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Boston Women's Heritage Trail

The Boston Women's Heritage Trail is a series of walking tours in Boston, Massachusetts, leading past sites important to Boston women's history. The tours wind through several neighborhoods, including the Back Bay and Beacon Hill, commemorating women such as Abigail Adams, Amelia Earhart, and Phillis Wheatley. The guidebook includes seven walks and introduces more than 200 Boston women.[1]

The BWHT was created in 1989 by a group of Boston schoolteachers, librarians, and students. It is funded by the nonprofit Boston Educational Development Foundation. The BWHT presents teacher workshops, guided walks, and other activities to promote women's history.[2]

Walking tours edit

The list of BWHT walking tours currently includes tours of the Back Bay (East), Back Bay (West), Beacon Hill, Charlestown, Chinatown/South Cove, Dorchester, Downtown, Jamaica Plain, Lower Roxbury, Roxbury, the South End, and West Roxbury. It also includes the Artists Walk, which focuses on local women artists, and the Ladies Walk, which commemorates Abigail Adams, Lucy Stone, and Phillis Wheatley.[3]

Artists edit

The Artists walk centers on the Back Bay, where many women artists have lived, worked, and exhibited. The walk was designed to complement the 2001 Museum of Fine Arts exhibition, A Studio of Her Own: Women Artists in Boston 1870–1940. Women mentioned include Helen M. Knowlton, Anne Whitney, and others.[4]

Back Bay East edit

The Back Bay East walk begins and ends at the Public Garden. Women mentioned include:[5]

Also mentioned are Fisher College, Simmons College, and the Winsor School.

Back Bay West edit

This walk starts at the Boston Public Library in Copley Square and ends at the Boston Women's Memorial on the Commonwealth Avenue mall. Women mentioned include:[6]

Beacon Hill edit

The Beacon Hill walk begins at the State House and winds through Beacon Hill, often in parallel with the Black Heritage Trail. Women mentioned include:[7]

Charlestown edit

Women mentioned on the Charlestown walk include:[8]

Chinatown/South Cove edit

The Chinatown/South Cove walk begins at the Boston Common Visitor Center, passes through Chinatown, and ends at Park Square. Women mentioned include:[9]

Dorchester edit

The Uphams Corner walk in Dorchester, developed by students at Codman Academy, is the first in a planned series of Dorchester walks. Women mentioned include:[10]

  • Alice Stone Blackwell, women's suffragist, journalist, and human rights advocate
  • Elida Rumsey Fowle, Civil War volunteer and adoptive mother of two emancipated slave children
  • Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton, poet
  • Anna Clapp Harris Smith, founder of the Animal Rescue League
  • Hepzibah Swan, socialite and art patron
  • Geraldine Trotter, editor and activist
  • "Ann & Betty", two slaves buried in Dorchester's oldest graveyard
  • Local women's abolitionist groups

Downtown edit

Starting at the State House and ending at the corner of Franklin and Washington Streets, the Downtown walk passes some of Boston's oldest historic sites. Women mentioned include:[11]

Jamaica Plain edit

Women mentioned on the Jamaica Plain walk include:[12]

Ladies Walk edit

The Ladies Walk celebrates the lives of First Lady Abigail Adams, suffragist Lucy Stone, and poet Phillis Wheatley. It starts at the Boston Women's Memorial on Commonwealth Avenue and ends at Faneuil Hall.[13]

Lower Roxbury edit

Women mentioned on the Lower Roxbury walk include:[14]

North End Walk edit

The North End walk begins at Faneuil Hall, passes through the North End, and ends at St. Leonard's Church, one of the first Italian churches in the U.S. It overlaps at several points with the Freedom Trail. Women mentioned on this walk include:[15]

Roxbury edit

Women mentioned on the Roxbury walk include:[16]

South End edit

The South End walk starts at Back Bay Station and ends at the Boston Center for the Arts. Women mentioned on the Sound End walk include:[17]

