Boston Museum of Fine Arts
Housing one of the world’s finest collections of art, the Boston  Museum of Fine Arts is a must-see on a visit to Boston. The museum’s  highlight is undoubtedly its American collection, which includes  American paintings and decorative arts.
And there’s more. The  Museum of Fine Arts also displays an incredible collection of European  Impressionist paintings, including one of the largest collections of  Monets outside of Paris. The MFA also holds one of the richest Degas  collections in the world, not to mention Asian and Old Kingdom Egyptian  collections, classical art, Buddhist temple, and medieval sculpture and  tapestries. After you’re done marveling at these treasures, be sure to  check out the exhibits of Japanese art, including Buddhist and Shinto  treasures.
 
 
 
 
Boston Museum of Science
With more than 600 interactive exhibits, the Boston Museum of Science  is an educational playground so engaging and effortless that you can’t  help but learn something. The amazing array of exhibits explores  computers, technology, complex systems, algae, maps, models, dinosaurs,  birds and much more.
Favorites include the world's largest  lightning bolt generator, a full-scale space capsule, a world population  meter, and a virtual fish tank. At Investigate!, live science  demonstrations involve animals and experiments taking place before your  eyes. The Science in the Park exhibit uses familiar objects such as  skateboards and playground equipment to teach kids the concepts of  physics. You can even find out how much you weigh on the moon!
 
Boston Common
The starting point of the Freedom Trail, Boston Common is the oldest  park in the country. At 50 acres/20 hectares, the Common is the anchor  for the Emerald Necklace, a system of connected parks that winds through  many of Boston’s neighborhoods.
The Common has served many  purposes over the years, including as a campground for British troops  during the Revolutionary War. Today, though, the Common serves  picnickers, sunbathers, and people watches. In winter, the Frog Pond  attracts ice-skaters, while summer draws theater lovers for Shakespeare  on the Common.
 
 
 
New England Aquarium
Teeming with more than 15,000 sea creatures of all sizes, shapes, and  colors, the New England Aquarium is a giant fishbowl of sea-life  wonder. Harbor seals and sea otters frolic in a large observation tank  at the entrance, but the main attraction is the awesome four-story,  200,000 gallon (760,000 liter) Giant Ocean Tank, which swirls with more  than 600 creatures great and small, including turtles, sharks, and eels.
At  the base of the tank the penguin pool is home to three species of  fun-loving penguins. Countless side exhibits explore the lives and  habitats of other underwater oddities, including the two-floor Amazing  Jellies exhibit, home to hundreds of ethereal jellyfish, and the Edge of  the Sea exhibit, with its sea stars, horseshoe crabs, and sea dragons.  Other attractions include displays on denizens of the Amazon, marine  life in the Gulf of Maine, and the ecology of Boston Harbor.
 
Faneuil Hall Marketplace
The heart and soul of downtown Boston, Faneuil Hall Marketplace is a  bustling complex of restaurants, food stalls, shops, bars, and public  spaces. Since it opened in 1976, this festive market and eating center  draws both visitors and locals to its cobblestone plaza, teaming with  shoppers, street performers, and people-watchers.
Faneuil Hall  Marketplace itself if comprised of three historic 19th century  buildings. Quincy Market, a three-level Greek revival-style building,  sits in the center behind Faneuil Hall. Next to it is the North Market  building and the South Market building.
 
Quincy Market
The main hub of the Faneuil Hall Marketplace, bustling Quincy Market  has attracted locals and visitors alike for nearly 200 years. This  historic food hall, set inside a stately three-level Greek revival-style  building, is packed with more than 50 shops, 14 restaurants, and 40  food court stops. There’s even a bar that’s an exact replica of the bar  from the popular TV show Cheers.
Inside Quincy Market, the  central corridor is lined with full-service restaurants, pushcarts, and  New England souvenirs. Choose from chowder, bagels, Indian, Greek, baked  good, and ice cream. Then, take a seat at one of the tables in the  central rotunda. On warm evenings, tables spill outdoors from  restaurants and bars fill up with people, creating a festive mood.
 
