Tours in Boston
Private 1.5-Hour Freedom Trail Walking Tour with Costumed Guide
Boston Harbor Holiday Brunch Cruise
Boston Haunted Pub Crawl
City Cruises Boston Premier Lunch Cruise
Boston Private Day Trip with Salem & Cape Ann’s North Shore
Boston Private City Tour and Harvard University with Hotel Pick Up
Public North End Neighborhood Tour
Plymouth half day private tour from Boston, groups 1-4
Full-Day Private Tour of Boston with Pick Up
Private Tour of Boston for Families & Kids
Private Tour of Lexington, Concord, and Boston
Cambridge, Lexington, & Concord: Private Revolutionary War Tour
Homemade Dumplings 101 in Boston
Boston and Cambridge Private Day Tour
Cocktails & Cannoli: Boston's North End Dessert Tour
Salem Private Half Day Tour from Boston, groups 5-6
Boston Harbor Private Sunset Cruise
Private driving tour of Boston groups of 5-6
Private Transfer from Boston city hotels to Flynn Cruise Port
Guided Walking Tour of Copley Square to Downtown Boston Freedom Trail
Private Boston Movie Mile Guided Walking Tour
Boston’s Freedom Trail: Private Tour including Paul Revere House
Sushi Making Class at a Local Distillery in Boston
Boston is rightly called a global city, the cultural center of New England, and a museum and historic site. But the locals, of course, call it something else. The capital of Massachusetts owes its amusing nickname – Bintown, «Bean Town» – to a traditional dish, beans in molasses.
The main historic route is the Freedom Trail. Four miles of this trail connect the iconic landmarks of the Old City. It begins at Boston Common, the first public park in the United States, and passes the old and new capitols, old cemeteries, and churches of all denominations. It also passes monuments to famous citizens and the sites of important events – the Boston Tea Party and the Boston Massacre. The tour ends at the Constitution, the world's oldest sailing ship still in operation.
History is an important part of the city's atmosphere. Tours with local guides take guests through the entire vibrant, fascinating chronicle of the city: its founding, its struggles with the English colonial authorities, the establishment of independence, and the abolition of slavery. You'll learn why tea was drowned in the harbor and why old houses smell like molasses on warm days.
Modernity, however, has no intention of leaving the city trapped in its memories. The metropolis (along with the surrounding agglomeration) is growing inexorably higher and wider. The skyscrapers of the business center seem to form a local mountain range among the low historical buildings. Glass and concrete inlays are almost ubiquitous in the old part of the city, giving it an eclectic, unconventional look.
Next door to Boston is Cambridge, from which the English university town takes its name. It's no coincidence that the world-famous Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are located here. Harvard is America's oldest and one of the world's strongest centers of science, as evidenced by the number of Nobel laureates among its alumni and faculty. In addition to its bastions of scientific knowledge, the city is known for its theaters, monuments, and fascinating facts about famous and little-known people.