Sunday, June 28, 2009

Bastin...where you eat chowda and labster!

You have to read the title in your best Boston accent. The accents are really thick and extremely loud in Boston! As you can imagine Mom and I were definitely out of place with our accents. We never realize how thick our accents are until we go up North. Now on to the details.........

Mom was at a nursing convention with nurses from all over, luckily she knows one of the nurses who lives in Boston and she just so happen to go to church at the Old North Church. The Old North Church is where Paul Revere hung the lanterns to signal the British were coming. We got an after hours tour and were able to go down into the crypts and in to the bell tower. The tour guide took people to the top of the bell tower, however, mom and I did opt for that. The stairs were built in the 1800's with out hand rails and went straight up. No thanks! The church still holds weekly services and weddings. We also learned that Paul Revere didn't actually hang the lights, but had two other people hang them so he could start off on his horse and alert others. Here are some pictures from the tour.


The Altar




The organ


Looking up the bell tower




The outside of the church


From here, the same lady took us to a restaurant in Little Italy. It was owned by an Italian family that she went to church with. We had antipasto with anchovies on the salad. Mom tried the anchovy and said it was salty. I never got around to it, if you know what I mean. There was also an older man named Tony playing the accordion and singing. He was very cute!

The next day was packed with sight seeing. We first went to Fenway Park. Since this is an older field, there wasn't a huge sign or big grand entrance. It was just entrances on the side of the street. Here is a picture.


We made our way down Newberry Street which is a very famous street for shopping. This street ran us into the Boston Commons and Boston Public Gardens, these are Boston's version of Central Park. On one side of the Boston Commons is Cheers!!! We went and had a beer at Cheers!



Two of mom's colleagues that tagged along for the sight seeing, Jane and Karen

The next day was another day of adventure! Only this time we got good weather. It was sunny and about 68 degrees. Perfect for walking around the city! We started off with lunch at No Name Restaurant. It was across the street from the hotel on the fishing pier. Our waiter, Nicholas, was Greek and had the best accent and was an older gentleman that adored our Southern accents. They had the best clam chowder ever! We then made our way across town to the Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market. It is a huge attraction in Boston. There is a small fake Cheers bar there. We saw some crazy street performers. We then made our way across the Charles River to the Bunker Hill memorial and the USS Constitution. The Charles River has a bridge across it that looks just like the Cooper River bridge in Charleston.

Quincy Market



Street Performers

Bridge crossing the Charles River

Bunker Hill Memorial


USS Constitution, the first battleship, ummmm...it's wooden.






Our last stop on the trip was Harvard. The campus was absolutely beautiful! Mom and I had a discussion while walking around the campus about what you think a person that attends Harvard would look like. We pictured a really nerdy person with a pocket protector, but we didn't see anybody like that. Like Fenway Park, we didn't see a huge entrance to Harvard, but we also didn't have the legs to look for it. We had walked between 5 and 7 miles this day. Ouch!

The Library at Harvard

Boston was a blast! It is definitely a place I would love to go back and visit. I don't feel like I got to see everything!

2 comments:

Colly said...

I really like your story telling of the trip. It looked wonderful!!! I went to Boston when I was younger, but unfortunately don't remeber too much other than the pier and Cheers of course!! haha!

Chap and Heather said...

GREAT pictures!! I want to go to Bastin!!!