Unlock New England’s secrets with AI-guided tours. Explore at your pace, snap photos for stories, and choose your narrator. Start your adventure now.
Unlock New England’s secrets with AI-guided tours. Explore at your pace, snap photos for stories, and choose your narrator. Start your adventure now.
Day 1: Boston – The Freedom Trail & Historic Core
Boston Common - Begin at the oldest public park in America. With your guide, imagine the 1775 British Redcoat encampments that once occupied this area, despite the modern skyline. Discover its somber past as a site for public executions, including that of Mary Dyer, and find the Central Burying…
Day 1: Boston – The Freedom Trail & Historic Core
Boston Common - Begin at the oldest public park in America. With your guide, imagine the 1775 British Redcoat encampments that once occupied this area, despite the modern skyline. Discover its somber past as a site for public executions, including that of Mary Dyer, and find the Central Burying Ground.
Massachusetts State House - Stand before the Massachusetts government seat. Your guide describes the 23-karat gold leaf dome’s history, noting how Paul Revere initially covered the wooden dome with copper to prevent leaks. Use the tool to spot the “Sacred Cod” inside the House of Representatives chamber.
Park Street Church - Gaze up at the 217-foot steeple that once dominated Boston’s skyline. Your audio guide explains why this intersection was called “Brimstone Corner”—due to fiery sermons and gunpowder stored in the crypt during the War of 1812. Hear about the first singing of “America” (My Country, ‘Tis of Thee) on these steps.
Granary Burying Ground - Explore this historic cemetery. Your digital map guides you to the graves of Paul Revere, John Hancock, and Samuel Adams. Decode the Puritan iconography on the slate headstones—like winged soul effigies and the grim “Death’s Head”—to understand early American views on mortality.
King’s Chapel Burying Ground - Visit Boston’s first Anglican church. Your architectural guide explains its unique design: a stone church built around the original wooden one to avoid interrupting services. Learn about the bell in the tower, cast by Paul Revere and praised by him as “the sweetest bell we ever made.”
Statue of Benjamin Franklin - Stand on the mosaic marking the site of the Boston Latin School, America’s first public school. Your guide provides a biographical audio overlay of Benjamin Franklin, who attended this school but dropped out. Learn how his bronze statue is uniquely positioned to look down upon the spot where he once studied.
Old Corner Bookstore - Examine the oldest commercial building in downtown Boston. Your guide reveals its 19th-century history as the epicenter of American publishing, hidden behind its modern retail facade. Learn about the legendary authors who gathered here, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Louisa May Alcott.
Old South Meeting House - Enter the massive Puritan meeting house. Your immersive audio recreates the tense atmosphere of December 16, 1773, when 5,000 angry colonists gathered to debate the tea tax. Listen to Samuel Adams’s legendary signal that launched the Sons of Liberty toward the harbor to destroy the tea.
Old State House - Stand beneath the ornate balcony of Boston’s oldest surviving public building. Your guide explains the symbolism of the Lion and the Unicorn statues on the roof, representing British rule. Hear the historical account of the Declaration of Independence being read from this balcony to Boston’s citizens in 1776.
Boston Massacre Site - Locate the ring of cobblestones beneath the Old State House. Your AR tool reconstructs the chaotic, snowy night of March 5, 1770. Analyze the conflicting eyewitness accounts and the brilliant legal defense of the British soldiers by future president John Adams, which established the American standard for a fair trial.
Faneuil Hall Marketplace - Enter the bustling meeting hall. Your guide directs your attention to the famous golden grasshopper weather vane atop the building, explaining its use as a secret passcode to identify spies during the Revolution. Inside, access audio of the fiery abolitionist speeches delivered here by Frederick Douglass.
Quincy Market - Walk through the massive Greek Revival market building. Your architectural guide details its 1826 construction, built on landfill to expand the crowded waterfront. Discover the history of the pushcart vendors and use your culinary map to find local staples like clam chowder and Boston cream pie hidden among the stalls.
The Paul Revere House - Step into the oldest remaining structure in downtown Boston (built 1680). Your guide navigates the cramped, medieval-style interior where Revere lived with his 16 children. Separate the myth of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem from the historical reality of Revere’s intricate intelligence network and his actual Midnight Ride.
Old North Church & Historic Site - Look up at the tallest steeple in colonial Boston. Your guide breaks down the famous “One if by land, and two if by sea” signal orchestrated by Paul Revere. Learn the daring story of the sexton, Robert Newman, who climbed the 154 steps in the dark to hang the two lanterns that ignited the American Revolution.