West Roxbury edit

Women mentioned on the West Roxbury walk include:[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "BWHT History". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  2. ^ "Funding and Sponsors". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  3. ^ . Boston Women's Heritage Trail. Archived from the original on 2016-06-15. Retrieved 2016-01-12.
  4. ^ . Boston Women's Heritage Trail. Archived from the original on 2014-03-04. Retrieved 2016-01-12.
  5. ^ "Back Bay East". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  6. ^ "Back Bay West". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  7. ^ "Beacon Hill". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  8. ^ "Charlestown". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  9. ^ "Chinatown/South Cove". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  10. ^ "Dorchester". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  11. ^ "Downtown". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  12. ^ "Jamaica Plain". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  13. ^ "Ladies Walk". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  14. ^ "Lower Roxbury". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  15. ^ "North End". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  16. ^ "Roxbury". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  17. ^ "South End". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
  18. ^ Scheible, Sue (Apr 21, 2016). "Hanson sculptor who created Tubman memorial hails news of $20 bill". Wicked Local.
  19. ^ "West Roxbury". Boston Women's Heritage Trail.

Further reading

  • Boston Women's Heritage Trail: Four Centuries of Boston Women: Guidebook, Walking Tours, and Maps. Curious Traveller Press. 1999. ISBN 9781892839039.

