Further Distractions
Boston
Prudential Skywalk Observation Deck & Exhibit
The best view of Boston is from the 50th floor of the Prudential Building. From a height of 213m (700ft) there is a 360-degree view of the city and its environs.
Prudential Tower
800 Boylston Street
Tel: (617) 859 0648.
Website: www.prudentialcenter.com/shop/shop_detail.php?id=64
Opening hours: Daily 1000-2200 (Mar-Oct); 1000-2000 (Nov-Feb).
Admission charge.
Boston Harbor Islands
On a warm, sunny day, the Boston Harbor Tour is a pleasant way to while away three and a half hours. The 45-minute ride to Little Brewster Island is a lesson in history, lighthouses and shipwrecks. Along the way is Spectacle Island, with a past that runs the gamut from a home to an 18th-century quarantine hospital, a resort and even a garbage dump. Other interesting islands in the 34-island national park area include Long Island (not open to the public) and Georges Island. Its Fort Warren served as a Civil War jail. The first US lighthouse (1716) was built on Little Brewster Island. Although the British burned it when they left, it was rebuilt in 1783. Today it is manned (womanned, really) by a lady lighthouse keeper. Visitors can climb its 76 winding steps and two ladders for an amazing view of the ocean, the isles and the Boston skyline.
Umass Boston Campus Center next to JFK Library. Arrive at the centre at least 15 minutes before departure.
Tel: (617) 223 8666.
Website: www.bostonislands.com
Opening hours: Thurs 1000, Fri-Sat 1000 and 1400 (last week in May until first week in Oct).
Admission charge.
New England Holocaust Memorial
Representing the Jews killed in the Holocaust are six glass columns, each etched with a million names. During the winter, smoke rises from each, a grim reminder of the mass murders committed and the concentration camp ovens.
Carmen Park, Congress Street near Faneuil Hall, on the Freedom Trail
Tel: (617) 457 8755.
Website: www.nehm.org
Prudential Skywalk Observation Deck & Exhibit
The best view of Boston is from the 50th floor of the Prudential Building. From a height of 213m (700ft) there is a 360-degree view of the city and its environs.
Prudential Tower
800 Boylston Street
Tel: (617) 859 0648.
Website: www.prudentialcenter.com/shop/shop_detail.php?id=64
Opening hours: Daily 1000-2200 (Mar-Oct); 1000-2000 (Nov-Feb).
Admission charge.
Boston Harbor Islands
On a warm, sunny day, the Boston Harbor Tour is a pleasant way to while away three and a half hours. The 45-minute ride to Little Brewster Island is a lesson in history, lighthouses and shipwrecks. Along the way is Spectacle Island, with a past that runs the gamut from a home to an 18th-century quarantine hospital, a resort and even a garbage dump. Other interesting islands in the 34-island national park area include Long Island (not open to the public) and Georges Island. Its Fort Warren served as a Civil War jail. The first US lighthouse (1716) was built on Little Brewster Island. Although the British burned it when they left, it was rebuilt in 1783. Today it is manned (womanned, really) by a lady lighthouse keeper. Visitors can climb its 76 winding steps and two ladders for an amazing view of the ocean, the isles and the Boston skyline.
Umass Boston Campus Center next to JFK Library. Arrive at the centre at least 15 minutes before departure.
Tel: (617) 223 8666.
Website: www.bostonislands.com
Opening hours: Thurs 1000, Fri-Sat 1000 and 1400 (last week in May until first week in Oct).
Admission charge.
New England Holocaust Memorial
Representing the Jews killed in the Holocaust are six glass columns, each etched with a million names. During the winter, smoke rises from each, a grim reminder of the mass murders committed and the concentration camp ovens.
Carmen Park, Congress Street near Faneuil Hall, on the Freedom Trail
Tel: (617) 457 8755.
Website: www.nehm.org
The best view of Boston is from the 50th floor of the Prudential Building. From a height of 213m (700ft) there is a 360-degree view of the city and its environs.
Prudential Tower
800 Boylston Street
Tel: (617) 859 0648.
Website: www.prudentialcenter.com/shop/shop_detail.php?id=64
Opening hours: Daily 1000-2200 (Mar-Oct); 1000-2000 (Nov-Feb).
Admission charge.
Boston Harbor Islands
On a warm, sunny day, the Boston Harbor Tour is a pleasant way to while away three and a half hours. The 45-minute ride to Little Brewster Island is a lesson in history, lighthouses and shipwrecks. Along the way is Spectacle Island, with a past that runs the gamut from a home to an 18th-century quarantine hospital, a resort and even a garbage dump. Other interesting islands in the 34-island national park area include Long Island (not open to the public) and Georges Island. Its Fort Warren served as a Civil War jail. The first US lighthouse (1716) was built on Little Brewster Island. Although the British burned it when they left, it was rebuilt in 1783. Today it is manned (womanned, really) by a lady lighthouse keeper. Visitors can climb its 76 winding steps and two ladders for an amazing view of the ocean, the isles and the Boston skyline.
Umass Boston Campus Center next to JFK Library. Arrive at the centre at least 15 minutes before departure.
Tel: (617) 223 8666.
Website: www.bostonislands.com
Opening hours: Thurs 1000, Fri-Sat 1000 and 1400 (last week in May until first week in Oct).
Admission charge.
New England Holocaust Memorial
Representing the Jews killed in the Holocaust are six glass columns, each etched with a million names. During the winter, smoke rises from each, a grim reminder of the mass murders committed and the concentration camp ovens.
Carmen Park, Congress Street near Faneuil Hall, on the Freedom Trail
Tel: (617) 457 8755.
Website: www.nehm.org