Copp’s Hill Burying Ground - Climb to this high ground in the North End. Your guide explains how the British military used this cemetery as an artillery vantage point during the Battle of Bunker Hill. Locate the tombstone of Daniel Malcolm, which is still riddled with musket ball pockmarks from British soldiers using it for target practice.
USS Constitution - Board the oldest commissioned warship afloat in the world. Your interactive tool provides a 3D cross-section of the ship’s hull, explaining the unique three-layer live oak construction that caused British cannonballs to bounce off her sides during the War of 1812. Explore the cramped gun deck and the captain’s quarters.
Bunker Hill Monument - Stand at the base of the 221-foot granite obelisk. Your military guide overlays the tactical map of the 1775 battle, explaining why it was actually fought on Breed’s Hill. Learn the strategic importance of the American command, “Don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes,” due to their severe lack of gunpowder.
Rose Kennedy Greenway - Walk this vibrant ribbon of parks. Your engineering guide provides an incredible “X-ray” view beneath your feet, explaining the $15 billion “Big Dig” project that buried the elevated central artery highway. See before-and-after historical photos of how this mega-project completely transformed and reconnected the city.
Marriott’s Custom House - Admire the neoclassical tower dominating the financial district. Your architectural guide details how the tower was added in 1915 to the original 1849 Greek Revival base, circumventing city height restrictions because it was a federal building. Zoom in to read the massive four-sided clock, which lacks a second hand.
Boston Public Garden - Wander America’s first botanical garden. Your guide explains the complex Victorian landscaping and the history of the iconic Swan Boats, operating since 1877. Locate the bronze duckling statues and listen to the audio story of Robert McCloskey’s beloved children’s book that made this specific pathway world-famous.
Day 2. Boston & Cambridge – Museums, Academia & Architecture
The Fogg Art Museum - Explore this world-class facility under a massive glass roof. Your guide leads you to the Forbes Pigment Collection, a stunning visual wall of raw, historical colors—including toxic emerald greens and mummy browns. Access deep dives on the European and American masterpieces, curating your own Ivy League art history seminar.
Harvard Museum of Natural History - Navigate this classic, Victorian-style natural history museum. Your specific mission is the Blaschka Glass Flowers exhibit. Your tool provides extreme close-ups of these 4,000 hyper-realistic botanical models crafted entirely from glass in the 19th century, explaining the lost techniques used by the father-son artisan duo.
Stata Center - Approach this wildly angled, reflective building. Your architectural scanner breaks down Frank Gehry’s controversial deconstructivist design. Learn the structural engineering required to make brick and steel look like it is collapsing, and discover the cutting-edge AI and computer science labs housed within its chaotic walls.
Charles River Esplanade - Walk the scenic riverbank separating Boston and Cambridge. Your guide details the history of the Hatch Memorial Shell, the Art Deco venue famous for the Boston Pops July 4th concerts. Identify the collegiate rowing boathouses across the water and learn how the river was dammed to create this tranquil basin.
Boston Public Library - Enter the “Palace for the People” in Copley Square. Your guide navigates you past the majestic lions to the Bates Hall reading room. Focus on the Abbey Room, using the tool to decode the massive mural cycle depicting the Quest for the Holy Grail, understanding the sheer volume of artistic wealth hidden in this public space.
Trinity Church - Admire the massive stone church dominating the square. Your guide introduces H.H. Richardson’s unique architectural style that swept the nation. Examine the intricate clay roof tiles and the rough-hewn granite. Learn the engineering miracle of its foundation, which rests on thousands of wooden pilings submerged in landfill.
John Hancock Tower - Stand beneath New England’s tallest building. Your guide points out the stark contrast between this sleek, reflective glass monolith and the historic Trinity Church next to it. Uncover the dramatic 1970s engineering crisis when the massive 500-pound glass windowpanes began spontaneously detaching and crashing to the street below.
Museum of Fine Arts - Navigate Boston’s premier art institution. Your curated path focuses on the staggering Art of the Americas wing. Your audio companion details the history behind John Singleton Copley’s revolutionary portraits (like Paul Revere) and John Singer Sargent’s sweeping murals, placing them in the context of Boston’s cultural golden age.
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum - Step into a 15th-century Venetian palace recreated in Boston. Your guide explains Gardner’s eccentric will, which mandated nothing in the museum could ever be moved. Use AR to “fill in” the empty frames left behind by the infamous 1990 art heist, viewing the stolen Rembrandt and Vermeer works exactly where they once hung.
Fenway Park - Visit the oldest ballpark in Major League Baseball. Even without a game ticket, your guide provides a deep dive into the quirky architecture of the 1912 stadium. Learn the exact dimensions of the 37-foot “Green Monster” left-field wall, the history of Pesky’s Pole, and the significance of the lone red seat in the bleachers.