External links edit

  • Official website of the Boston Women's Heritage Trail

boston, women, heritage, trail, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 2022, learn, when, remove, . This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Boston Women s Heritage Trail news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The Boston Women s Heritage Trail is a series of walking tours in Boston Massachusetts leading past sites important to Boston women s history The tours wind through several neighborhoods including the Back Bay and Beacon Hill commemorating women such as Abigail Adams Amelia Earhart and Phillis Wheatley The guidebook includes seven walks and introduces more than 200 Boston women 1 The BWHT was created in 1989 by a group of Boston schoolteachers librarians and students It is funded by the nonprofit Boston Educational Development Foundation The BWHT presents teacher workshops guided walks and other activities to promote women s history 2 Contents 1 Walking tours 1 1 Artists 1 2 Back Bay East 1 3 Back Bay West 1 4 Beacon Hill 1 5 Charlestown 1 6 Chinatown South Cove 1 7 Dorchester 1 8 Downtown 1 9 Jamaica Plain 1 10 Ladies Walk 1 11 Lower Roxbury 1 12 North End Walk 1 13 Roxbury 1 14 South End 1 15 West Roxbury 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksWalking tours editThe list of BWHT walking tours currently includes tours of the Back Bay East Back Bay West Beacon Hill Charlestown Chinatown South Cove Dorchester Downtown Jamaica Plain Lower Roxbury Roxbury the South End and West Roxbury It also includes the Artists Walk which focuses on local women artists and the Ladies Walk which commemorates Abigail Adams Lucy Stone and Phillis Wheatley 3 Artists edit The Artists walk centers on the Back Bay where many women artists have lived worked and exhibited The walk was designed to complement the 2001 Museum of Fine Arts exhibition A Studio of Her Own Women Artists in Boston 1870 1940 Women mentioned include Helen M Knowlton Anne Whitney and others 4 Back Bay East edit The Back Bay East walk begins and ends at the Public Garden Women mentioned include 5 Emily Greene Balch economist sociologist and pacifist winner of the Nobel Peace Prize Amy Beach composer Isabella Stewart Gardner art collector and founder of the Gardner Museum Catherine Hammond Gibson original owner of the Gibson House Museum Mary Elizabeth Haskell founder of the Haskell School for Girls Harriet Hemenway and Minna Hall founders of the Massachusetts Audubon Society Julia Ward Howe abolitionist activist and author of The Battle Hymn of the Republic Elma Lewis arts educator and founder of the National Center of Afro American Artists Florence Luscomb architect and women s suffragist Mary May founder of the Brimmer and May School Julia Oliver O Neil famous for marching in parades with her ten daughters in matching outfits Lucina W Prince founder of the Prince School of Salesmanship Belle P Rand founder of the French Library and Cultural Center Sarah Choate Sears art patron and artist Anne Sexton Pulitzer winning poet Mary Pickard Winsor founder of the Winsor School Sculptors Theo Alice Ruggles Kitson Anna Coleman Ladd Mary Moore Bashka Paeff Lilian Swann Saarinen Nancy Schon Katharine Lane Weems and Anne Whitney Also mentioned are Fisher College Simmons College and the Winsor School Back Bay West edit This walk starts at the Boston Public Library in Copley Square and ends at the Boston Women s Memorial on the Commonwealth Avenue mall Women mentioned include 6 Abigail Adams first lady and presidential advisor Sister Ann Alexis administrator of Carney Hospital and the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul Mary Antin author and immigration rights activist Alice Stone Blackwell women s suffragist journalist and human rights advocate Melnea Cass civil rights activist Lucretia Crocker science educator Charlotte Cushman actress and art patron Carolyn L Dewing founder of the School of Fashion Design Mary Baker Eddy founder of the Church of Christ Scientist Katharine Gibbs founder of Gibbs College Louise Imogen Guiney poet essayist and editor Anne Hutchinson religious dissenter Alice M Jordan founder of the New England Round Table of Children s Librarians Mary Morton Kehew social reform leader Ellen Lanyon artist Elma Lewis arts educator and founder of the National Center of Afro American Artists Lucy Miller Mitchell pioneering educator Maria Mitchell astronomer Cecilia Payne Gaposchkin astronomer Frances Rich sculptor Ellen Swallow Richards pioneering environmental chemist Beryl Robinson educator and storyteller Sarah Choate Sears art patron and artist Isobel Sinesi of the School of Fashion Design Muriel S Snowden community activist Lucy Stone suffragist and founder of the Woman s Journal Anne Sullivan teacher of Helen Keller Phillis Wheatley poet Marathon runners Joan Benoit Bobbi Gibb Nina Kuscsik Rosa Mota and Fatuma Roba Sculptors Meredith Bergmann Yvette Compagnion Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller Penelope Jencks Theo Alice Ruggles Kitson Amelia Peabody Anne Whitney Frances Rich and Nancy Schon Artists Cecilia Beaux Susan Hinckley Bradley Margaret Fitzhugh Browne Mary Cassatt Adelaide Cole