/ Boston / Places to Visit / Boston Opera House
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539 Washington St, Boston, MA 02111, United States
+1 617-259-3400
The Park Street Church on the Freedom Trail is an active church that is known for a number of historical firsts
The Museum of African American History, housed in the African Meeting House, explores the contribution of African Americans in New England from the colonial period through the 19th century
The Granary Burying Ground is one of the most well known cemeteries in the United States, being the final resting place of many leaders of the American Revolution, including Paul Revere, Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and Robert Paine
Founded in 1634, Boston Common is one of the oldest public parks in the United States
The Chinatown Gate at the corner of Beach Street and Surface Road (T: South Station) is the most visible symbol of Chinatown for the tourists
The Massachusetts State House is the state capitol and seat of government, built in 1797 on land once owned by John Hancock
King's Chapel, designed by Peter Harrison, was commissioned by King James II to insure the presence of the Church of England in America, and founded as an Anglican congregation in 1686
The Old South Meeting Room was where the Sons of Liberty originally met during the Revolutionary War period, where Samuel Adams gave the signal for the ?war whoops? that started the Boston Tea Party in 1773, and more than a 1000 men enlisted in a single day to fight for the Union
The Boston Public Garden is the largest and oldest botanical garden in the United States, dating back to 1837
The Irish Famine Memorial is a small park with bronze statues and 8 granite plaques on the Freedom Trail commemorating the 1845 Irish potato famine, that was built on the 150th anniversary of the famine