Commonwealth Avenue Mall - Stroll down the center of the Back Bay. Your geographical guide explains how this entire wealthy neighborhood was created by filling in a tidal marsh. Identify the statues of Alexander Hamilton and Leif Erikson, and observe the strict Victorian architectural codes that give the brownstones their uniform, Parisian elegance.
Acorn Street - Navigate to the most photographed street in the United States. Your guide helps you identify the authentic, rounded river-stone cobblestones (which are brutal to walk on) compared to modern pavers. Learn the history of these narrow lanes, originally built for the artisans and servants working in the grand mansions nearby.
Louisburg Square - Walk into this private, aristocratic enclave in Beacon Hill. Your guide details the history of the square’s famous residents, including Louisa May Alcott and current political figures. Learn about the proprietary system where the homeowners, not the city, own and maintain the central park and the streets themselves.
Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum - Visit the floating museum on the Fort Point Channel. Your guide provides historical context for the replica ships, the Eleanor and the Beaver. Learn the logistics of the East India Company’s monopoly and view one of the only two known surviving tea crates from the actual 1773 event, preserved behind glass.
The Institute of Contemporary Art - Walk the Harborwalk to this dramatic waterfront building. Your architectural guide explains the spectacular cantilevered glass gallery that hovers 80 feet above the water. Explore the dynamic contemporary exhibits inside, using the app to decipher the often complex, boundary-pushing multimedia and installation art.
Boston Children’s Museum - Spot the massive, 40-foot tall milk bottle on the wharf. Your guide tells the quirky history of this 1930s highway ice cream stand, saved from demolition and barged across the harbor to its current spot. It’s a fun, engaging lesson on roadside “novelty architecture” acting as an appetizer for the museum behind it.
Christian Science Plaza - Stand at the edge of the massive, 670-foot reflecting pool. Your architectural tool breaks down the Brutalist and Neoclassical elements of the sprawling plaza. Learn about the original Mother Church and the Maparium—a stunning, three-story, walk-through stained-glass globe built in 1935, located inside the Mary Baker Eddy Library.
Symphony Hall - Pass by the home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Your audio guide explains why this 1900 building is considered one of the top three acoustical concert halls in the world. Learn how it was the first auditorium ever designed according to scientifically derived acoustical principles, rather than just architectural guesswork.
Day 3: Salem & The North Shore – Witches, Seafarers & Art Colonies
Salem Witch Museum - Start your Salem tour by framing the 1692 events. Your guide helps separate the Hollywood myths from the grim historical reality. Access a digital web connecting the accusers and the accused, understanding how property disputes, strict Puritan religion, and a harsh winter fueled the mass hysteria that claimed 25 lives.
Witch House - Visit the only structure still standing in Salem with direct ties to the trials. Your guide details the life of Judge Jonathan Corwin. Explore the dark, 17th-century architecture and learn about the intense, often brutal interrogations that took place within these exact walls before victims were sent to the gallows.
Salem Witch Trials Memorial - Walk through this quiet, poignant memorial next to the burying ground. Your guide highlights the 20 granite benches, each bearing the name, execution date, and method of death of a victim. Listen to the chilling audio recordings of the victims’ final pleas of innocence, cut short by the surrounding stone walls.
Peabody Essex Museum - Enter one of the oldest and fastest-growing museums in America. Your guide focuses on the museum’s crowning jewel: Yin Yu Tang, a complete 200-year-old Chinese merchant’s house dismantled in China and reassembled in Salem. Explore the intricate woodwork and learn the multi-generational history of the Huang family who lived there.
The House of the Seven Gables - Visit the dark, brooding mansion that inspired Nathaniel Hawthorne’s famous novel. Your guide reveals the architectural quirks, including the actual seven gables and a hidden, twisting secret staircase built into the chimney. Uncover the history of the Turner and Ingersoll families who made their wealth from the sea.
Salem Maritime National Historic Site - Walk the half-mile-long Derby Wharf extending into the harbor. Your guide explains Salem’s post-Revolutionary history when it was the richest city per capita in America, dominating the East India pepper trade. Visualize the harbor packed with hundreds of masted ships unloading exotic goods from Asia and Africa.
The Custom House - Stand before the Federal-style brick building on the waterfront. Your guide details Nathaniel Hawthorne’s time working here as a customs surveyor, a job he hated but which inspired the opening of The Scarlet Letter. Look up at the massive wooden eagle on the roof, carved by the famous local artisan Samuel McIntire.
Friendship of Salem - View the fully rigged replica of a 1797 Salem merchant vessel. Your guide provides a breakdown of the complex rigging and the harsh realities of a sailor’s life on a three-year voyage to the East Indies. Learn how these specific types of ships outran pirates and secured massive fortunes for Salem’s elite class.
