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Boston Map: Old South Meeting HouseOld South Meeting House Frommer's Highly Recommended

Hours Daily Apr-Oct 9:30am-5pm; Nov-Mar 10am-4pm
Address
310 Washington St
Transportation T: Blue or Orange Line to State St
Phone 617/482-6439
Web site www.oldsouthmeetinghouse.org
Prices Admission $5 adults, $4 seniors and students with ID, $1 children 6-18, free for children under 6. Freedom Trail ticket (with Old State House and Paul Revere House) $11 adults, $3 children
Season Closed Jan 1, Thanksgiving, Dec 24-25

Frommer's Review

Look for the clock tower that tops this religious and political gathering place, best known as the site of an important event leading to the Revolution. On December 16, 1773, a restive crowd of several thousand, too big to fit into Faneuil Hall, gathered here. They were waiting for word from the governor about whether three ships full of tea -- priced to undercut the cost of smuggled tea and force the colonists to trade with merchants approved by the Crown -- would be sent back to England from Boston. The ships were not, and revolutionaries haphazardly disguised as Mohawks cast the tea into the harbor. The meeting house commemorates that uprising, the Boston Tea Party. You can even see a vial of the tea.

Originally built in 1670 and replaced by the current structure in 1729, the building underwent extensive renovations in the 1990s. In 1872, a devastating fire that destroyed most of downtown stopped at Old South, a phenomenon considered evidence of the building's power. An interactive multimedia exhibit, Voices of Protest, tells the story of the events that took place here.

The meeting house frequently schedules speeches, readings, panel discussions, and children's activities, often with a colonial theme. Each December, it stages a reenactment of the debate that led to the tea party -- it's especially fun for kids, who can participate in the heated debate. Check ahead for schedules.

To continue on the Freedom Trail: Exit through the gift shop and look across Milk Street to see Benjamin Franklin's birthplace. In a little house at 17 Milk St., Franklin was born in 1706, the 15th child of Josiah Franklin. The house is long gone, but look across at the second floor of what's now 1 Milk St. When the building went up after the fire of 1872, the architect guaranteed that the Founding Father wouldn't be forgotten: A bust and the words BIRTHPLACE OF FRANKLIN adorn the facade.

Now backtrack on Washington Street (passing Spring Lane, one of the first streets in Boston and originally the site of a real spring) and follow it to State Street.

Note: This information was accurate when it was published, but can change without notice. Please be sure to confirm all rates and details directly with the companies in question before planning your trip.


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