Sign up for Scenic Six
Navigate the endless possibilities of New England travel with Boston.com.
Travel
The Boston Irish Heritage Trail, where visitors can celebrate more than 300 years of Irish history in Boston, is expanding this summer.
The 2.8-mile trail, created in 1994, is comprised of 20 stops that stretch from the waterfront to Fenway Park and features parks, statues, cemeteries, and more.
“A city like Boston just has layers of history and generations and centuries of change, so in that sense it’s always good to look back at history and see how the city evolved,” said Michael Quinlin, co-founder of the Boston Irish Tourism Association (BITA), which maintains the trail, along with wife and co-founder Colette Quinlin.
Five new sites will be added, two of them dedicated to three Boston women.
“One thing we noticed is that there was a need for us to add more women to the site and that’s one of the things we have been researching,” Quinlin said.
Therefore, the trail will soon include the Kip Tiernan memorial in Back Bay and plaques for Ann Glover and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy in the North End.
Other newcomers to the trail will be the Edgar Allen Poe statue at the corner of Boylston and Charles streets, G.P.A. Healy‘s painting of Daniel Webster at Faneuil Hall, and Boston’s famous Swan Boats, which open for the season on April 19.
“We were delighted to discover that the boats, which are so iconic, were actually created by an immigrant couple in 1877 named Paget,” Quinlin said.
Quinlin said the five additions are mainly along the path of the existing trail.
The self-guided tour is available year round, but the association will again offer seasonal scheduled tours this fall after a pause during the COVID pandemic, Quinlin said. Tour maps can be found at the visitor information center at Boston Common where the tours begin, he said, as well as in the association’s free Travel & Culture magazine, published three times a year, the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston City Hall, and various retail shops around Greater Boston.
As an added bonus, “you get to see a lot of Boston and a lot of the city’s beauty and architectural highlights along the way,” Quinlin said about the trail.
Ahead, Quinlin shares a little bit about each stop on the trail, as well as information about the five new stops.

The Rose Kennedy Garden is located along the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, a 17-acre public park that welcomes millions of visitors annually. Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy was the daughter of Boston Mayor John F. Fitzgerald and the mother of President John F. Kennedy.
“The Rose Kennedy Garden is a great place to start because, in the Boston Irish lexicon, the Kennedy family is paramount,” said Quinlin. “They made such an impact on the city, on the nation, on the world.”
The Rose Kennedy Garden, in Christopher Columbus Park, was dedicated to Kennedy in 1987.
“She was born just a few steps from where the Rose Kennedy Garden is,” said Quinlin. “It’s such a beautiful place, especially in the spring.”
Kevin White, Boston’s 45th mayor, was one of the city’s “most beloved and influential mayors of the 20th century,” according to the BITA. He served as mayor from 1968-1984.
“One of his great accomplishments as mayor was to bring back downtown Boston and, specifically, the Faneuil Hall area,” said Quinlin. “He was credited as sort of a visionary of urban renewal.”
The statue, located outside of Faneuil Hall, was unveiled and dedicated to the Irish politician in 2006.

James Michael Curley served in elected office in Massachusetts for nearly half a century, from 1900-1949.
“He was the mayor four times, he was the governor, and he was a congressman. And he also did a portion of time in jail while he was in office,” Quinlin said. “He was quite the character, a larger-than-life character, and he dominated city politics and Irish politics for half a century.”
The twin statues were unveiled along Congress Street in 1980.

The 20th century was dominated by Irish American politicians, Quinlin said.
“Between 1930 and 1994, continuously, there was an Irish American mayor in office,” he said. “It was an incredible 64 year run.”
Visitors will find a mural of Mayor John F. Collins, the city’s mayor from 1960-1968, on the side of the building.