Chase Gertrude Fiske Lilian Westcott Hale Marie Danforth Page Lilla Cabot Perry Louise Stimson and Sarah Wyman Whitman Philanthropists Ednah Dow Cheney Pauline Durant Fanny Mason Abby W May Pauline Agassiz Shaw Jane Alexander and Eileen Reilly Religious leaders Abbie Child Dr Elsa Meder Elizabeth Rice Alice Hageman and Donna Day Lower Award winning crafters Lydia Bush Brown Head Louise Chrimes Winifred Crawford Sister Magdalen Margaret Rogers Mary Crease Sears and Josephine H Shaw Exeter Street Theater owners Viola and Florence Berlin Beacon Hill edit The Beacon Hill walk begins at the State House and winds through Beacon Hill often in parallel with the Black Heritage Trail Women mentioned include 7 Louisa May Alcott author Ruth Batson civil rights activist Blanche Woodson Braxton the first African American woman to be admitted to the Massachusetts Bar Association Maria Weston Chapman founder of the Boston Female Anti Slavery Society Ellen Craft escaped slave author and educator Rebecca Lee Crumpler the first African American woman physician Margaret Deland author Mary Dyer one of the four executed Quakers known as the Boston martyrs Annie Adams Fields author Louise Imogen Guiney author Harriet Hayden African American abolitionist Anna E Hirsch the first woman president of the Board of Trustees of New England School of Law Julia Ward Howe abolitionist activist and author of The Battle Hymn of the Republic Anne Hutchinson religious dissenter Sarah Orne Jewett author Mary Eliza Mahoney the first professionally trained African American nurse Sophia Palmer and Mary E P Davis founders of the American Nurses Association Susan Paul African American abolitionist Elizabeth Peabody founder of the first English language kindergarten in the U S Rose Standish Nichols landscape architect Linda Richards the first professionally trained American nurse Florida Ruffin Ridley civil rights activist Josephine St Pierre Ruffin African American publisher civil rights leader and women s suffragist Maria W Stewart African American abolitionist Hepzibah Swan socialite and art patron Harriet Tubman African American abolitionist women s suffragist and Union spy who spent time in Boston Anne Whitney sculptor including Samuel Adams statue at Faneuil Hall Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska physician and founder of the New England Hospital for Women and Children Sisters of the Society of Saint Margaret founders of St Monica s Home Students of the Portia School of Law Female founders of the Vilna Shul Charlestown edit Women mentioned on the Charlestown walk include 8 Rebecca Lee Crumpler the first African American woman physician Charlotte Cushman actress Julia Harrington Duff the first Irish American woman to serve on the Boston School Committee Sarah Josepha Hale author instrumental in the creation of Thanksgiving Day in the U S and the Bunker Hill Monument Harriot Kezia Hunt an early female physician Rosie the Riveter in connection with the 8 000 women who worked at the Charlestown Navy Yard Squaw Sachem Pawtucket leader Elizabeth McLean Smith sculptor and president of the New England Sculptors Association Elizabeth Foster Vergoose also known as Mother Goose Chinatown South Cove edit The Chinatown South Cove walk begins at the Boston Common Visitor Center passes through Chinatown and ends at Park Square Women mentioned include 9 Sarah Caldwell opera conductor and impresario Ednah Dow Littlehale Cheney writer reformer and philanthropist Chew Shee Chin founder of the New England Chinese Women s Association Harriet Clisby physician and founder of the Women s Educational and Industrial Union Jennie Collins humanitarian and one of the first working class American women to publish a book Helena Dudley director of Denison House Amelia Earhart aviator and social worker at Denison House Ruby Foo restaurateur Margaret Fuller journalist critic and women s rights advocate associated with American transcendentalism Pauline Hopkins author editor of The Colored American Mary Morton Kehew social reform leader Rose Lok aviator the first Chinese American woman pilot to solo at Logan Airport Mary A Mahan first woman to be admitted to the Massachusetts Bar Association The Maryknoll Sisters Annie McKay Boston s first school nurse Rose Finkelstein Norwood labor organizer Julia O Connor labor organizer Mary Kenney O Sullivan labor organizer Elizabeth Peabody founder of the first English language kindergarten in the U S Vida Dutton Scudder co founder of Denison House Hannah Sabbagh Shakir founder of the Lebanese Syrian Ladies Aid Society Frances Stern one of the first nutritionists in the United States Phillis Wheatley poet Members of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union Members of the Boston Women s Trade Union League Residents of the YWCA Working Girls Home Dorchester edit The Uphams Corner walk in Dorchester developed by students at Codman Academy is the first in a planned series of Dorchester walks Women mentioned include 10 Alice Stone Blackwell women s suffragist journalist and human rights advocate Elida Rumsey Fowle Civil War volunteer and adoptive mother of two emancipated slave children Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton