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MASSACHUSETTS
Recreation and Places of
Interest
Massachusetts offers a wide variety of attractions
for tourists. The Berkshire Hills provide good
skiing and hiking. The Mohawk Trail, originally
traveled by Native Americans and connecting the
people in the Connecticut River valley with those
in the west, today is the popular name for Route
2 as it winds along the Deerfield River and over
the Berkshire Mountains between Greenfield and
North Adams. On its way it passes through some
of the most beautiful sections of northwestern
Massachusetts. Deerfield, in the Connecticut River
valley, was the site of a Native American raid
during Queen Anne’s War in the early 18th
century.
The main attraction in central Massachusetts is
Old Sturbridge Village. A representation of a farming
settlement of the early 19th century, the village
contains homes and craftsmen’s shops. Massachusetts’s
North Shore presents a panorama of its maritime
history in the picturesque old fishing town of
Gloucester. Another old port is Salem, where tourists
visit a number of historic buildings, including
the House of the Seven Gables, built in 1688 and
made famous in a novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne.
The country’s first ironworks has been restored
at Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site.
North of Boston are Lexington and Concord, famous
for their role at the outset of the American Revolution.
Among the many attractions of Boston is the Freedom
Trail, which includes Faneuil Hall, the Old South
Meeting House, and the Old North Church, where
lanterns were hung to signal the beginning of the
ride of Paul Revere. The Bunker Hill Monument (see
Bunker Hill, Battle of) and the U.S.S. Constitution
are across the Charles River in Charlestown.
Plymouth, on Massachusetts’s South Shore,
is the site of the Pilgrim’s Plymouth Colony.
A reconstruction of the original Mayflower can
be seen there, as well as Plymouth Rock, where
the Pilgrims are supposed to have landed. Also
there is Plimoth Plantation, a reconstruction of
the early village. All along Cape Cod fine sandy
beaches and sheltered coves invite swimming, fishing,
and sailing. At the tip of the cape is Provincetown,
long an artist’s colony. The resort island
of Martha’s Vineyard is known for the beautifully
colored clay cliffs found at Gay Head. Farther
offshore lies Nantucket Island, once a whaling
center and now a summer colony and resort of much
charm.
National Parks
The National Park Service maintains 13 sites in
Massachusetts, most of which preserve fine structures
related to the nation’s history. Among them
is the Boston African-American National Historic
Site in the heart of Boston’s Beacon Hill
neighborhood. The site includes 15 pre-Civil War
structures relating to the history of Boston’s
19th-century black community, including the African
Meeting House, the oldest standing black church
in the United States. Boston National Historical
Park contains 16 sites connected by the Freedom
Trail, which runs through downtown Boston and Charlestown.
The trail is marked by a line in the pavement either
in red paint or brick.
The John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic
Site, in Brookline, is the birthplace and early
boyhood home of the 35th president. The Adams National
Historical Park, in Quincy, commemorates the American
family that includes two United States presidents,
John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Two more parks
explore the lives of other noted Massachusetts
residents. Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic
Site, also in Brookline, commemorates the great
conservationist, landscape architect, and founder
of city planning. An archival collection of drawings
and plans is housed at the site. Likewise, the
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow National Historic Site,
in Cambridge, celebrates the poet’s work
created while teaching at Harvard from 1837 to
1882. George Washington used the house at the Longfellow
site as his headquarters during the siege of Boston
(1775-1776).
The history of America’s Industrial Revolution
is preserved at Lowell National Historical Park,
which includes the Boott Cotton Mills Museum with
a weave room with 88 operating looms, “mill
girl” boarding houses, the Suffolk Mill turbine,
and 19th-century commercial buildings. The Springfield
Armory National Historic Site contains a weapons
museum in the building that for 175 years was the
center of manufacturing for United States military
small arms.
Structures preserved at the Salem Maritime National
Historic Site date from the era when Salem ships
opened trade with ports of East Asia. Buildings
of maritime significance include the Custom House
where Nathaniel Hawthorne worked, Derby Wharf,
the Bonded Warehouse, the West India Goods Store,
and the 17th-century Narbonne-Hale house.
The Minute Man National Historical Park, in Lexington
and Concord, preserves the scene of the fighting
between the colonial militia and British troops
on April 19, 1775, the day that launched the American
War of Independence. At the North Bridge, the first
ordered firing upon British troops resulted in “the
shot heard ‘round the world.”
Along the Battle Road, colonials fired at the retreating
British (see Concord, Battle of).
Cape Cod National Seashore comprises 17,628 hectares
(43,557 acres) of shoreline and upland landscapes.
A variety of historic structures are within the
boundary of the seashore, including lighthouses
and houses in the Cape Cod architectural style.
A portion of the Appalachian National Scenic Trail
also passes through the state.
State Forests and Parks
While Massachusetts is often thought of as an urban
state, forests in the 1990s covered almost triple
the area they did in the early 1800s. The largest
area under state control is October Mountain State
Forest, near Lee, with more than 6,500 hectares
(16,000 acres). State regions of particular interest
are Mount Greylock, the state’s tallest mountain,
with panoramic views of the Berkshire Hills; Purgatory
Chasm State Reservation, with geologic formations
that offer rugged rock walls and hiking paths along
the floor of the chasm; and Holyoke Heritage State
Park, where visitors can learn about the first “planned”
industrial city. The state boasts 97 state parks,
including Nickerson State Park, on Cape Cod; Skinner
State Park, in Hadley, famous for painter Thomas
Cole’s 1836 “The Oxbow,” which
fixed the public’s image of New England landscape
for decades; and Walden Pond, near Concord, which
attracts admirers of writer Henry David Thoreau.
The nation’s oldest public park is the 20-hectare
(50-acre) Boston Common, located in the center
of Boston. It was set aside in 1634 as a cow pasture
and parade ground.
Museums
Massachusetts’s leading museum is the Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston, where an outstanding collection
of Asian, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, European, and
American art is housed. The Isabella Stewart Gardner
Museum, in Boston, houses famous paintings. The
Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, in Williamstown,
has an important collection of European paintings,
including Impressionists and Old Masters. The Worcester
Art Museum and the Harvard University Art Museums
are also well known.
Of particular interest to young people are the
Boston Museum of Science; the maritime collections
at the Peabody Essex Museum and the historical
Salem Witch Museum, both in Salem; and the whaling
museums in New Bedford and on Nantucket. The Boston-based
Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities
maintains historic homes throughout the state.
Source: MSN Encarta:
Online Encyclopedia