The Boston Irish Famine Memorial, at the corner of Washington and School streets, was erected to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Irish potato famine, which brought many Irish refugees to Boston between 1845 and 1849.
“It killed a million people and sent another 2 million people fleeing Ireland,” said Quinlin about the famine. “A lot of them ended up in Boston and that’s one of the reasons why Boston became known as an Irish city.”
The memorial, which includes twin sculptures and information about the history of the famine, was unveiled in 1998.

Among the most notable Irish residents buried in the Granary Burying Ground are John Hancock, Governor James Sullivan, and Boston Massacre victim Patrick Carr.
“It gives the perspective of the way Irish immigrants were having a role way back in the 18th century and during the colonial and revolutionary war period,” Quinlin said.

The Shaw Memorial, located near the State House, depicts the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, a regiment of African-American soldiers that fought in the Civil War and the colonel who led them. The sculptor, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1848.
The Saint-Gaudens family fled the Irish famine when Augustus was a baby and he became one of America’s prominent American sculptors during that time period, Quinlin said.
“This was one of Augustus’ most prized sculptures because it was so important and rich and it gave a glimpse into civil war during that period of time,” Quinlin said.

Many items of Irish significance can be found in and around the Massachusetts State House.
Among the items of note are an Irish flag in the Hall of Flags, said Quinlin, as well a plaque for Jeremiah O’Brien, who captured a British ship in the first naval battle of the Revolutionary War; a plaque for labor union leader Mary Kenney O’Sullivan; and an 8-foot statue of President John F. Kennedy on the lawn. The latter was unveiled in 1990 by the Kennedy family.

Unveiled on the Boston Common in 1877, this monument was erected in memory of foot soldiers and sailors who were killed during the Civil War.
The monument was created by Irish-born sculptors and brothers Martin, James, and Joseph Milmore. They came to Boston as boys, fleeing the famine, and became notable sculptors, Quinlin said.
“It’s one of their best pieces of work. It’s a beautiful depiction of the sacrifices that Bostonians made during that war,” he said.

This monument was created in remembrance of the five victims of the Boston Massacre, one of which was Patrick Carr, was an Irish-American. Initially, some Bostonians were against the idea of a memorial for the victims, Quinlin said.
A coalition comprised of Black and Irish Bostonians insisted that the memorial go up, said Quinlin, while the Brahmin establishment considered the victims “rabblerousers and not worthy of a memorial.”
“Obviously, the Irish and the Black prevailed,” he said. “In the massacre, the first man shot was a Black man named Crispus Attucks and the last man shot was the Irish immigrant Patrick Carr. It is an interesting look at Boston’s racial history, in a sense.”

Born in Ireland in 1745, Commodore John Barry “was probably the most prominent naval hero of the American Revolution along with John Paul Jones, who was from Wales,” Quinlin said.
“He captured a lot of British ships, and he was made the first secretary of the American navy by George Washington,” he said.
The plaque along Tremont Street on the Boston Common, unveiled in 1949, was Mayor Curley’s last public act, he said.

The Central Burying Ground, on Boylston Street near Tremont Street, was created in 1756 to alleviate overcrowding of the other cemeteries in the area at the time.
American patriots from the Boston Tea Party and the Battle of Bunker Hill, British soldiers who died during the Revolutionary War, and Irish and other immigrants who died in colonial Boston are all buried there.
“It’s one of the few historic burying grounds in Boston where you can see Celtic crosses,” Quinlin said.

Thomas Cass was an Irish-born businessman who was put in charge of forming the Ninth Irish Regiment during the Civil War.
“He was heroic. He led a group of men, he was shot in battle in 1862, brought back to Boston and he died of his wound. I believe he was the first individual Irish immigrant who got a statue in the city of Boston,” Quinlin said.
The original memorial of Cass was unveiled in 1889 but Bostonians didn’t like the statue so the current statue in the Public Garden was unveiled in 1899, Quinlin said.