Salem 1630: Pioneer Village - Explore America’s first living history museum, built in 1930. Your guide uses AR to show how the Puritans constructed their first thatched-roof cottages and dugouts upon arriving in the New World. Learn about the medicinal herb gardens and the grueling daily survival tactics required during the first harsh Massachusetts winters.
Mcintire Historic District - Stroll down Chestnut Street, often called the most beautiful street in America. Your architectural scanner decodes the exquisite Federal-style mansions designed by Samuel McIntire. Learn to identify the symmetrical brick facades, ornate porticos, and fanlights that defined the homes of Salem’s wealthiest sea captains.
The Jeremiah Lee Mansion - Enter this stunning 1768 Georgian mansion. Your guide focuses on the original, hand-painted English scenic wallpapers—the only ones of their kind left in the world in their original location. Learn about Colonel Lee’s massive wealth and his sudden death just days before the Revolutionary War began.
Gloucester Fishermen’s Wives Memorial - Drive up the coast to Gloucester. Stand before the iconic bronze “Man at the Wheel” statue. Your guide explains the somber history behind the monument, dedicated to the estimated 10,000 Gloucester fishermen who have lost their lives to the Atlantic since 1623. Read the names on the cenotaphs encircling the plaza.
Hammond Castle Museum - Visit the eccentric coastal castle built by John Hays Hammond Jr., the “Father of Radio Control.” Your guide navigates the medieval arches and the massive Great Hall housing a gigantic pipe organ. Uncover Hammond’s 400+ patents and his penchant for throwing lavish, mysterious parties in this oceanfront fortress.
Motif Number 1 - Stop at the harbor in Rockport to photograph this iconic red fishing shack. Your guide explains its fame in art history; it was named by a local painter because it was the preferred subject (or “motif”) of every art student visiting the town. Learn how the original was destroyed in the Blizzard of ‘78 and painstakingly rebuilt.
Halibut Point State Park - Hike the trails of this former Babson Farm granite quarry. Your geological guide explains how the massive sheets of granite were cut and shipped to build paved streets and custom houses across the nation. Reach the edge of the quarry hole, which drops precipitously into the roaring Atlantic surf.
Singing Beach - End your day at this famous beach. Your scientific guide explains the phenomenon of the “singing sand”—how the specific spherical shape of the quartz grains combined with the right humidity causes the sand to squeak or “sing” when you scuff your feet through it. Enjoy a quiet sunset looking out over Massachusetts Bay.
Day 4: Plymouth & Cape Cod – Pilgrims, Pirates & Whalers
Plymouth Rock - Stand before America’s most famous boulder. Your guide separates the powerful national mythology from historical fact, explaining that the rock wasn’t formally identified as the landing spot until 121 years after the Mayflower arrived. Learn about the rock’s bizarre history of being split in two, moved around town, and chipped away by souvenir hunters.
Mayflower II - Board this meticulously crafted, full-scale replica. Your maritime guide details the grueling 66-day transatlantic voyage. Use your tool to analyze the ship’s rigging and cramped ‘tween decks, where 102 passengers and 30 crew members lived in near darkness, understanding the intense physical and psychological toll of the 1620 crossing.
Plimoth Patuxet Museums - Enter the living history museum. Your audio guide focuses first on the Patuxet Wampanoag perspective, detailing their sophisticated agricultural practices, diplomacy, and the devastating plagues that decimated their population just before the English arrived. Use your tool to decode the construction of a traditional wetu.
Pilgrim Hall Museum - Visit the oldest continuously operating public museum in the country. Your guide directs you to the actual possessions brought over on the Mayflower, including William Bradford’s Bible and the only known portrait of a Pilgrim painted from life (Edward Winslow). Analyze the remarkably preserved, 400-year-old wooden cradle of Peregrine White.
National Monument to the Forefathers - Stand beneath the largest solid granite monument in the United States. Your architectural scanner decodes the massive 81-foot statue, explaining the five central allegorical figures representing the virtues the Pilgrims brought: Faith, Morality, Law, Education, and Liberty. Learn how this massive hidden gem was funded entirely by private donations over 30 years.
Burial Hill - Climb to the highest point in Plymouth. Your guide reconstructs the original wooden fort that stood here in 1621, complete with cannons facing the harbor. Navigate the slate headstones to find the graves of William Bradford and other early settlers, using your tool to decipher the grim, Puritan “Death’s Head” carvings.
Cape Cod Canal - Drive south and cross the massive bridges onto Cape Cod. Your engineering guide details the grueling history of the canal’s construction, finally completed in 1914. Learn how this 17-mile waterway effectively turned the Cape into an island, saving mariners from the treacherous, shipwreck-prone outer shoals.
