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Students outnumber year-round residents in this pleasant college town located 18 mi/30 km north of Springfield, which is home to the University of Massachusetts, Amherst College and Hampshire College. While there, visit poet Emily Dickinson's home (r...
Categories: Amherst
For more than a century, the tranquil hills in the far-west region of Massachusetts 110 mi/175 km west of Boston have attracted a stunning array of creative talent—from musicians to visual artists to giants of American literature. They've also attrac...
Categories: Berkshires/Western MA
The history and bricklaid beauty of Boston is easy to enjoy. Follow the Freedom Trail past Old North Church, Paul Revere Park, Fanieul Hall, the Commons, Old Ironsides and more landmarks of America's birth. Across the Charles River is Cambridge and H...
Categories: Boston
North of Worcester, in Boylston, Massachusetts, the Tower Hill Botanic Garden offers an educational and peaceful detour. Its 18th-century-style greenhouse filled with subtropical specimens is a nice escape in winter.
Categories: Boylston
Braintree is a town Norfolk County, Massachusetts, and is conveniently located in the Greater Boston area. Settled in 1625, this New England city is best known for being the birthplace of John Adams and John Quincy Adams, as well as John Hancock.
Categories: Braintree
Categories: Buzzards Bay
Cambridge is a city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, USA, and part of the Greater Boston metropolis. English Puritans settled in 1630 and first named it Newe Towne. In 1638, the Massachusetts legislature who were also Cambridge University alumni...
Categories: Cambridge MA
Discover why Cape Cod is best known for its beaches with their impressive dunes. Explore the pristine landscapes along the 40-mile stretch of National Seashores and Dunes on Outer Cape Cod. Delight in the fresh salt air as you search for the numerou...
Categories: Cape Cod
Cruising
Categories: Cape Cod Canal
Categories: Chatham
Located 20 mi/30 km northwest of Boston, the village of Concord, Massachusetts, was one of the first places where musket balls flew during the Revolutionary War. The main battle site, Old North Bridge, is part of Minuteman National Historic Park, as ...
Categories: Concord MA
You won't find many architectural preservation projects better executed than Historic Deerfield—12 buildings from the 1700s and 1800s that have been meticulously preserved within the larger town of Deerfield, Massachusetts. Located 80 mi/130 km west ...
Categories: Deerfield
Students of maritime history will want to set anchor in Fall River, Massachusetts, located 45 mi/70 km south of Boston and just a 15-minute drive from New Bedford. It's home to Heritage State Park at Battleship Cove where visitors can board the World...
Categories: Fall River
Categories: Falmouth MA
Fitchburg, Massachusetts, 24 mi/30 km north of Worcester, has a small art museum that has gained attention in New England. Prints by American impressionist Mary Cassatt and German expressionist Kathe Kollwitz are stars of the collection. There are al...
Categories: Fitchburg
Gloucester, Massachusetts is America’s oldest seaport. In 1606, Samuel de Champlain came into the harbor and named it ‘Le Beau Port’. Today, it is still a busy seaport where most of the town’s inhabitants fish for a living, supplying much of the w...
Categories: Gloucester
In Harvard, Massachusetts, you will find the Fruitlands Museum, a small farmhouse complex that began as a utopian "New Eden" co-founded by transcendentalist Bronson Alcott (Louisa May's father). Exhibits include Shaker furniture and crafts, Native Am...
Categories: Harvard
Driving southeast 15 mi/25 km along winding Highway 228 from Boston, you'll reach Hingham, Massachusetts, a delightful town with a boulevardlike main street and lavish 18th- and 19th-century houses set off by gracious lawns. The elegant town center i...
Categories: Hingham
Holyoke, Massachusetts, 8 mi/13 km north of Springfield, is an example of an early planned mill city. Today it's a year-round recreation center, with fishing, ice skating, cross-country skiing, rock climbing and snowshoeing at Mount Tom State Reserva...
Categories: Holyoke
Just north of Salem and 31 mi/50 km northeast of Boston (on Route 107) lies the charming colonial town of Ipswich, Massachusetts, which has several 17th-century homes (preserved by the Ipswich Historical Society) around the town common. Anne Bradstre...
Categories: Ipswich
Lenox, Massachusetts, is the location of "The Mount," Edith Wharton's gracious estate. It was there that she wrote Ethan Frome and entertained such literary stars as Henry James. A long-term, US$35 million restoration of the house incorporated Wharto...
