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You are here: Home : Destination Guide : North-america : New-england : Locations

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New England: Locations

 

The one thing you notice about New England towns and place names is that they are somehow very familiar. Many of the places are named from the original towns, villages and hamlets and counties from old England, some from France and others left over from the Native American names. The major city of Boston is, in fact, originally a small town in Lincolnshire, England, and the little Old London speaks for itself.


Plymouth Plantation

102 pilgrims made the original trip in the 16th century from Plymouth, England in a sea worthy vessel called the Mayfair. They set up camp just a few miles from where they actually landed, in a village called Plymouth Plantation. It is still a working representation of how life was back then. The village was originally a wilderness and they began to hack away at the woods to cut the trees and build houses. Many did not survive that first harsh winter on the ship. From those 50 that survived the Mayflower the pioneer spirit still lives on.

Boston


As Oliver Wendle-Holmes wrote, Boston is the hub of the universe. Boston is the place where the pioneer spirit of the Pilgrim settlers has been challenged again and again. New York may be more dynamic, LA more quirky and San Francisco more beautiful, but no city has as big a past as it does a present and as much tradition as innovation. Some call it the intellectual cradle of America and there's only one way to keep up with Boston and that's to hit the ground running.
Boston's later history saw huge waves of immigration. The Irish became prominent in politics, culminating in their favourite son, JFK, becoming president, but another nationality to flood Boston during these times was the Italians. Today the North End as it is known, is the Italian district, and it oozes character.
Education is a way of life in New England. There are over 60 colleges and universities in the Boston area and 250,000 people come here to study every year. 4 of its universities, Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth and Brown are all part of the prestigious ivy league. There are some serious college rivalries and nothing stirs it up like a football game. College football in America is huge. The games are broadcast live on TV and as many as 30,000 people come to support their local college team.
Harvard in Boston city is probably the most famous University. It's been the set for many films and has educated many of America's most powerful people. Like 'Oxbridge' in England, if you can get in here, you're going to be set for life, which is a good thing because it costs a fortune to go here. Harvard has no shortage of superstitions and folklore. Legend has it that if you rub the big toe of the statue of college founder John Harvard you'll have years of good luck. It's also known as the statue with 3 lies, because there are 3 problems with it, one, that it's not actually John Harvard, it's a student, two he was the benefactor and not the founder, and the university was founded in 1636, not 1638 as the plaque claims.

As far as the nightlife in Boston goes, you have a lot to choose from but you cannot go wrong if you hit an Irish pub. The Irish took such a firm hold of the city, that it's now the most Irish city in America. Remember that do hit the barrel you sadly need to be over 21 in the USA and will need proof of age.

The Freedom Trail, amazing parks and gardens, art and science museums and nearby historic towns of Plymouth, Gloucester and Salem make Boston a quaint and beautiful city to visit.

Boston Massacre

The story of the city of Boston is a tale full of attitude and rebellion. In front of the Royal State House was the scene of a bloody massacre when colonialist soldiers opened fire on innocent people, which heralded the start of the American Revolution against British rule. It was the famous massacre that really ignited the people toward revolt and encouraged them to get rid of English rule forever.
By 1773 the tensions here had grown considerably, the English had lifted all of the taxes except for one on tea, which completely outraged the colonialists who decided that they were not going to unload the cargo. At night they secretly dressed up as local Indians, boarded the boat and dumped all of the tea overboard. This became known as the famous Boston Tea Party.
The English became incensed and they decided to put an end to this kind of behaviour, but what they didn't bargain for, was war. April 19th, 1775 was the day the first shot of the revolutionary war was fired. Paul Revere rode from Boston to Lexington, screaming 'the regulars are coming, the regulars are coming'. This allowed the men some time to assemble before they were met by 700 British soldiers. At some point a shot rang out, nobody knows who or why, but this became known as the shot heard round the world.
The war lasted for years before Boston and the colonies gained full independence. 4th July is know as Independence day and is celebrated as a public holiday by American throughout the world. On this date in 1776, a group of brave American colonists took a bold stepwhen the Second Continental Congress voted to adopt Thomas Jefferson's revolutionary document, the Declaration of Independence.

New Haven

New Haven is a small, but prominent town, known mainly as the home to Yale university, but it also harbours a tiny establishment which has had a huge impact not only on America, but on the world, it's the place that invented the hamburger.

Danbury

Danbury is the home of an all American institution - Harley Davidson motorcycles. The Marcus Dairy has for over 30 years bikers been the meeting point for bikers who gather here religiously every Sunday morning. It started out small, but by the mid 80's over 1000 bikers would collect here and so the Dairy decided to make it official and they created a bike show called Super Sunday. Now, up to 15,000 bikers hang out at the dairy on Sunday mornings. There are stalls here selling everything from brand new, state of the art Harleys, to Harley Davidson toilet seats and machine guns, and you can meet plenty of Hell's Angels. Biking isn't just big in New England, all across the US, over 6 million bikers cruise the highways each year and half a million of those own Harleys.

New Hampshire

Portsmouth
and Strawbery Banke in the state of New Hampshire are fantastic beach resorts. The cities of Manchester and Concord are worth a visit for art lovers and city goers, and Lake Winnipesaukee is famed for its great water sports and the White Mountain National Park for its forest hiking and camping. North Conway boasts a range of outdoor activities and the Franconia Notch State Park also offers great scenery. You can drive on the Kancamagus Highway from Lincoln to Conway for an outdoor nature experience from inside your car.

Maine

Maine is famed for its food like lobster and hamburgers and its fantastic beach resorts. Portland is the main centre of Maine, but heading East you can explore some lovely beach towns like Camden, Boothbay Harbor, Bar Harbor and Blue Hill. Outdoor activities from beachcombing to hiking and mountain adventures are key to the Maine experience, with beautiful lakes and the Acadia National Park situated to the North of the state.

Connecticut


Connecticut's jewels include Nook Farm, the house of author Mark Twain in Hartford, great universities like New Haven and Yale and maritime history and development. Picturesque scenery can be explored in the old towns of Essex, Old Lyme, Ivoryton and the Litchfield Hills in the north-west.

Newport - Rhode island

Newport is the main place to visit with great seaside beaches and palace mansions and a base to explore other island like Block Island.

Belleview Rd is basically Rhode Island's millionaire mile. Newport in the 19th Century was definitely the playground for all of the shipping and steel and coal magnates in the country and they were all here, the Fischers, the Astors, the Vandebildts. They were incredibly wealth and they built 'summer cottages' which were actually glorious mansions. All of these mansions look out over the sea. Of all of the splendid and famous Newport mansions the best to visit is Vanderbildts house, who were at one time America's wealthiest family. The Vanderbildts pretty much epitomised the American dream. Cornelius Vanderbildt started out with 100$ borrowed from his mum, her entire life savings, and turned it into $100 million from buying one ferry, then several ferries and eventually he owned the New York Central Railroad.

One thing Newport is famous for is sailing. Newport was the setting for the America's Cup for 135 years and it's so synonymous with sailing that if you mention Newport to anyone in New England you may as well be saying yacht.

 
   
 
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