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Massachusetts’ Best History and Heritage Trails

Posted by Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism
Massachusetts is a living history book surrounded by breathtaking landscapes. Experience the best of both worlds on a history and heritage trail. There’s no better way to explore our state and uncover its rich past. 

Appalachian Trail 
Western Massachusetts 
The legendary Appalachian Trail will take you through the majority of the American East Coast, from Maine down to Georgia and almost every state in-between. The Massachusetts section of the trail crosses through 90 miles of the Berkshires in Western MA, starting with Mount Greylock all the way to Mount Everett on the Connecticut border. While not a heritage trail in the traditional sense, the Appalachian Trail celebrates and conserves America’s natural beauty. 
 
Battle Road 
Lexington and Concord 
This five-mile trail collecting sites historically significant to the American Revolution can be walked, biked, or driven. See structures dating back to the opening battles for American independence and traverse the areas where revolutionaries like Paul Revere, John Hancock, and Sam Adams would have ridden through. Each year for Patriots Day in mid-April, reenactors will recreate the battles of Lexington and Concord on many of the sites where they actually took place. 
 
Boston’s Black History Trail 
Boston 
This National Park site celebrates the history and heritage of Beacon Hill’s Black community as they fought and organized for rights and recognition before, during, and after the Civil War. The trail is just over a mile and a half long, and tours typically last 90 minutes. Sites along the way include the African Meeting house, which is the oldest surviving black church structure in the United States, and the Lewis and Harriet Hayden House, a prominent stop along the Underground Railroad. 
 
Boston’s Women’s Heritage Trail 
Boston 
The Boston Women’s Heritage Trail has helped to highlight and preserve the role of women in Boston’s history through education, events, and tours. The organization offers over a dozen self-guided tour maps based around specific neighborhoods and historic events on their website, or you can sign up for a guided private tour or lecture. In total, there are over a hundred locations throughout the city worth learning more about. 
 
Cape Cod Museum Trail 
Cape Cod 
The Cape is widely known for its beautiful beaches, but it has plenty of attractions that are fun and exciting all year round – including over 75 museums! The Cape Cod Museum Trail brings these museums together, celebrating the art, history, and natural beauty of the region. 
 

The Freedom Trail 
Boston 
There’s no better way to experience the revolutionary history of Boston than by following the sites along the Freedom Trail. Starting at the Boston Common, the oldest city park in the U.S., the 2.5-mile trail winds through downtown Boston up to Charlestown across the Charles River. Along the way, you’ll see 16 historical sites including the Massachusetts State House, the site of the Boston Massacre, Paul Revere’s house, and the USS Constitution. 
 

Hyannis Kennedy Legacy Trail 
Hyannis 
Nothing says “Massachusetts” like our most famous family. The Kennedys have a long history with Cape Cod, and this self-guided trail throughout Hyannis celebrates that tradition. Walk along the streets John and Jackie would have walked down when they visited , attend daily mass at the Kennedy family church, even see the site where JFK gave his Presidential acceptance speech in 1960. 
 
Innovation Trail 
Boston 
Massachusetts has always been a great place for people to make history, and you can see  and experience the state’s legacy of progress along the Innovation Trail, which brings together over a dozen sites across Boston and Cambridge where Massachusetts was on the cutting-edge. See and learn more about Massachusetts’ role in the development of both historically significant and modern marvels  in medicine, science, and technology. 
 
Melville Trail 
Berkshires 
“Moby Dick” author Herman Melville spent many of his creative years living and working Western Massachusetts, and the Melville Trail brings together the locations and landscape that inspired some of his work. Explore Arrowhead, his Pittsfield home, along with nine other Berkshire locations that he visited and enjoyed. He even included some of these sites in his novels. 
 
Salem Heritage Trail 
Salem 
For anyone interested in Salem’s iconic history, the Salem Heritage Trail is a must-see attraction. The trail encompasses not just the Salem Witch Trials, but also sites and stories from the colonial era, the industrial era, and Salem’s indigenous peoples. Along the way, you can check out the Peabody Essex Museum, the Witch History Museum, the Old Town Hall, and much more. 
 
Worcester Black History Trail 
Worcester 
The legacy of Worcester’s Black communities from the American Revolution to the fight for civil rights is preserved and honored along the Worcester Black History Trail. Starting with 5 historical locations marked with photos and descriptive plaques, the trail will continue to grow as the city finds and commemorates more locations. The trail was unveiled in 2022. 
 
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TOPICS: Berkshires, Boston, Cape Cod and the Islands, concord, Hyannis, Lexington, Salem, Worcester

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