Categories: Lenox
Lexington, Massachusetts, about 10 mi/16 km northwest of Boston, bears witness to the war for U.S. independence. On 19 April 1775, Lexington was the site of the first skirmish of the Revolutionary War when British troops were dispatched to seize a su...
Categories: Lexington MA
This former mill town, the City of Spindles, located 35 mi/55 km northwest of Boston, was a pioneer in the U.S. industrial revolution. Lowell, Massachusetts, is now a thriving modern city with a lively arts scene centered on the Merrimack Repertory T...
Categories: Lowell
The North Shore town of Marblehead, Massachusetts, near Salem, has an Old Town section with Federal-style sea captains' homes and charming cottages. The views of Marblehead Harbor from Crocker Park are exquisite New England panoramas.Stop at Abbot Ha...
Categories: Marblehead
Categories: Marlborough MA
Categories: Mass Maritime Academy
Categories: Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge
From 1820 to 1860, the waterfront town of New Bedford, Massachusetts, was the world's most active whaling port, which made it one of the world's wealthiest cities of its time. In addition to 90 restored buildings, this town 60 mi/100 km south of Bost...
Categories: New Bedford
Coastal Newburyport, Massachusetts, near the state's northeasternmost tip 35 mi/55 km north of Boston, draws visitors with its rich nautical heritage—boatyards, taverns and magnificent Federal-style mansions on High Street that were once the homes of...
Categories: Newburyport
Located in the Berkshires region of northwestern Massachusetts, the small city of North Adams is home to the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA). Describing itself as a supercollider for the arts, the museum is a must-visit for conte...
Categories: North Adams
Northampton, Massachusetts, where former U.S. President Calvin Coolidge lived and practiced law after attending Amherst College, is a well-preserved 19th-century town with a thriving arts community. The town is also home to Smith College, whose Museu...
Categories: Northampton MA
Categories: Penikese Island
Ironically, Col. Jacob Wendell, the man credited with initiating and guiding the original settlement of Pittsfield, never lived here and may have never even visited. In 1738, the wealthy Bostonian bought 24,000 acres of lands known originally as Pon...
Categories: Pittsfield
Founded by the Pilgrims on December 21, 1620, this town situated on the banks of Plymouth Bay is ripe with historical significance to U.S. history. Any American grade-schooler can tell you about Plymouth Rock and the Mayflower and here one can see b...
Categories: Plymouth Massachusetts
Quincy, Massachusetts, just 7 mi/21 km south of Boston, is aptly called the City of Presidents—both John Adams and his son John Quincy Adams hailed from there. The Adams National Historical Park includes the birthplace of both men and an Adams family...
Categories: Quincy MA
Categories: Rockland
Salem, Massachusetts is a coastal city in the United States of America. Salem holds an important piece of history in early America, this is because it was the birthplace of the National Guard and known for its famous Witchcraft Trials of 1692. Salem ...
Categories: Salem
South Hadley, Massachusetts, 9 mi/14 km north of Springfield, is home to Mount Holyoke College, the oldest women's college in the country (founded in 1837). The collection at Mount Holyoke Art Museum ranges from Egyptian artifacts to contemporary wor...
Categories: South Hadley
Enjoy a visit to an authentic Colonial-style town, and be sure savor some of New England's best chowder and apple pie while visiting Southbridge!
Categories: Southbridge
In a state known for firsts, Massachusetts' third-largest city located 90 mi/145 km southwest of Boston, Springfield, claims its fair share: the first U.S. automobile, the first motorcycle, the first gas pump (which, presumably, was installed for the...
Categories: Springfield MA
Categories: Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary
Artist Norman Rockwell spent his last years in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. A sizable collection of his works, most notably cover illustrations for the Saturday Evening Post, are displayed at the Norman Rockwell Museum. Another famous Stockbridge arti...
Categories: Stockbridge
It's worth at least a half-day's visit to the south-central Massachusetts town of Sturbridge to see Old Sturbridge Village, a reconstructed 1830s working village 55 mi/90 km southwest of Boston. Cattle and oxen graze the 200-acre/80-hectare living-hi...
Categories: Sturbridge
Two roads lead to Williamstown which are of romantic beauty. One is old stage-road through New Ashford and lovely valley of South Williamstown. A deliciously cool stream parallels the road with the ruins of the old saw-mill and the curious abyss of ...
Categories: Williamstown MA
Categories: Woods Hole
Worcester, Massachusetts, located 40 mi/65 km southwest of Boston and the second-largest city in the state, has a long history as a cultural center. Charles Dickens, Henry David Thoreau and Mark Twain all lectured at Mechanics Hall, which was built i...
Categories: Worcester MA