Paul Revere Mall

Paul Revere Mall

Freedom Trail Hanover Street Boston, Massachusetts 02113

Official Website
Freedom Trail Official Website
Freedom Trail map

About this Location

Inspired by the Paseo del Prado in Havana, Cuba, this walkway was designed by landscape architect Arthur Shurcliff with the assistance of his son Sidney Shurcliff in 1933. Originally called Webster Avenue, the narrow passageway was cleared of tenement housing and substantially widened to create a direct sightline between two historic landmarks: The Old North Church and St. Stephen’s Church. The new pedestrian thoroughfare was resurfaced with red brick and bluestone arranged in repeating geometric patterns and lined by rows of shade trees. In 2019 the City of Boston, in consultation with the firm Kyle Zick Landscape Architecture, Inc., installed new lighting and paving, improved accessibility, and restored the mall’s central fountain.

Situated along Boston’s Freedom Trail, the 480-foot-long cruciform passageway, also known as the Prado, is bounded by nine-foot-high coped-brick walls that separate the space from nearby residences. An avenue of linden and poplar trees, interspersed with granite benches, runs the length of the mall, creating a rare shaded respite in Boston’s North End neighborhood. An equestrian statue of Paul Revere (1940) by Cyrus Edwin Dallin marks the mall’s primary entrance at Hanover Street. Closer to the Old North Church, where two lanterns were hung to signal the departure of British troops, a prominent Italianate circular granite fountain is set within a square demarcated in the pavement and further defined by four raised corner curbs, containing plantings within cast-iron fences. The square is edged by commemorative bas-relief plaques embedded in the surrounding brick walls.

About Freedom Trail

See all hotspots at Freedom Trail

The Freedom Trail is a 2.5-mile-long path through Boston that passes by 16 locations significant to the history of the United States. Marked largely with brick, it winds from Boston Common in downtown Boston through the North End to the Bunker Hill Monument in Charlestown. Stops along the trail include simple explanatory ground markers, graveyards, notable churches and buildings, and a historic naval frigate. While most of the sites are free or suggest donations, the Old South Meeting House, the Old State House, and the Paul Revere House charge admission. The Freedom Trail is overseen by the City of Boston’s Freedom Trail Commission and is supported in part by grants from various nonprofits and foundations, private philanthropy, and Boston National Historical Park.

Features

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Restrooms on site

  • Entrance fee

Content from Official Website, Freedom Trail Official Website, and Wikipedia

Last updated January 14, 2024