Tour Highlights



1. JFK Statue on the State House Lawn
Dedicated on May 29, 1990 and subsidized by private citizens, this monument was designed and sculpted by Isabel McIlvain. The statue stands on the lawn of the MA State House, where both of Kennedy's grandfathers served in the late 19th century.



2. Bellevue Hotel and 122 Bowdoin St. Apartment
These adjacent locations served as Kennedy's residences when he moved to Boston to run for the U.S. Congress in 1946 under the slogan of "The New Generation Offers a Leader." Kennedy initially lived at the Bellevue, where his grandfather John F. Fitzgerald, former Boston Mayor and U.S. Congressmen, was spending his retirement years.

3. Omni Parker House Hotel
Location of many famous Kennedy and Fitzgerald moments, including the site where JFK announced his bid for Congress in 1946, as well as where he proposed to Jacqueline Bouvier and had his bachelor party in 1953. The Omni was also the site of many raucous birthday parties held for Honey Fitz.

4. Old City Hall
Where John F. Fitzgerald, "Honey Fitz," presided as Mayor of Boston from 1905 to 1907, and again from 1909-1913. Fitzgerald was the first Mayor of Boston born to Irish immigrants, and his election marked the high-point of his political career.

5. Irish Famine Memorial
Dedicated in 1998, this memorial commemorates the millions of Irish immigrants who fled their native land in the 1840s to escape the hunger of the potato famine. Patrick Kennedy, JFK's great-grandfather, emigrated in 1849, and 114 years later his Presidential descendant returned to Dunganstown, County Wexford to pay homage to his great-grandfather and the Irish people.

6. JFK's Senate Headquarters
Located at 10 Kilby Street in Post Office Square, this site marks where JFK revolutionized politics in Massachusetts by running the first campaign in state history that was truly statewide, with offices throughout the Commonwealth. Kilby Street was the headquarters, and from this location Robert F. Kennedy managed his brother's campaign and defeated a stalwart of Massachusetts politics—Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.

7. Faneuil Hall
The site of many speeches by Mayor John F. Fitzgerald, including a boisterous celebration which followed his election in 1905. Also at this location, JFK delivered the final speech of his 1960 presidential campaign, and Ted Kennedy announced his run for the Presidency in 1980.



8. Union Oyster House
The oldest continuously operated restaurant in the United States, and a favorite of President Kennedy. Check out Booth 18, known as the "Kennedy Booth" because it is where the President frequently enjoyed his clam chowder.

9. Rose Kennedy Greenway
Named for the matriarch, Rose Kennedy, this beautiful park affords a moment to reflect on the Kennedy legacy in Massachusetts, the nation, and the world. The mother of three U.S. Senators, two war heroes, an Ambassador to Ireland, an Attorney General of the United States, and a President of the United States, Rose Kennedy is forever enshrined.

Visit Boston Civil War Tours for information about our Civil War tour of Boston.
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The Kennedy Tour of Boston highlights sites and landmarks in the city which played an important role in John F. Kennedy's rise to the White House. The tour explores the emergence of an Irish political machine in Boston—led by Kennedy's grandfathers, P.J. Kennedy and John F. "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald—which paved the way for Kennedy's political ascent, from Congressman, to Senator, to Vice-Presidential candidate, to President of the United States.

Private Tours are available

$60 for first ticket

$7 for each additional

Group rates are available

Contact

Phone: 617-413-6998

Email: info@kennedytour.com

Visit Boston Civil War Tours for information about our Civil War tour of Boston.






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Boston, MA


JFK shakes hands with shipyard workers during his campaign for re-election to the Senate in 1958, a race he would win by a historic margin, further legitimizing his presidential chances.



JFK at the 1956 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, where he gained momentum as a Vice-Presidential candidate. James Michael Curley is seated behind Kennedy.



Congressman Kennedy gives a speech in Faneuil Hall as his grandfather Honey Fitz, his mother Rose, and his grandmother Mary Hannon look on.



JFK and RFK can't hide their excitement as election returns begin to show that Kennedy is on the verge of upsetting incumbent Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.



Congressman John Fitzgerald in 1894



On January 9, 1961, John F. Kennedy delivered a speech called City Upon a Hill at the State House in Boston just before leaving for his presidential inauguration in Washington, DC.