
Cambridge is chock a block with college students, but there's plenty of fun things for kids to do. Founded in 1630, the center of the old village is Harvard Square today. During the American Revolution, the new American army camped out on Cambridge Common, while British supporters lived down the road on Brattle St.
Charles River Tour
- A one hour boat ride on the Charles River (in summer the river will be dotted with sailboats). See Beacon Hill and Back Bay Boston, and Harvard and MIT from the river.
Boston Harbor and Locks Tour
- May to October, a longer tour takes you on the Charles River and by the USS Constitution and landmarks of the Freedom Trail, plus pass through the Charles River Locks.
Across the way, on Dawes Island, find the
brass horseshoes
in the sidewalk. On the night of April 18, 1775, while Paul Revere headed out to Lexington, William Dawes also rode out to warn the militias, only he took the longer route, riding through Cambridge.
Old college pump (Harvard Yard)
- Check out a replica of the ancient college pump, where undergraduates pumped water from a well for washing, cooking and drinking. Kids can lift the wooden handle up and down, "shake hands with the pump," but no water will come out.
Around the Science Center -
Harvard Museum of Natural History
- Kids love the extinct dodo bird, triceratops, giant mastodon, stuffed birds (California condor, bald eagles, puffins), and a hall of minerals with gems galore - touch that giant amethyst geode. Another specialty at the museum is 3,000 glass flowers - irises, dahlias, cactuses, banana plants, autumn leaves, water lilies, and more, crafted over 100 years ago.
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology
- Step next door to see cultural exhibits, models of Maya pyramids, dugouts from the Solomon Islands, Japanese daggers, Indonesian puppets, Australian boomerangs, arts of the Northwest and Plains Indians, Navajo blankets, and Hopi dioramas.
Walk along the Charles River
- From Harvard Square, go down John F Kennedy St. to Memorial Drive, and take the paths up or down along the river.
Brattle Street
- From Harvard Square, head out west on Mt. Auburn Street, go right on Hawthorn Street, then turn left onto Brattle Street. Visit the yellow Longfellow House (George Washington's headquarters, as well as the home of the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow who wrote the Midnight Night of Paul Revere). Continue on Brattle Street, walking past old mansions on "Tory Row" (here's where the British loyalists lived). You can keep walking, all the way to Mt. Auburn Cemetery. If the kids get tired, just pick up the buses on Mt. Auburn St. and return to Harvard Square.