Sandwich Glass Museum - Visit the Cape’s oldest town to explore this specialized, ticketed museum. Your guide provides a deep dive into the 19th-century Boston & Sandwich Glass Company. Learn the dangerous chemical alchemy required to produce the famous “cranberry” and “canary” colored glass, and watch a live glassblowing demonstration with expert audio commentary.
Nobska Point Lighthouse - Stand at this picturesque lighthouse overlooking Martha’s Vineyard. Your guide details the evolution of its light, from the original 1828 oil lamps to the current Fresnel lens. Understand the perilous navigation of Vineyard Sound, a historically vital shipping lane that saw thousands of schooners passing daily in the 19th century.
Cape Cod National Seashore - Enter the protected National Seashore established by JFK. Your ecological guide explains the Cape’s unique formation by retreating glaciers 18,000 years ago. Use your map to navigate the fragile dune ecosystems and salt marshes, understanding the constant, erosive battle between the sandy peninsula and the relentless Atlantic Ocean.
Marconi Wireless Station - Stand on the high bluffs overlooking the ocean. Your technological guide reconstructs the massive wooden antenna towers that once stood here. Listen to the story of Guglielmo Marconi successfully transmitting the first two-way transatlantic radio message between President Theodore Roosevelt and King Edward VII in 1903.
Provincetown - Walk the vibrant, narrow streets at the very tip of the Cape. Your guide corrects a common misconception: the Pilgrims actually spent five weeks here in Provincetown Harbor before moving to Plymouth. Learn about the signing of the Mayflower Compact in this harbor, establishing the first framework for self-government in the New World.
Pilgrim Monument & Provincetown Museum - Ascend the tallest all-granite structure in the US (252 feet). Your guide explains its design, modeled after the Torre del Mangia in Siena, Italy. As you climb the 116 steps and 60 ramps, use your digital compass at the top to identify the distant Boston skyline and the sweeping curve of the entire Cape Cod peninsula.
Provincetown Art Association and Museum - Visit the cultural heart of America’s oldest continuous art colony. Your guide curates a tour of PAAM’s collection, highlighting how the unique, reflective light of the surrounding ocean drew legendary artists like Edward Hopper and Robert Motherwell. Understand Provincetown’s vital role in the development of American modernism.
Race Point Lighthouse - Hike or take a dune tour to this isolated beacon. Your maritime guide explains why this specific stretch of coast was known as the “Graveyard of the Atlantic,” claiming over 3,000 shipwrecks. Learn about the heroics of the US Life-Saving Service (precursor to the Coast Guard) who rescued stranded sailors in brutal winter nor’easters.
Chatham Lighthouse - End your day viewing the active Coast Guard station. Your guide provides a stunning visual overlay of how dramatically the barrier beaches here shift and break during winter storms. Listen to the dramatic account of the 1952 Pendleton rescue, the most daring small-boat rescue in Coast Guard history, launched from this very station.
Day 5: Newport, Rhode Island – The Gilded Age Mansions
The Breakers - Enter the grandest of Newport’s summer estates. Your architectural guide details Richard Morris Hunt’s 70-room, Italian Renaissance-style masterpiece. Scan the platinum-paneled walls and the massive central Great Hall, understanding how Cornelius Vanderbilt II built this palace to showcase his family’s absolute dominance of American industry.
Marble House - Visit the estate of Alva Vanderbilt. Your guide explains that this house, built with 500,000 cubic feet of marble, sparked the Newport architectural arms race. Learn about Alva’s scandalous divorce and her later use of this opulent estate to host massive rallies for the women’s suffrage movement, perfectly blending extreme wealth with radical politics.
The Elms - Explore this Parisian-style chateau modeled after the French Château d’Asnières. Your guide skips the grand ballrooms to focus on the basement. Learn about the cutting-edge, hidden technologies of the 1890s that made the house run invisibly—including an underground coal tunnel, ice makers, and the strict, unseen lives of the 40+ domestic servants.
Rosecliff - Step into the mansion famous for its heart-shaped grand staircase and use in films like The Great Gatsby. Your guide explains its design by Stanford White, modeled after the Grand Trianon at Versailles. Listen to tales of the legendary, eccentric parties hosted by silver heiress Theresa Fair Oelrichs, including a dinner party given for her pet dogs.
Rough Point Museum - Visit the uniquely personal home of Doris Duke, the billionaire philanthropist. Your guide contrasts this comfortable, lived-in English Manorial style home with the sterile Vanderbilt palaces. Learn the eccentric history of Duke, including the two pet Bactrian camels she allowed to roam the manicured grounds and occasionally inside the house.
