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Tours about the American Revolutionary War may sound dry, recalling interminable grade-school history lessons. But when you’re in the places where events actually happened, the war and its extraordinary historical consequences feel surprisingly palpable. While in Massachusetts, we took three fascinating tours that illuminated the Revolutionary War and the events leading up to it. They ranged from a complimentary ranger talk in Concord to a 3.5-hour walk around the historic heart of Boston. The Andrew Harper Travel Office would be happy to arrange any of the excursions below.
We walked the Freedom Trail with an expert historian, making a sort of patriotic pilgrimage. I appreciated that the Revolutionary Story Tour limited its group size to 15 participants, and I liked its mostly chronological, rather than geographical, organization. Key to the experience was our engaging guide, Dr. Rob Lawson. “Learning history requires an act of imagination,” he told us, and he painted vivid pictures of events, ranging from the monumental (a blow-by-blow account of the Boston Massacre, as we stood where it happened) to the personal (pointing out the table at the Omni Parker House hotel where JFK and Jackie got engaged). A Boston booster, he’d sometimes toss in trenchant asides, like “Here is where the Revolution happened; in Philly, they did the paperwork.”
We finished at the north end of the North End, where we looked across the water to Breed’s Hill, site of the famous (if misnamed) Battle of Bunker Hill. Lawson inspired unexpected empathy for the redcoats, who took the hastily constructed fort atop it at great cost. If you have time for one walking tour in Boston, the Revolutionary Story Tour should be it.