poet Anna Clapp Harris Smith founder of the Animal Rescue League Hepzibah Swan socialite and art patron Geraldine Trotter editor and activist Ann amp Betty two slaves buried in Dorchester s oldest graveyard Local women s abolitionist groups Downtown edit Starting at the State House and ending at the corner of Franklin and Washington Streets the Downtown walk passes some of Boston s oldest historic sites Women mentioned include 11 Abigail Adams wife of John Adams Hannah Adams the first woman in the U S who worked professionally as a writer Jennie Loitman Barron the first woman appointed to the Massachusetts Superior Court Clara Barton founder of the American Red Cross Alice Stone Blackwell women s suffragist journalist and human rights advocate Maria Weston Chapman founder of the Boston Female Anti Slavery Society Lydia Maria Child abolitionist and women s rights activist Lucretia Crocker science educator Sheila Levrant de Bretteville artist Dorothea Dix activist on behalf of the indigent insane who created the first generation of American mental asylums Julia Harrington Duff the first Irish American woman to serve on the Boston School Committee Mary Dyer one of the four executed Quakers known as the Boston martyrs Mary Baker Eddy founder of the Church of Christ Scientist Annie Adams Fields author Eliza Lee Cabot Follen author and abolitionist Abiah Franklin mother of Benjamin Franklin Sarah and Angelina Grimke abolitionists and women s suffragists Mary Tileston Hemenway philanthropist Harriet Hosmer sculptor Anne Hutchinson religious dissenter Helen Hunt Jackson author Edmonia Lewis sculptor Mary Livermore journalist and women s rights advocate Grace Lorch teacher and civil rights activist Amy Lowell poet Florence Luscomb architect and women s suffragist Abby May school founder activist and one of the first social workers in Massachusetts Jane Mecom sister and confidant of Benjamin Franklin Elizabeth Murray businesswoman and proto feminist during the American Revolution Judith Sargent Murray women s rights advocate essayist playwright and poet Mary Kenney O Sullivan labor organizer Sarah Parker Remond African American abolitionist Susanna Rowson playwright and actress Josephine St Pierre Ruffin African American publisher civil rights leader and women s suffragist Frances Slanger the first American nurse in Europe to be killed in combat during World War II Lucy Stone suffragist and founder of the Woman s Journal Anne Sullivan teacher of Helen Keller Elizabeth Foster Vergoose also known as Mother Goose Mercy Otis Warren political writer of the American Revolution Phillis Wheatley poet Female dressmakers milliners and operators of Dress Reform Parlors Female lecturers at the Tremont Temple Female organizers of the New England Holocaust Memorial Female speakers at Faneuil Hall including Susette La Flesche and Sarah Josepha Hale Jamaica Plain edit Women mentioned on the Jamaica Plain walk include 12 Emily Greene Balch economist sociologist and pacifist winner of the Nobel Peace Prize Ednah Dow Littlehale Cheney writer reformer and philanthropist Mary Emilda Curley wife of James Michael Curley Susan Walker Fitzgerald the first female Democrat elected to the Massachusetts State Legislature Margaret Fuller journalist critic and women s rights advocate associated with American transcendentalism Maud Cuney Hare musician musicologist and civil rights activist Elizabeth Peabody founder of the first English language kindergarten in the U S Sylvia Plath poet Ellen Swallow Richards pioneering environmental chemist Mary Joseph Rogers founder of the Maryknoll Sisters Pauline Agassiz Shaw philanthropist and social reformer Judith Winsor Smith abolitionist and women s suffragist Lucy Stone suffragist and founder of the Woman s Journal Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska physician and founder of the New England Hospital for Women and Children Ladies Walk edit The Ladies Walk celebrates the lives of First Lady Abigail Adams suffragist Lucy Stone and poet Phillis Wheatley It starts at the Boston Women s Memorial on Commonwealth Avenue and ends at Faneuil Hall 13 Lower Roxbury edit Women mentioned on the Lower Roxbury walk include 14 Melnea Cass civil rights activist Mildred Daniels community activist Sisters residing at the local Carmelite Monastery Students of Girls High School North End Walk edit The North End walk begins at Faneuil Hall passes through the North End and ends at St Leonard s Church one of the first Italian churches in the U S It overlaps at several points with the Freedom Trail Women mentioned on this walk include 15 Charlotte Cushman actress Goody Glover the last person to be hanged in Boston as a witch Fanny Goldstein librarian and the founder of Jewish Book Week Edith Guerrier founder of the Saturday Evening Girls Sarah Josepha Hale founder of the Boston Seaman s Aid Society Lina Frank Hecht founder of the Hebrew Industrial School Harriot Kezia Hunt an early female physician Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy mother of John F Kennedy Clementina Poto Langone Italian American civic leader Judith Sargent Murray women s rights advocate essayist playwright and poet Rachel Walker