Chateau-sur-Mer - Explore the first grand mansion of Newport, built decades before the Gilded Age. Your guide highlights the heavy, ornate High Victorian architecture. Learn how this estate set the precedent for Newport as a summer resort, and discover the elaborate coming-of-age parties and “fetes champetres” (country feasts) hosted here in the 1850s.
Isaac Bell House - Take a break from marble to visit this seminal work of American architecture. Your guide explains the “Shingle Style,” pioneered by McKim, Mead & White, which blended Japanese open floor plans with traditional New England wooden shingles. It represents a brief moment of uniquely American design before the obsession with European palaces took over.
Kingscote - Step into this early, asymmetrical “cottage” built in 1839. Your guide details the Gothic Revival movement, focusing on the pointed arches and intricate wooden trim. Scan the stunning dining room added later by Stanford White, featuring opalescent Tiffany glass bricks, representing the transition from modest summer retreats to opulent entertaining.
Hunter House - Shift to Newport’s colonial era. Your guide explores this 1748 Georgian mansion on the harbor, built by a wealthy maritime merchant. Learn about Newport’s dark history as a central hub of the Triangle Trade. Discover the secret smuggling compartments built into the house to hide untaxed molasses and rum from British customs officials.
Cliff Walk - Walk the famous public path that separates the lawns of the billionaires from the crashing Atlantic. Your geo-guide tracks your location, providing audio pop-ups for the backyards of the mansions you pass. Learn about the continuous legal battles between the public’s right to access the shoreline and the privacy demands of the ultra-wealthy.
Fort Adams State Park - Enter the largest coastal fortification in the United States. Your military guide details the massive granite walls and the complex “listening tunnels” built beneath the fort to detect enemy tunneling. Learn how this massive garrison, designed to protect Narragansett Bay, never actually fired a shot in anger during its century of active service.
Touro Park - Visit this National Historic Site built in 1763. Your guide highlights the stunning Palladian architecture designed by Peter Harrison. Access the audio of George Washington’s famous 1790 letter to this congregation, promising that the new US government would “give to bigotry no sanction,” establishing a foundational precedent for religious freedom.
Redwood Library & Athenaeum - Step into the oldest continuously operating library in its original building in the US (1750). Your guide explains its revolutionary design—built of wood but painted and carved with sand to look like expensive Roman stone. Discover the history of the British occupation of Newport, during which many of the original volumes were stolen or destroyed.
Newport Art Museum - Visit this museum housed in a Richard Morris Hunt-designed stick-style mansion. Your guide focuses on the museum’s collection of regional art, particularly the works of the influential Narragansett Bay artists. Learn how the wealthy summer residents patronized local artists, creating a vibrant, enduring cultural community alongside the social elite.
International Tennis Hall of Fame - Enter the stunning 1880 shingle-style complex commissioned by James Gordon Bennett Jr. (after he was kicked out of another club on a bet). Your guide details the history of the first US National Lawn Tennis Championship held on these grass courts in 1881. Explore the extensive museum tracking the global evolution of the sport.
Naval War College Museum - Access this ticketed museum located on Coasters Harbor Island (military base access rules apply). Your guide details the history of the US Navy in Narragansett Bay. Focus on the legacy of Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan, whose lectures here in the 1880s revolutionized global naval strategy and directly influenced Theodore Roosevelt’s Great White Fleet.
Trinity Church - Step into this 1726 Anglican church. Your guide points out the incredibly rare, three-tiered “wineglass” pulpit located in the center of the aisle, emphasizing the importance of the sermon over the altar in colonial worship. Look for the box pews, including No. 81, which was regularly used by George Washington during his visits to Newport.
Bowen’s Wharf - End your day in the bustling commercial wharf district. Your guide peels back the modern restaurants to reveal the 18th-century cobblestone seaport, where sailmakers and blacksmiths outfitted whaling and merchant ships. Enjoy the modern culinary scene while using your nautical database to identify the complex rigging on the yachts docked nearby.
Day 6: Providence & Mystic – Capital Ambitions & Maritime Heritage
Rhode Island State House - Start in Providence at this magnificent McKim, Mead & White building. Your guide provides a stunning fact: the marble dome is the fourth largest self-supported dome in the world (after St. Peter’s, the Minnesota Capitol, and the Taj Mahal). Scan the “Independent Man” statue on top, symbolizing Rhode Island’s history of religious and political defiance.
Roger Williams National Memorial - Visit the site of the original 1636 settlement. Your guide explains why Roger Williams was banished from Massachusetts for his radical beliefs in the separation of church and state. Learn how he purchased this land from the Narragansett tribe to create a “lively experiment” in absolute religious freedom, drawing outcasts from across the colonies.
