Mount Washington, you can either drive up, or take the Cog Railway (which is a little pricey).
There is also a gondola type ski lift nearby that is open year round that takes you up to the top of a mountain, which is a good view. I think it is Cannon Mountain.
Some of the most popular places to visit in southeastern Massachusetts are Horseneck Beach in Westport and the small, but very nice Buttonwood Park Zoo in New Bedford.
In my hometown, Fairhaven, MA, where I guide historical walking tours, you can visit the harborside Fort Phoenix. There is a public beach there and on Thursday afternoons, June through September, I’ll be there in colonial clothing to talk about the fort’s history, demonstrate firing a flintlock rifle, and showing how an 18th century barber/surgeon pulled a tooth.
We’re off Rte. 195, thirty minutes east of Providence, RI, on the way to Cape Cod.
Hey! No Clark’s Trading Post? No Mt Washington Railway? (turn on your Garmin as you get close & listen to it go Absolutely Crazy with “Recalculating! Recalculating! Please Drive to Highlighted Route!!!”)
I guess I’m simply horrible (or maybe its changed) but The Seaman’s Inn used to be Awesome! I never found a single bad thing on the menu (even the ‘Carpet Bagger Special’ , a fillet mignon with oysters, rocked). Yeah, I know…steak at a seaport? Still…wow.
Lake Compounce? Bristol Steam Trains? The Robber Baron Mansions in Newport?
And…if you want to Truly Scar Them For Life…
Bickfords Pancake Houses FROM HELL!!! (I DARE you to play ‘People are Strange’ on the jukebox!!!) :eek:
There is also the other Peabody Museum at Yale in New Haven (both named after the same guy). They have one of the better dinosaur collections in the country. What kid doesn’t love dinosaurs? When I was a kid that was one of the big three places, along with Mysitic Aquarium and Mystic Seaport, that my family hit every summer. They also have mummies, cool wildlife dioramas, and some kid-specific outreach stuff.
If you are into art and architecture, that part of New Haven is actually a great place to go. There are a ton of great old buildings in that area, including the Yale campus. Also, Yale’s art museums are pretty decent (although not as good as the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford).
Oh, additionally, the Peabody also has all of the artifacts from the discovery of Machu Pichu. You wont be able to see them much longer without going to Peru because the Peruvian government sued Yale to get them back.
Whale watches are a lot of fun. My favorite place is out of Rye NH.
Mystic Aquarium is awesome! I went there this past summer when my sister came to visit. They have a cage filled with birds and you can pay $2 or $3 for a stick of food. The birds will land on you and eat right out of your hands. You can also buy food for the stingrays. They suck it right out of your hand. I could have stayed and played with the stingrays all day.
The Worcester Science Museum (now with the stupid name of Ecotarium) is a lot of fun. They have a planetarium which is very cool as long as you don’t suffer from vertigo.
Worcester also has Higgins Armory, which is the only museum on this side of the world dedicated to armor and weapons (as in ancient armor and weapons).
I love Sturbridge Village and go a couple times a year but I’m also a boring adult. We took our nephew this summer and while he enjoyed himself, he complained a lot about all the walking.
If you do make it to northeast NY, definitely stop to see Ausable Chasm and if you’re going to go that far, you might as well stop in Plattsburgh to see the Perpetual Motion machine in the mall.
Hampton Beach is always fun but I heard they had a big fire recently. I know my favorite arcade is gone. I don’t know how much else is gone.
The Freedom Trail, Fanuel Hall, and the Charleston Shipyard are interesting. Every kid who comes to NE should tour the Constitution at least once.
Anyone like basketball? The Hall of Fame is in Springfield.
Mount Greylock is beautiful and you don’t have to actually walk to the top. Don’t go in the monument if you suffer from claustrophobia. I found out the hard way that I am mildly claustrophobic.
I’ve never been but my boyfriend says Battleship Cove is great. We were going to go this past summer but some boy scout thing caused the battleship to be closed. Bastards. Oh well, we went to Mystic instead.
If you like trolleys, there’s a trolley museum in CT and apparently there’s one in ME as well.
Have your kids ever been to a Drive-In? I know there are still some in NE. The only one I know for certain is open all summer is right on Route 146 in RI, maybe 10 minutes past the MA border.
Too bad you’re coming in August. If you could make it in September, you could go to the Big E and King Richard’s Faire (if they’re holding it this year). But, I’m assuming your kids need to be in school in September.
Or, you could just go to Boston and ride the frickin’ Green Line.
(It’s one of the subway lines, which has trolley-style cars; the line is underground in the city center, but runs above ground along streets farther out).
Well…yeah. You could do that. But if you like old trolleys, the museum is cool. The one in CT isn’t huge or spectacular or anything but they have a couple different trolleys running, including an open-air one. The enclosed one still has the old ads on the walls. It’s pretty cool.
That is truly a loss. Aside from great food, they used to have an entire menu selection of single malt scotch available for tasting. They were so good that tourists & locals used to visit. Shame.
Agreed. They’ve apparently changed the name to Latitude 41° Restaurant. I haven’t been there in a few years, but the reviews are fairly critical of the new management.
The Seamen’s Inne was one of the first restaurants I went to when I first arrived in New England nearly 20 years ago. The CO of my first submarine had the whole wardroom there for dinner at Christmas time, which I thought was pretty nice.* I had just reported to the submarine, and went to sea on that boat for the first time just a few days later, so it was kind of appropriate, I remember thinking.
*(Little did I know at the time that it would be all downhill from there with that SOB. :rolleyes:)
I think that if you are in the are, a Stew Leonard’s in the area (Norwalk, Newington, Danbury), it’s worth the trip, the kids’d like it. Please, of you are going to be in the Hartford area, boycott the West Hartford Children’s Museum.
Enfield CT has the Connecticut Trolley Museum. (dangit, i got beat)
Picture a slightly frazzled man with his two children
Picture one of those children in a wheelchair
Picture being faced with steps, many steps RIGHT AT THE FRIGGIN’ ENTRANCE (oh, AFTER you pay)
when asked how the [expletive deleted] I was supposed to get my kid up there, Picture the two employees having NO idea, and having to go find a manager (who appeared to be thin on the ground) to find that there is no elevator.
Now I am faced with about 4 levels of Museum, most of which you need to go outside, around the building (in the rain) and wait for someone to come unlock the door.
When I sent a letter to them after getting home, I just got a blow-off “well, sucks to be you” type letter in return.