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Taking the Kids on One of the Most Famous Walks in the Country

Ready for a walk? It’s not just any walk—it’s one of the most famous walks in the country.

Welcome to Boston’s Freedom Trail, the 2.5-mile-long route over cobblestoned streets that lets you travel back in time to when Boston was still a colony and people argued about what to do about the increasingly difficult demands from the King of England.

Three million people—a lot of them parents and kids—walk the Freedom Trail every year, or at least part of it.

“History isn’t boring just because the people are dead. It’s about people’s lives,” said Ava, 11, visiting from Rochester, New York. She was one of many kids I talked to about what makes Boston a fun place to visit.

“I think every place in Boston is like a field trip, in a good way!” added Adrien, 14, who lives in a Boston suburb.

This month, of course, all eyes are on Boston as we mark the first anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombing. Yesterday, many ran in the 2014 Boston Marathon to honor those who died or were so grievously injured. I can’t think of a better time to celebrate all that makes Boston such a wonderful place for families to visit.

There’s even history to be learned from watching the World Champion Red Sox play at Fenway Park, which celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2012 and is the oldest Major League baseball park still in operation. Every kid I interviewed said that if you are visiting Boston during baseball season, you’ve got to go see a Red Sox game—if you can get tickets, of course.

“When someone scores a home run, the crowd goes wild, and it’s so cool to see,” said Arianna, 13, of Walpole, Massachusetts.

“Every other second people are yelling! It’s really fun!” said James, 10, visiting with his grandparents from Little Rock, Arkansas.

Boston is a city where it is easy—and fun—to go from the 18th century and back to the 21st century as often as you like, stopping for a bowl of clam chowder and souvenirs at Faneuil Hall, where patriots debated and which today is tourism central with shops, food stalls, and street entertainers, or stopping for pizza and gelato in the North End, the famous Italian neighborhood. Paul Revere’s house is now Boston’s oldest downtown building. Visit the Old North Church; it was from here on April 18, 1775, that patriots signaled “two if by sea,” that the British were advancing.

It is also from here that Paul Revere set out on April 18, 1775, on his famous ride to Lexington to warn the patriots that the British were coming. Contrary to Boston poet’s Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem (“Listen, my children, and you shall hear/Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere”), Paul didn’t yell, “The British are coming!” He managed to warn some patriots but was stopped by the British before he got to Concord. Longfellow’s poem wasn’t written until nearly 100 years after Revere’s ride, and despite what it got wrong, it is credited with turning Paul Revere into a national hero. Today, Revere’s famous ride is reenacted every year on Patriots’ Day.

Make sure to point out the grasshopper weather vane on top of Faneuil Hall. It’s not only a well-known Boston symbol but it was used to unmask suspected spies during the American Revolution. Locals would ask suspects to identify the object on top of Faneuil Hall; if they couldn’t, they were believed to be British spies.

But for every historic site—16 right on the Freedom Trail—there are marvelous 21st-century attractions: the New England Aquarium, the hands-on Boston Museum of Science, the holograms and robots at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, shopping on Newbury Street, and the downtown Prudential Center.

“Take it all in!” advised Rebecca, 14, from Lockport, Illinois.

Opt for the popular high-speed Codzilla boat tours in Boston Harbor, where you’re guaranteed to get wet, or the Boston Duck Tours that take you past famous sites on land and into the Boston Harbor on amphibious vehicles.

Imagine Boston Common packed with British soldiers: At the Granary Burying Ground, see if the kids can find the most famous revolutionary-era Bostonians, including Paul Revere, John Hancock, and Samuel Adams.

“I love it—the history, the atmosphere, and the shopping,” said Kathryn, 14, visiting from Hooksett, New Hampshire.

Who says history can’t be fun?

(c) 2014 Eileen Ogintz Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.

(Photos: Taking the Kids)

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