First Baptist Church in America - Admire the pristine white facade of the oldest Baptist congregation in the US, founded by Roger Williams. Your architectural guide details the towering 185-foot steeple, which survived the catastrophic 1938 hurricane. Learn how the massive meeting house was built largely to hold Brown University’s commencement ceremonies, a tradition that continues today.
Benefit Street - Stroll down the most impressive concentration of original colonial homes in America. Your digital map highlights the restored 18th- and 19th-century mansions. Learn the gritty history of how this wealthy enclave fell into total disrepair in the mid-20th century before a massive, grassroots preservation effort saved it from the urban wrecking ball.
John Brown House Museum - Enter the 1786 Georgian mansion of John Brown, which George Washington called “the most magnificent and elegant mansion that I have ever seen.” Your guide tackles Brown’s complicated legacy: a fierce American patriot who funded the Revolution and founded Brown University, but who also aggressively defended and profited from the transatlantic slave trade.
Providence Athenaeum - Step into this independent, Greek Revival library (1838). Your literary guide leads you through the granite columns to the alcoves where Edgar Allan Poe famously courted Sarah Helen Whitman. Listen to audio snippets of the passionate, doomed romance that unfolded among these very bookshelves before she broke off their engagement due to his drinking.
Brown University - Walk onto the main green of the 7th oldest college in the US. Your guide scans the brick facade of University Hall (1770), the original college building. Learn how it was seized and used as a barracks and hospital for French and American troops during the Revolution. Uncover the history of the iconic Van Wickle Gates, which open only twice a year.
Historic Federal Hill - Head to DePasquale Plaza in Providence’s “Little Italy.” Your culinary guide explains the wave of Italian immigration in the early 1900s that shaped this vibrant neighborhood. The tool highlights historic bakeries and import shops, offering audio interviews with 3rd-generation shop owners about the traditional pasta and pastry techniques still used today.
Mystic Seaport Museum - Drive south into Connecticut to America’s leading maritime museum. Your guide navigates the recreated 19th-century seafaring village. Visit the authentic cooperage, shipsmith, and printing press. Listen to the harsh, fascinating history of the New England whaling industry that illuminated the world with oil before the discovery of petroleum.
Charles W. Morgan - Step aboard the crown jewel of the seaport, the last surviving wooden whaling ship in the world (built 1841). Your maritime guide details the intense, dangerous process of hunting sperm whales. Explore the cramped fo’c’sle where sailors lived, and examine the massive try-pots on deck used to boil down the blubber during years-long voyages.
Fort Griswold Battlefield State Park - Visit the site of the 1781 Battle of Groton Heights. Your military guide recounts the brutal attack led by the infamous turncoat Benedict Arnold against his native Connecticut. Stand inside the earthwork fort and learn the tragic story of Colonel William Ledyard, who was allegedly killed with his own sword after surrendering to the British forces.
Mystic River Bascule Bridge - End your day watching the iconic highway bridge open. Your engineering guide explains the mechanics of the 1922 Brown Bascule bridge, which uses two massive, exposed concrete counterweights to lift the spans for passing sailboats. It’s a hypnotic piece of functional industrial art connecting the historic halves of downtown Mystic.
Day 7: Lexington & Concord – The Shot Heard ‘Round the World
Lexington Green - Stand on the triangular green where the American Revolution began on April 19, 1775. Your AR guide places the 77 local militiamen facing the 700 elite British regulars. Listen to Captain Parker’s legendary order: “Stand your ground. Don’t fire unless fired upon.” Analyze the historical debate over who actually fired the mysterious “first shot.”
Buckman Tavern - Enter the yellow tavern facing the green. Your guide explains that this is where the Lexington militia gathered in the early morning hours, nervously drinking rum while waiting for the British column to arrive. Locate the original front door inside the museum, which still features a bullet hole from a British musket fired during the skirmish.
Hancock-Clarke House - Visit the parsonage where John Hancock and Samuel Adams were sleeping when the alarm was raised. Your guide details Paul Revere’s frantic arrival at midnight to warn them of their impending arrest. Explore the preserved rooms and learn why these two specific men were the primary targets of the British military expedition out of Boston.
Munroe Tavern - Drive down Massachusetts Avenue to this 1695 tavern. Your military guide flips the perspective to the British side. Learn how Earl Percy took over this tavern to serve as a field hospital for his exhausted, retreating Redcoats, who were under constant sniper fire from colonial militias lining the road back to Boston.
