The casino at Encore Boston Harbor brings glamour on a grand scale to the Mystic riverfront. Enter the main floor—open and airy, colorful and vibrant, with 40-foot ceilings, red Rubino glass chandeliers, and a dazzling array of classic and state-of-the-art slot machines for every player, at every level. (Curated content from www.encorebostonharbor.com)
Take your pick from wall-to-wall trampolines, foam pits, dodgeball, slamball, ninja obstacles and more! (Curated content from getairsports.com)
Boston is a city like no other—and it has a harbor to match. We’ll show you the sights and teach you something about the history of the Boston waterfront like no one else can. Whether you’re looking for a romantic sunset excursion or a unique perspective on “Old Ironsides,” let BHC be your guide. (Curated content from www.cityexperiences.com)
Boston's premiere source for yacht charters and crewed boat rentals. Established in 1989. Navigating Boston Harbor, Boston Harbor Islands, Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and beyond. Specializing in corporate events, weddings, bachelorette parties, burial at sea, birthdays, term charters, harbor tours, and custom excursions. Also inquire about our dockside lodging! (Curated content from bostonyachtcharters.com)
Improv Asylum is a comedy theater featuring improvisation and sketch comedy (think Whose Line is it Anyway? meets Saturday Night Live!). We have performed more than 10,000 shows for well over 2 million people. You could be next! We have shows 6 nights a week at our resident theater on Hanover Street in Boston’s North End. (Curated content from improvasylum.com)
Built in 1723, Christ Church in the City of Boston, known to all as the Old North Church, is Boston’s oldest surviving church building and most visited historical site. (Curated content from www.oldnorth.com)
The iconic artisan Paul Revere and his home embody the cultural heritage and historical memory of Boston. Our programs reflect our commitment to richer interpretation through engaging educational presentations, a broadened thematic base, active collaborative programming, and an expanded notion of audience with outreach to underserved groups. (Curated content from www.paulreverehouse.org)
Fifty years after the battle, the Marquis De Lafayette set the cornerstone of what would become a lasting monument and tribute to the memory of the Battle of Bunker Hill. The project was ambitious: construct a 221-foot tall obelisk built entirely from quarried granite. It took over seventeen years to complete, but it still stands to this day atop a prominence of the battlefield now known as Breed's Hill. Marking the site where Provincial forces constructed an earthen fort, or "Redoubt," prior to the battle, this site remains the focal point of the battle's memory. (Curated content from www.nps.gov)
Discover how one city could be the Cradle of Liberty, site of the first major battle of American Revolution, and home to many who espoused that freedom can be extended to all. (Curated content from www.nps.gov)
On December 16, 1773, as many as 5,000 colonists packed this building to resist a shipment of taxed tea. After hours of negotiations, the people failed to come to a resolution with the royal government. A signal must have been given soon after, for some 150 men with soot on their faces and varying interpretations of Indigenous dress stormed out of buildings nearby and made their way to the tea ships at Griffin's Wharf. After hours of work, the men destroyed 342 chests of the imported tea. The British Crown viewed this resistance as treason, and the punishments brought the war closer than ever. (Curated content from www.nps.gov)