The statue of David I. Walsh, unveiled in 1954, is near the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.
Walsh was the first Irish Catholic governor of Massachusetts, who served from 1914-16, and the first Catholic senator from Massachusetts between 1926 to 1946, Quinlin noted.
“It obviously gets a lot of traffic because so many people go down to the Hatch Shell and love to walk the Esplanade,” he said about the scenic spot.

Maurice Tobin is yet another Irish-American politician in Boston’s history.
Tobin was born in Roxbury to an Irish immigrant family, Quinlin said, and went on to become the youngest state representative at age 25, mayor, and the first Massachusetts secretary of labor from 1948 to 1953.
“So he had a very illustrious political career as mayor, as governor, and as secretary of labor,” Quinlin said.

Patrick Collins, another Irish immigrant success story, came to Boston after fleeing the famine in 1848 and became mayor in 1902, Quinlin said.
He was the first Catholic congressman from Massachusetts, became mayor in 1902, and also served as the U.S. ambassador to London. The memorial on the Commonwealth Avenue Mall was unveiled in 1908.
“He had a very distinguished political, public service career,” he said.

American portrait artist John Singleton Copley was the son of Irish parents who emigrated to Boston in the 1730s.
“He became one of the preeminent artists of the 18th century and just did a lot of paintings, of George Washington, John Hancock, Same Adams, Paul Revere,” Quinlin said. “A lot of his work is in the MFA and other places around the world.”
His statue is in Copley Square, which is also named after the colonial artist.

The Boston Public Library, established in 1848, has more than 13,000 Irish items.
“It has grown into one of the main repositories in the country for valuable Irish collection,” Quinlin said.
Guests will find material on the Irish Free State and the Abby Theater, Irish sheet music, rare Civil War images taken by photographer Matthew Brady, a bust of Hugh O’Brien, Boston’s first Irish mayor, a bust of writer Edger Allan Poe, and twin lion statues in the foyer created by Louis Saint-Gaudens.

Before he arrived in Boston in 1870, John Boyle O’Reilly was arrested and imprisoned for his crimes against Britain as part of the Irish Republican Brotherhood.
“He’s known sort of as the great reconciler between the Boston Irish immigrants and the Yankee establishment,” Quinlin said. “He was the guy who kind of figured out how to connect the two groups to make them talk to each other and appreciate each other. He was a poet, he was an orator, he was the publisher of The Boston Pilot.”
The bronze statue of O’Reilly on Boylston Street was dedicated in 1896.

