Ever since their founding, the Harvard Art Museums—the Fogg Museum, Busch-Reisinger Museum, and Arthur M. Sackler Museum—have been dedicated to advancing and supporting learning at Harvard University, in the local community, and around the world. The museums have played a leading role in the development of art history, conservation, and conservation science, and in the evolution of the art museum as an institution. (Curated content from harvardartmuseums.org)
More than one million objects depict the wide interests of the MIT community from its founding in 1861 to today's cutting-edge current research. (Curated content from mitmuseum.mit.edu)
If you love mystery, adventure, and puzzles, you’ll love our mission-driven escape rooms! It’s like starring in a real life movie, where, for one hour, anything can happen! (Curated content from redfoxescapes.com)
DRINK. PLAY. NERD OUT. 21+ (Curated content from www.a4cade.com)
Christ Church was designed in 1759 by Peter Harrison of Newport, Rhode Island, the colonies’ first well-known architect. The building has been altered since, but the integrity of Harrison’s original design has remained intact. (Curated content from www.cccambridge.org)
Named after BU’s first astronomy professor, the observatory provides attendees with access to Schmidt-Cassegrain telescopes and binoculars, so they can gaze into the night sky (Curated content from www.bu.edu)
Established in 1848 by an act of the Great and General Court of Massachusetts, the Boston Public Library (BPL) was the first large free municipal library in the United States. (Curated content from www.bpl.org)
The mission of Fenway Park Living Museum Fund, Inc., is to support Fenway Park's continued preservation and to make Fenway Park's rich history accessible to fans and the general public by supporting the collection, preservation, safeguarding and display of historic materials. The Fenway Park Living Museum collection is available for viewing to the general public year-round through Fenway Park tours. (Curated content from www.mlb.com)
The Gibson House Museum is a private, nonprofit house museum in Boston's historic Back Bay neighborhood. The home served as residence to three generations of Gibson family members and their household staff between 1859 and 1954. The Museum’s four floors of period rooms, including the original kitchen, are a time capsule of domestic life in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. (Curated content from www.thegibsonhouse.org)
Isabella Stewart Gardner collected and carefully displayed a collection comprised of more than 7500 paintings, sculptures, furniture, textiles, silver, ceramics, 3000 rare books, and 7000 archival objects-from ancient Rome, Medieval Europe, Renaissance Italy, Asia, the Islamic world and 19th-century France and America. (Curated content from www.gardnermuseum.org)