Revere wife of Paul Revere Pauline Agassiz Shaw founder of the North Bennet Street Industrial School Helen Osborne Storrow philanthropist Sophie Tucker entertainer Female fundraisers for St Leonard s Church Roxbury edit Women mentioned on the Roxbury walk include 16 Melnea Cass civil rights activist Jessie Gideon Garnett the first African American woman dentist in Boston Ellen Swepson Jackson educator and activist Elma Lewis arts educator and founder of the National Center of Afro American Artists Mary Eliza Mahoney the first professionally trained African American nurse Lucy Miller Mitchell daycare pioneer co founder of Head Start and Freedom House Sarah Ann Shaw television reporter Muriel S Snowden co founder of Freedom House recipient of MacArthur Genius Grant Maude Trotter Steward newspaper editor Geraldine Trotter editor and activist South End edit The South End walk starts at Back Bay Station and ends at the Boston Center for the Arts Women mentioned on the Sound End walk include 17 Louisa May Alcott author Tina Allen sculptor Maria Louise Baldwin African American educator and civic leader Mary McLeod Bethune educator and school founder Melnea Cass civil rights activist Hattie B Cooper leader of the Women s Home Missionary Society Lucretia Crocker science educator Estella Crosby co founder of the Boston branch of the National Housewives League Wilhelmina Marguerita Crosson educator and early advocate of black history education Rebecca Lee Crumpler the first African American woman physician Fern Cunningham sculptor created the first sculpture honoring a woman Harriet Tubman in a Boston public space 18 Mildred Davenport renowned African American dancer and dance instructor Mary Baker Eddy founder of the Church of Christ Scientist Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller artist sculptor Frieda Garcia community activist Anna Bobbit Gardner the first African American woman to be awarded a bachelor s degree from the New England Conservatory of Music Louise Imogen Guiney poet essayist and editor Harriet Boyd Hawes pioneering archaeologist Coretta Scott King civil rights activist and wife of Martin Luther King Jr Annie McKay Boston s first school nurse Cora Reid McKerrow local businesswoman Louise Chandler Moulton author and critic Mary Safford Blake the first woman gynecologist Susie King Taylor escaped slave author and the first African American Army nurse Harriet Tubman African American abolitionist women s suffragist and Union spy who spent time in Boston Julia O Henson activist donated the building for Harriet Tubman House in 1904 Myrna Vazquez renowned actress in Puerto Rico South End community activist Anna Quincy Waterston author E Virginia Williams founder of the Boston Ballet Mary Evans Wilson founder of the Women s Service Club Community activists Jeanette Hajjar Helen Morton and Paula Oyola Members of the Boston Ladies Auxiliary of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Members of the Lebanese Syrian Ladies Aid Society Students of the Boston Normal School and the New England Female Medical College Residents of the Bethany Home for Young Women St Helena s House and the Franklin Square House West Roxbury edit Women mentioned on the West Roxbury walk include 19 Kathleen Coffey first woman Chief Justice of West Roxbury District Court Mary Draper Revolutionary war activist Margaret Fuller journalist critic and women s rights advocate associated with American transcendentalism Sophia Ripley feminist associated with American transcendentalism Evelyn Shakir Lebanese American scholar and author Marian Walsh Massachusetts state senator Local activists Alice Hennessey Ellen McGill and Pamela SeigleSee also editFreedom Trail Black Heritage Trail Salem Women s Heritage TrailReferences edit BWHT History Boston Women s Heritage Trail Funding and Sponsors Boston Women s Heritage Trail Take a Tour Boston Women s Heritage Trail Archived from the original on 2016 06 15 Retrieved 2016 01 12 Artists Boston Women s Heritage Trail Archived from the original on 2014 03 04 Retrieved 2016 01 12 Back Bay East Boston Women s Heritage Trail Back Bay West Boston Women s Heritage Trail Beacon Hill Boston Women s Heritage Trail Charlestown Boston Women s Heritage Trail Chinatown South Cove Boston Women s Heritage Trail Dorchester Boston Women s Heritage Trail Downtown Boston Women s Heritage Trail Jamaica Plain Boston Women s Heritage Trail Ladies Walk Boston Women s Heritage Trail Lower Roxbury Boston Women s Heritage Trail North End Boston Women s Heritage Trail Roxbury Boston Women s Heritage Trail South End Boston Women s Heritage Trail Scheible Sue Apr 21 2016 Hanson sculptor who created Tubman memorial hails news of 20 bill Wicked Local West Roxbury Boston Women s Heritage Trail Further reading Boston Women s Heritage Trail Four Centuries of Boston Women Guidebook Walking Tours and Maps Curious Traveller Press 1999 ISBN 9781892839039 External links editOfficial website of the Boston Women s Heritage Trail Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boston Women 27s Heritage Trail amp oldid 1173216023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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