Minute Man Visitor Center - Enter the National Historical Park. Your guide recommends the multimedia theater presentation to grasp the scale of the 20-mile running battle. Use the interactive map to trace the “Battle Road Trail,” understanding the guerrilla tactics used by the colonials who fired from behind stone walls and trees against the disciplined British lines.
North Bridge Antiques - Walk the wooden bridge over the Concord River. Your guide sets the scene: this is where colonial forces, for the first time, received orders to fire upon the King’s troops, forcing a British retreat. View Daniel Chester French’s famous “Minute Man” statue, and read Ralph Waldo Emerson’s immortal “Concord Hymn” carved into its granite base.
The Old Manse - Look at the Georgian house directly next to the North Bridge. Your literary guide explains its incredible history: built by Ralph Waldo Emerson’s grandfather (who watched the battle from the yard), and later rented by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Learn how the transcendentalist movement was practically born in the study overlooking the historic river.
Concord Museum - Visit the premier museum of Concord’s history. Your guide directs you to two of the most important artifacts in American history: one of the original two lanterns hung in the Old North Church by Paul Revere, and the humble flute owned by Henry David Thoreau, which he played while living in isolation at Walden Pond.
Ralph Waldo Emerson House - Step into the home of America’s leading 19th-century intellectual. Your guide describes the legendary gatherings in Emerson’s parlor, where thinkers like Thoreau, Alcott, and Margaret Fuller debated philosophy and abolition. View his preserved study, where essays like “Nature” and “Self-Reliance” reshaped American literature.
Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House - Visit the historic home of the Alcott family. Your guide details how Louisa May Alcott wrote and set her masterpiece, Little Women, in this exact house. Locate the small, half-moon desk her father built for her where the novel was penned. Learn about the progressive, often impoverished, and highly creative reality of the real-life “March” sisters.
The Wayside - Explore the only home in America lived in by three major literary figures: Louisa May Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Margaret Sidney. Your architectural guide points out the strange, towering “Sky Parlor” Hawthorne added to the house so he could write in complete isolation. Learn about its earlier history as a refuge for runaway slaves.
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery - Walk up the steep, wooded hill to “Authors Ridge.” Your guide maps out the closely clustered graves of Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, and Alcott. Observe the tradition of visitors leaving pens, pencils, and notes on the simple headstones, paying respects to the minds that defined the American Renaissance in this quiet, rural setting.
Walden Pond State Reservation - Walk the wooded path around the famous glacial kettle pond. Your guide leads you to the replica of Henry David Thoreau’s tiny, 10x15 foot cabin. Listen to audio excerpts from Walden explaining his philosophy of deliberate living. Learn how he wasn’t a hermit, but frequently walked into Concord to visit his mother and dine with Emerson.
Longfellow House Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site - Stop in Cambridge on your return. Your guide reveals the dual history of this yellow mansion. It served as George Washington’s headquarters during the 1775-1776 Siege of Boston, and later became the home of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. See the chair made for him from the wood of the “spreading chestnut tree” mentioned in his famous poem.
Mount Auburn Cemetery - Drive through the gates of America’s first landscaped rural cemetery (1831). Your guide explains how this massive botanical garden sparked a national movement to move burials out of crowded city churchyards. Use the map to find the ornate tombs of Boston’s elite, and climb the Washington Tower for a spectacular view of the Boston skyline.

- Unlimited narrated stories for any attraction
- 7 days premium app access for iPhone or Android
- Interactive maps with routes and recommendations
- Instant stories by photo or from the map
- Unlimited narrated stories for any attraction
- 7 days premium app access for iPhone or Android
- Interactive maps with routes and recommendations
- Instant stories by photo or from the map
- Accomodation not included
- Accomodation not included
With this AI app, users are no longer confined to crowded group tours or inflexible scripts. Discover iconic locations such as the Boston Freedom Trail and the luxurious Gilded Age mansions of Newport—or delve into lesser-known colonial sites. Inquire about anything that piques your interest—and receive instant, engaging narrated stories. New England’s…
With this AI app, users are no longer confined to crowded group tours or inflexible scripts. Discover iconic locations such as the Boston Freedom Trail and the luxurious Gilded Age mansions of Newport—or delve into lesser-known colonial sites. Inquire about anything that piques your interest—and receive instant, engaging narrated stories. New England’s most profound historical secrets are yours to explore.
Point & Discover: Capture a photo of any monument or museum masterpiece to instantly receive a captivating and accurate story. It’s like having a historian in your pocket!
Ultimate Freedom: Navigate effortlessly with interactive map-based audio tours. Your schedule, your pace, your rules.
Choose Your Vibe: Select a narrator persona that suits your style—from a deep-diving scholar to a fun companion for the kids.
Get Started: Enjoy 7 Days of Premium Access available instantly for iPhone and Android.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.