7 hours (approx.)
Daily Tour
10 people
English
The Boston Bigly Tour offers by far the best value for the money. It's an all-encompassing small group tour with the comfort of cushioned seating, a clear digital sound system, environmental control, large picture windows, and the security and convenience of having a professional tour guide for the entire experience. The Boston Bigly Tour is the ONLY tour that brings you a comprehensive value added to that even takes you out to the City of Quincy to see the oldest presidential homesteads in the United States, those of John Adams, his son John Quincy Adams and of course Abigail Adams of Revolution fame. The "bigliest" value!
Named for John Singleton Copley, the portrait artist and home to Trinity Church and the Boston Public Library here in the Back Back neighborhood.
• Admission Ticket Free
Copley Place and Prudential Center shopping malls. The center of upscale shopping in Boston, these enclosed malls contain over 200 shops.
• Admission Ticket Free
Christian Science Plaza Reflecting Pool. A landmark designation pool over seven hundred feet long, designed by IM Pei and Associates and Araldo Cossutta Associates, and open to the public, known as “Brutalism” style architecture.
• Admission Ticket Free
Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox, is the oldest baseball stadium in the major leagues still in use today. You’ll have time to take a photo next to the “Teammates” sculpture with four of the many famous players including Ted Williams.
• Admission Ticket Free
Pass right over the finish line of the Boston Marathon (1897), the oldest “new” marathon in the world and reflect passing by the Survival Memorial marketing the events of the 2013 terrorist attack.
• Admission Ticket Free
Heading up Beacon Hill, to your left are the brownstone and granite mansions, gas lanterns and cobblestone streets of the 1800s that symbolize the wealth accumulated from trade and textile mills, key to Boston’s booming economy.
• Admission Ticket Free
At the top of Beacon Hill is the Massachusetts State House designed by Charles Bulfinch, the seat of government power since 1795. The dome is covered in 22.5k gold leaf and symbolizes prosperity.
• Admission Ticket Free
To your right is the restored Robert Gould Shaw Memorial of 1897 dedicated to the 54th Regiment of local African-Americans that volunteered to fight in the Civil War, and depicted in the inspiring movie “Glory”.
• Admission Ticket Free
Heading down Beacon Hill is the King’s Chapel constructed in 1754 by Royal Governor Andros. Formerly a house of worship for the King’s own officers and loyalists.
• Admission Ticket Free
Passing the chapel to your left is the statue of Benjamin Franklin, born in Boston back in 1706. Ben stands today at the site of the original Boston Latin School, where he briefly attended until running away at age 17 to seek fame and fortune.
• Admission Ticket Free
The seat of royal power, constructed in 1713, when Boston was a colony, as denoted by a seven-foot gilded unicorn and lion sitting atop what is the oldest building in the city. In the front is a marker identifying the spot where the “Boston Massacre” occurred in 1770, when Red Coats fired upon an agitated mob.
• Admission Ticket Free
Faneuil Hall was constructed in 1742 and is called “The Cradle of Liberty” for the numerous speeches leading to the Revolution given by Sam Adams, James Otis and many other Friends of Liberty. The great hall is on the second level and maintained by the National Park Service. The grasshopper weathervane designed by Deacon and coppersmith Shem Drowne is a local symbol of liberty.
• Admission Ticket Free
See the birthplaces of John Adams and John Quincy Adams, and where John and Abigail would start their family. This is the oldest presidential birthplace(s) in the United States.
After the Revolution the Adams family purchased Peace field in Quincy. It became home to Presidents John and John Quincy Adams, First Ladies Abigail Adams and Louisa Adams and other noteworthy descendants for four generations from 1788 to 1927. You will have time to take photos from the outside during our brief stops.
3 hours • Admission Ticket Free
Lunch is next at the Seaport District. Experience the amazing steps to brew a world class beer, and the history of colonial beer brewing, at the Harpoon Brewery. Enjoy a fresh baked ale pretzel or pizza at the adjacent beer hall. Ample time is allotted for lunch.
As an alternative, try a lobster roll or fish and chips at the adjacent Yankee Lobster, a local hangout since 1950, famous for fresh seafood at a reasonable price.
2 hours • Admission Ticket Included
The next stop on the Bigly adventure is past the North End, home to over 50 famous Italian restaurants and bakeries, and the site of the “Great Molasses Flood” of 1919. Smack in the middle of this historic neighborhood is Paul Revere’s house and the Old North Church made famous by the poet Henry Longfellow’s poem, “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere” that triggered the American Revolution.
• Admission Ticket Included
The final stop on this historic adventure is Charlestown, home of the Bunker Hill Monument, honoring the Battle of Bunker Hill fought on June 17, 1775. It was a tactical victory but strategic loss for the British that is celebrated as an official holiday every year in the City of Boston.
• Admission Ticket Included
At the water’s edge of the inner harbor is home of the world’s oldest commissioned warship, the mighty U.S.S. Constitution, manned to this day by navy personnel. Known affectionately as “Old Ironsides”, she never lost a battle against America’s foes. You’ll be able tour this seaworthy warship once you pass through security.
1 hour • Admission Ticket Free