Available now

From Beacons And Crooks To Deacons And Books
A journey across the Shawmut peninsula to the made land of Boston’s Back Bay.

We’ll meet on the front steps of the Massachusetts State House, facing Boston Common, opposite the 54th Memorial, and end near the Back Bay and Copley T stations.
Only available on days the Boston Public Library in Copley Square is open.
This tour is open to 12 guests.

Pizza, Pasta, Pastries, People
A unique experience of the past and present of Boston’s vibrant 400 year old North End neighborhood – our own “Little Italy”.
Bring your appetite (you will have at least 15 opportunities to buy food), and cash (many places we’ll pass don’t accept cards).

We’ll meet across from the Tony DeMarco statue, outside the new DePazquale building; we won’t wait, and neither will the pizza.
We’ll end our tour a 3 minute walk from where we started.
This tour is restricted to 6 guests.
Kids are welcome – tho’ young ones often lose interest an hour in, after pizza, canoli, and North End Bingo.

Well, THAT’S Not Very Nice
Explore the darker side of Boston’s history, past and present – all the stuff the Office Of Travel And Tourism doesn’t highlight.
Although you’ll hear about persecution, slavery, wars, riots, massacres, bombings, terrorism, robberies, corruption, corporate malfeasance, gangland killings, bizzare murders, and serial killers, our focus is on how much our responses to these happenings are conditioned by our own xxxxxxxxxx, and the times we live in.
Our tour goes along Boston Common and up into the beautiful Beacon Hill neighborhood, including a couple of short, gentle, uphill stretches.
We meet on the front steps of the Massachusetts State House, facing Boston Common, and end our tour at the Charles/MGH T station.
The lower age limit for this tour is at your discretion – I don’t go into gory details, but I don’t want to be the one explaining ‘execution’, ‘dismemberment’, ‘decapitation’, ‘castration’, and ‘prostitution’, to your kids.
This tour is open to 12 guests.

You Say You Want A Revolution?
We all want to change our world. So what does the course of the American Revolution in Boston have to teach us about how to do that – collectively AND individually?
And what would it take for the people of Boston to rise up – again – and restore the possibilities and promise of American Independence?
By the end of this tour you’ll have created a plan for your OWN revolution.

Our tour is in 3 parts, along Boston’s Freedom Trail; you might choose to take each part separately, or combine Tours 1 , 2, and 3, in one continuous Tour 4.
Tour 1 starts on Boston Common, at the corner of Tremont Street and Park Street. It covers a gentle xxx miles, mostly downhill. We end outside Faneuil Hall, near Haymarket T station.
Tour 2 goes into Boston’s North End neighborhood – and is our Pizza, Pasta, Pastries, People tour, above.
Tour 3 crosses the Charles River into Charlestown. We start xxxxxxxxx. It covers xxxxxxxxx.
For the more ambitious, Tour 4 combines all 3 separate legs into one grand tour, over the course of xx hours & xx miles. We’ll have lunch in the North End, and end at Community College T station.