Fenway Park, one of Boston’s most famous landmarks and home of the Boston Red Sox, was built in 1912 by Irish immigrant Charles E. Logue.
Logue was building a lot of churches and schools and municipal buildings before he was asked to build Fenway Park, Quinlin said.
“He literally did it in less than a year,” he said. “And it has stood the test of time.”
The Kip Tiernan Memorial on Dartmouth Street near the Boston Public Library, honors “a beloved homeless and hunger advocate in the city of Boston for many many years, almost half a century,” Quinlin said.
In the North End, trail goers will learn more about two more women at the plaques for Rose Kennedy and Ann Glover.
“Rose has various landmarks and plaques and memorials throughout Boston and for good reason. She was the matriarch of a great political family. She has a really nice plaque on the side of St. Stephen’s Church in the North End because she was very religious and attended mass there.”
Below Kennedy’s plaque is a plaque dedicated to Ann Glover.
“She was an Irish immigrant who was hanged as a witch in Boston in 1688,” he said, noting that she spoke Gaelic in the courtroom. “It is an important part of the city’s history and also the Boston Irish history because it speaks a little to how immigrants were treated when they first arrived in Boston.”
The Swan Boats in the Public Garden were built by Irish immigrants and “interestingly, almost 150 years later, it’s still iconic,” said Quinlin.
The statue of Edgar Allan Poe, the famous 19th century writer, outside the city’s transportation building.
“Poe was born in Boston not far from where the statue is and his father’s family came from the north of Ireland,” Quinlin said.
Finally, about Irish artist G.P.A. Healy’s painting of Daniel Webster at Faneuil Hall, Quinlin said, “Webster’s painting is so iconic and, again, it speaks to some of the beauty of what a lot of immigrants — in this case Irish immigrants and their offspring — created in Boston.”
Navigate the endless possibilities of New England travel with Boston.com.
Since 2000 who has won more championships, Boston Celtics, Boston Bruins, Boston Red Sox or New England Patriots?
One can go all the way back to last summer and see how much Marco Sturm was concerned about the penalty kill.
Early in the season, it looked like new Bruins’ coach worries about the kill would pay dividends. But after a good start to the season on the PK, the B’s have tumbled down to 28th in the NHL, killing just a 76.4% success rate.
Trying to fix the kill was some of the coaching staff’s most important “homework” for the extended Olympic break, said Sturm upon the players’ return to the Warrior Ice Arena for practices last week.
The most obvious thing they have to do is cut down on penalties. Their plummet toward the bottom of the PK rankings has – surprise, surprise – coincided with them shooting up in the “minor penalties taken” category. They have taken 243, second only to the Florida Panthers’ 255.
But it also sounds like they plan to tweak their diamond structure as well. What exactly they will be doing differently is hard to tell in practice, especially with the fluid nature of the sport. But Sturm said it’s all part of the season-long chess match between the league’s power plays and penalty kills.
“Power plays get better. They do. If you look at us at the start, we were all out and we did exactly what we wanted to do. The things is, after a certain time and certain games – (assistant coach Steve Spott) Spotter calls it a ‘copy league’ – what it means is you can … see certain weaknesses on the PK,” said Sturm. “With the diamond, they got us pretty much and we just couldn’t handle it and didn’t have an answer. And also we were taking way too many, too. That was a little bit of the downfall. Again, we try to have something in place right now that hopefully fits our group and players better.”
The diamond, he said, giveth and taketh away.
“What I really like on the diamond is you take away the one-timers,” said Sturm. “The old way (the four-man box), the flanks were always available. You think about (Alex) Ovechkin and all those guys, you kind of take that away. You can be very aggressive. But you will give up probably the low 2-on-1s. That would be the downside of it. And now guys slowly figure out how to beat it, any system. That’s what can happen, and it’s already happening, so that’s why we want to be ahead of the curve a little bit.”
Going into the season, the first order of business was to identify some players who could kill, especially after the team traded away PK stalwarts Brad Marchand, Charlie Coyle and Brandon Carlo at last season’s trade deadline.
The regulars on the back end are Nikita Zadorov, Charlie McAvoy, Hampus Lindholm and Andrew Peeke. Up front, there are stalwarts Sean Kuraly, Mark Kastelic, Pavel Zacha and Elias Lindholm. But rookie Fraser Minten and Tanner Jeannot, who had not killed in several years, are also heavily in the rotation. Sturm feels he’s got the personnel to do the job, though he said he could mix up the pairings.
Kuraly leads all forwards in PK time a game at 3:05 a game and he’s done it throughout his career. Pinpointing any one area as the problem, he said, is futile.
