Boston's Common, this trail takes an estimated twenty million visitors a year on a fascinating 2.5-mile walk through its historic sites—sites enveloped within the city itself, and dotted with cafĆ©s, restaurants, bars, hotels, and commerce. In this book, each of these sites, and each name associated with America's independence, whispers endless stories and inspires great dreams. This city's captivating past—and that of the entire American experience—can be discovered on each page, making it an absorbing and everlasting book, one dedicated to the absolute beauty and the luminous tradition of freedom.

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Yes, you can access The Boston Freedom Trail by Robert Wheeler in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Early American History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Skyhorse
Year
2019
Print ISBN
9781510743779
eBook ISBN
9781510743786
CONTENTS
Foreword
Preface
Introduction
Boston’s Common Ground
The Brewer Fountain
Shaw Monument
Black Heritage Trail
Massachusetts State House
Park Street Church
Granary Burying Ground
King’s Chapel
King’s Chapel Burying Ground
First Public School—Site of Boston Latin School
Benjamin Franklin Statue
Old Corner Bookstore
Boston Irish Famine Memorial
Old South Meeting House
Old State House
Boston Massacre Site—Incident on King Street
Boston Tea Party
Faneuil Hall
New England Holocaust Memorial
The North End
Paul Revere House
Old North Church
Copp’s Hill Burying Ground
USS Constitution ā€œOld Ironsidesā€
Bunker Hill
Other Voices
Culinary
Overnight
The End
Acknowledgments
images
FOREWORD
By Jim Koch, founder of the Boston Beer Company and brewer of Samuel Adams Boston Lager
When you live in Boston, as I have since 1967, it’s easy to take The Freedom Trail for granted. It’s even easy to curse its small, circuitous streets and cobblestone paths. Locals often overlook the red brick line that guides curious visitors through the city. But as Bostonians, we all have our moments when we stop and pause in awe of the history that surrounds us.
I had one of those moments of awe when I was starting The Boston Beer Company and was searching for a name for my signature brew. Friends had given me sheaves of possible names when I recalled my high school history teacher’s favorite figure from the American Revolution, Samuel Adams. I clearly remembered why I became captivated with Adams: it was his unyielding fervor and his unwavering drive for independence; it was his progressive thinking and his determination to stay in the fight, even against overwhelming odds. For me, his name is synonymous with American pride and independence and freedom. And like me, Samuel Adams came from a family of brewers. I will always remember that spring morning when I gathered my courage and forced myself to take the elevator to the lobby, to walk down State Street, and to make my first terrifying sales call to introduce Samuel Adams Boston Lager.
If Boston is, as Oliver Wendell Holmes claimed in 1858, the ā€œHub of the Universe,ā€ then Faneuil Hall is the hub of Samuel Adams’ life. I hope that both Bostonians and visitors alike who walk the Freedom Trail will enjoy this beautifully written book. I am honored that Robert Wheeler asked me to write this foreword. I feel that when reading these expressive paragraphs, and when gazing upon these evocative photographs, one will never again overlook the grand significance of historic Boston and its awe-inspiring Freedom Trail.
Cheers!
Jim Koch
images
PREFACE
By Dan McCole, Southie Watercolorist
As an Irish American having grown up in South Boston, I have much pride in the major role Boston, my City on the Hill, played in the fight for freedom from the British Crown. As a graduate of Boston’s Vesper George School of Art in 1952, I have spent a good part of my life painting those images of the city—its people, its architecture, its harbor, its traditions and celebrations—that inspire and resonate.
Through his new book, Robert Wheeler breaks with tradition by bringing to life the bravery, the hopes, the risks, and the edgy promise of a new country for a people who bet their lives on a free society. The words and images within this important book are based on his passion, and his keen observation, as he takes us behind and underneath the physical beauty of the bronze plaques, sculptures, and burial grounds, and fleshes out the lives of a people who were willing to die in order to live free.
As I step along with my life, moving into those more graceful and contemplative years, I am reminded that lasting art reaches into the heart of the observer, thereby keeping images and events fresh and alive. Boston’s rich and charismatic Trail, as seen through these lyrical vignettes and these moving pictures, keeps the torch lit, and reminds us of the precious cost, and the beauty, of true and lasting freedom.
Best and Always,
Dan McCole
images
INTRODUCTION
The beauty and allure of Boston’s Freedom Trail—a trail that winds itself through modern buildings, busy traffic, and hurried people—is endlessly captivating, forever surprising, and worthy of contemplation and celebration. There is simply no other city in America that exposes and reflects as much history, and it is the enduring presence of Boston’s historical past that makes it an essential destination. This city’s past, and that of the entire American experience, can be discovered on each corner and contains fascinating stories of both unanimity and rebellion in the lives of real people struggling to find liberation and dignity in the New World. Those who established a Republic and who envisioned a future governed by and for the people in those early years of the 1770s, were following the philosophy and spirit of the Age of Enlightenment, or Reason, that had first been conceived on the European continent by such writers as Locke, Hume, and Voltaire. These men during this Age believed in, and advanced through a rational and scientific approach, the ideals of liberty, of a constitutional government, and of the separation of church and state. The commitment to the ideals of Enlightenment can be seen in the founding documents of the new Republic, and in the great halls where the ideas of the Revolution were first debated and declared. Boston’s Freedom Trail is a constant reminder of the perils of confronting the powerful and, throughout its many twists and turns, one is constantly reminded of the predominance and tyranny of the British monarchy. Due to the power of King George III and his determination to subdue his American colony, colonial rebels—our Founding Fathers—were considered malicious and often referred to as extremists, even terrorists. Those men—Paine, Adams, Jefferson, Hancock, Franklin, Revere—backed by strong and resourceful women, were subject to being hanged for their treasonous denunciations. As a group of thinkers with very radical ideas a...

Table of contents

  1. Front Cover
  2. Half-Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Foreword
  8. Preface
  9. Introduction
  10. Boston’s Common Ground
  11. The Brewer Fountain
  12. Shaw Monument
  13. Black Heritage Trail
  14. Massachusetts State House
  15. Park Street Church
  16. Granary Burying Ground
  17. King’s Chapel
  18. King’s Chapel Burying Ground
  19. First Public School—Site of Boston Latin School
  20. Benjamin Franklin Statue
  21. Old Corner Bookstore
  22. Boston Irish Famine Memorial
  23. Old South Meeting House
  24. Old State House
  25. Boston Massacre Site—Incident on King Street
  26. Boston Tea Party
  27. Faneuil Hall
  28. New England Holocaust Memorial
  29. The North End
  30. Paul Revere House
  31. Old North Church
  32. Copp’s Hill Burying Ground
  33. USS Constitution ā€œOld Ironsidesā€
  34. Bunker Hill
  35. Other Voices
  36. Culinary
  37. Overnight
  38. The End
  39. Acknowledgments