 
 
 
 
Beacon Hill
True, Beacon Hill may be home to the Massachusetts State House, the  crown jewel of the neighborhood and focal point of politics in the  Commonwealth, but the real appeal of this prestigious neighborhood lies  in it beauty. Gas lanterns illuminate the cobblestone streets, while  distinguished brick town houses come decked with purple windowpanes and  blooming flowerboxes.
Beacon Hill’s residential streets are  reminiscent of London, and streets such as stately Louisburg Square  indeed capture the grandeur that was intended. Charles Street, Beacon  Hill’s charming commercial thoroughfare, is Boston’s most enchanting  spot for browsing boutiques, haggling over antiques, or sipping a  steaming cappuccino at one of the European-styled cafes. Stay for a fine  dinner, made all the more romantic when it is enjoyed in such a  delightful setting.
 
Freedom Trail
The Freedom Trail is a great way to explore Boston’s most popular  sites. The 2 ½-mile/4-km trail itself links a number of historic sites,  many associated with colonial United States history. The route is marked  with a line of red paint or red brick on the sidewalk; markers identify  stops and plaques point the way from one sight to the next.
The  Freedom Trail starts on the Boston Common and visits sights on Beacon  Hill, in Downtown, near the Waterfront, and in the North End, before  crossing the bridge and ending in Charlestown. As such, it provides an  introduction to some of Boston’s distinct neighborhoods, as well as its  rich history.
 
 
 
 
 
Fenway Park
Boston's most cherished landmark? Site of Boston's greatest dramas  and worst defeats? To many Bostonians, it's not Bunker Hill or the Tea  Party ship, but tiny old Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox. Built  in 1912, Fenway Park is one of the last survivors of old-style baseball  parks. Only Wrigley Field in Chicago rivals its legendary status.
Baseball  at Fenway is special thanks to the unique shape of the park, the  intimate playing field, and the one and only Green Monster, the famous  towering left field wall that compensates for the relatively short  distance from home plate. The Green Monster consistently alters the  regular course of play - what appears to be a lazy fly ball could  actually drop over the Monster for a home run, and what appears to be a  sharp double into the gap may be played off the wall to hold the runner  to a single.
Boston Harbor Islands National Park
Boston Harbor Islands National  Park is comprised of 34 islands, sprinkled throughout the Boston   Harbor. These islands – many of which are open for trail walking,  bird-watching, fishing, and swimming – offer a range of ecosystems. On a  visit to this park, you’ll encounter sandy beaches, rocky cliffs, fresh  and saltwater marsh, and forested trails. Best of all, the islands are  only 45 minutes from downtown Boston.
Georges Island is not only one of the transportation hubs for the islands, it is also the site of the 19th century  Fort Warren. Spectacle Island, another transportation hub, has walking  trails and hosts many special events like live jazz concerts and  festivals. Lovells  Island draws boaters, swimmers, and sunbathers to  its lovely rocky beaches. Here you can catch an afternoon shuttle to  Grape  Island, where you can pick raspberries, bayberries, and  elderberries, all growing wild amid the island’s scrubby wooded trails.
 
 
Boston Public Garden
The Boston Public Garden is a 24 acre (10 hectare) botanical oasis of  Victorian flowerbeds, verdant grass, and weeping willow trees shading a  tranquil lagoon. At any time of the year, it is an island of  loveliness, awash in seasonal blooms, gold-toned leaves, or untrammeled  snow.
A statue of George Washington, looking stately atop his  horse, greets visitors at the main entrance on Arlington Street. Other  pieces of public art in the park, however, are more whimsical. The most  endearing is Make Way for Ducklings, always a favorite with tiny tots  who can climb and sit on the bronze ducks. But it’s the peaceful lagoon  that draws visitors and locals a like to the Public Garden. For it is  hear, you should take on the slow-going swan boats, a serene relic of  bygone days.