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Adams
National Historic Park - Adams National Historical
Park is located in the City of Quincy, Norfolk County, Massachusetts,
approximately ten miles south of Boston. The site comprises 11 historic
structures and a cultural landscape totaling almost 14 acres. The site
provides a unique opportunity for preservation, education and
participation in the history and development of the United States, the
Revolutionary War, and the United States Presidency.
Appalachian
National Scenic Trail - The Appalachian National
Scenic Trail is a 2,167-mile (3,488 km) footpath along the ridge crests
and across the major valleys of the Appalachian Mountains from Katahdin
in Maine to Springer Mountain in north Georgia. The trail traverses
Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, Tennessee,
North Carolina and Georgia.
Boston
National Historic Park - Discover the revolutionary
generation of Bostonians who blazed a trail from colonialism to
independence. Boston National Historical Park is an association of sites
that together give the visitor a coherent view of the city's role in the
nation's history.
Boston
African American National Historic Site - Located 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 African-American community, including: the African Meeting
House, the oldest standing African-American church in the United States.
Boston
Harbor Islands National Recreation Area - Boston
Harbor Islands national park area includes 30 islands situated within
the Greater Boston shoreline. The islands are rich in natural and
cultural resources.
Cape
Cod National Seashore - Cape Cod National Seashore
comprises 43,604 acres of shoreline and upland landscape features,
including a forty-mile long stretch of pristine sandy beach, dozens of
clear, deep, freshwater kettle ponds, and upland scenes that depict
evidence of how people have used the land. A variety of historic
structures are within the boundary of the Seashore, including
lighthouses, a lifesaving station, and numerous Cape Cod style houses.
The Seashore offers six swimming beaches, eleven self-guiding nature
trails, and a variety of picnic areas and scenic overlooks.
Frederick
Law Olmsted National Historic Site - Frederick Law
Olmsted (1822-1903) is recognized as the founder of American landscape
architecture and the nation’s foremost parkmaker. Olmsted moved his
home to suburban Boston in 1883 and established at “Fairsted” the
world's first full-scale professional office for the practice of
landscape design. Over the course of the next century, his sons and
successors expanded and perpetuated Olmsted's design ideals, philosophy,
and influence.
John
F. Kennedy National Historic Site - John F. Kennedy
National Historic Site preserves the birthplace in 1917 and boyhood home
of the 35th President of the United States. The modest frame house in
suburban Boston was also the first home shared by the president's father
and mother, Joseph P. and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, and represents the
social and political beginnings of one of the world's most prominent
families.
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Longfellow
National Historic Site - Longfellow National Historic
Site is an outstanding example of a historic site representing the
themes of arts and literature. For almost half a century (1837-1882)
this was the home of one of the world's foremost poets, scholars and
educators, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
Lowell
National Historic Park - The history of America's
Industrial Revolution is commemorated in Lowell, Massachusetts. The
Boott Cotton Mills Museum with its operating weave room of 88 power
looms, "mill girl" boardinghouses, the Suffolk Mill Turbine
Exhibit and guided tours tell the story of the transition from farm to
factory, chronicle immigrant and labor history and trace industrial
technology. The park includes textile mills, worker housing, 5.6 miles
of canals, and 19th-century commercial buildings.
Minute
Man National Historic Park - The events of April 19,
1775 were a turning point in the long struggle between Mother England
and her American colonies. In a march of protest and petition turned
independence and revolution, the fighting on April 19, 1775 would
foreshadow the rebellious action of the American colonies to ultimately
create a new nation, the United States of America.
New
Bedford Whaling National Historic Park - New Bedford
Whaling National Historical Park commemorates the heritage of the
world's preeminent whaling port during the 19th century. A variety of
cultural landscapes, historic buildings, museum collections, and
archives preserve this history and collectively recount the stories of a
remarkable era. Whaling, a leading 19th century enterprise, contributed
to America's economic and political vitality.
Salem
Maritime National Historic Site - Salem Maritime, the
first National Historic Site in the National Park System, was
established to preserve and interpret the maritime history of New
England and the United States. The Site consists of about nine acres of
land and twelve historic structures along the waterfront in Salem,
Massachusetts, as well as a Visitor Center in downtown Salem. The Site
documents the development of the Atlantic triangular trade during the
colonial period, the role of privateering during the Revolutionary War,
and the international maritime trade, especially with the Far East,
which established American economic independence after the Revolution.
Saugus
Iron Works National Historic Site - This is the site
of the first integrated ironworks in North America, 1646-1668. It
includes the reconstructed blast furnace, forge, rolling mill, and a
restored seventeenth century house.
Springfield
Armory National Historic Site - Established on March
21, 1978 to preserve the history of the first National Armory, 1794 -
1968. Springfield Armory technology profoundly affected the lives of
soldiers and civilians. Armory arms decided battle tactics. They were
essential in all major conflicts in U.S. History. Armory inventions
revolutionized the manufacture of consumer products like keys, shoes,
baseball bats and furniture. Housed in the original Main Arsenal, the
museum maintains one of the most extensive and unique firearms
collections in the world. Special exhibits, events and film. Public and
school programs. Springfield Armory National Historic Site encompasses
approximately 55 acres and several buildings of the original armory
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