“We were on a roll earlier in the season. Does that mean power plays figure out what we’re doing and we didn’t adjust well enough? I don’t know. It’s a culmination of a lot of things,” said Kuraly. “As players, you definitely take it on to yourself to think of what we can do better. It’s just all the little things. Can we win more faceoffs and get more clears? On clears, can we do cooperate clears and share on our clears? Can we be a little bit better up ice, be a little stiffer and put ourselves in a better spot? Can we be better with our stick detail? Can we communicate better?
“I think it’s a culmination of all those things. They look at all these numbers and all these stats and if it was one thing, I think it would be pretty easy to clean up or at least address. I think it’s just a culmination of all those things to make a penalty kill good. And I think can we get on and off the ice and change quick is part of it. A lot of things make a penalty kill good. Of those six or seven things, if we can improve them five or 10 percent, we could have a really good penalty kill.”
Like the media on the Garden’s ninth floor, players on the kill can often see on video after the fact they had more time on a play. Communication, said Kuraly, is huge.
“Just by saying a few words, and I always talk with my linemates,” said Kuraly. “David Backes was the one that insisted I do that a long time ago, you make them look better if you just throw any sort of communication at them. ‘Time’ or ‘take a look.’ ‘Heads up.’ It’s pretty primitive what you can say to them. Just give them a clue, even if you think it might not help. There’s a lot of times where, even if you tell a guy he’s got some time, you settle down a little more and make just a little bit better play.”
Charlie McAvoy will be taking a crack at his dream on Sunday morning when he and his USA teammates take on Canada for the Olympic gold medal. Sturm, though, is a little nervous about how he’ll be able to transition back NHL hockey, which restarts for the B’s on Thursday with a big game against Columbus.
“Knowing Charlie, I know this is something he’s been looking forward to, probably his whole life. I know he will be great,” said Sturm. “I know it’s going to be a challenge (upon his return). From my experience coming back, the mental part of it is just, because you’re so emotionally involved in those Olympics, it drains you … it’s going to be a challenge, especially Charlie because he plays a lot. It’s a mental drain and that’s why we just have to manage every day the right way so we can have the best outcome.” … Zacha appears on schedule to be ready to play next Thursday against the Blue Jackets. He was able to shed the non-contact jersey for the regular sweater on Saturday.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said the city will spend another $1 million in federal funds to extend a fare-free MBTA bus pilot for three more months.
Wu said Friday that the city will use its remaining American Rescue Plan Act dollars, at a rate of $340,000 per month, to extend the fare-free pilot program for MBTA bus routes 23, 28 and 29, through the end of June.
Based on that monthly reimbursement rate to the MBTA, the program has cost the city about $17.34 million in ARPA funds to waive fares for riders on bus routes that serve Dorchester, Mattapan and Roxbury since it was launched in March 2022.
Initially envisioned as a two-year pilot, the Wu administration extended the program for two years in February 2024, and now for another three months ahead of its anticipated expiration at the end of this month.
The City of Boston is in talks with the MBTA about how to keep the fare-free bus program in place for the long-term, the mayor’s office said.
“Fare-free bus service helps families, workers, and businesses, and also makes bus service faster and more reliable,” Wu said in a statement. “We are extending this program through June, as we look to work with the MBTA to keep this going.”
The mayor’s office said ridership increased by 35% on the three fare-free routes in the first year of the pilot, which is more than twice the MBTA average. The targeted routes have seen a 16% spike in ridership since before the pandemic.
Surveys conducted by the city have shown more than a quarter of riders using those routes have saved “at least $20 a month,” which they have reported putting toward other household expenses like groceries, medicine, rent or school supplies, the mayor’s office said.
Other survey respondents reported that the fare-free bus transportation has helped them build emergency funds, cover school expenses or “simply stay in their homes,” the mayor’s office said.
Interim Transportation Secretary and MBTA General Manager Phillip Eng said Friday that the T has “been pleased to be able to support” the city’s fare-free bus pilot program, but gave no indication of whether it would be extended beyond June.
2026 MHSA Montana Wrestling State Championship Brackets And Results – FloWrestling
Romance Glossary: An A-Z Guide of Tropes and Themes to Find Your Next Book
Wildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city
What a Speech Reveals About Trump’s Plans for Nuclear Weapons
Video: How Much Do You Know About Romance Books?
Second US aircraft carrier is being sent to the Middle East, AP source says, as Iran tensions high
Tim Walz demands federal government ‘pay for what they broke’ after Homan announces Minnesota drawdown
Schumer’s ‘E. coli’ burger photo resurfaces after another Dem’s grilling skills get torched: ‘What is that?’