Attraction 9 / 25
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Dock Sq.
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State (blue, orange), Government Center (blue, green)
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Faneuil Hall, a historic building in Georgian style is the center of Boston's Faneuil Hall Marketplace, a popular area with foodstalls, restaurants, shops and street entertainment.
History
Faneuil Hall was originally designed
in 1740 by John Smibert. The brick, two story building
in Georgian Style was funded by a wealthy French merchant,
Peter Faneuil, who donated it to Boston. The building
was completed in 1742, but burnt to the ground only
19 years later.
It
was rebuilt following the original design in 1763.

Cradle of Liberty
The first floor of the Faneuil Hall
served as a market place, the second floor contained
a large meeting hall which was first used for town meetings
in 1764. This is where Samuel Adams and fellow revolutionary
colonists gathered and protested the 'taxation without
represenation'. The many meetings held by American patriots
between 1764 and 1774 gave Faneuil Hall the nickname
'Cradle of Liberty'.
Expansion
By the beginning of the 19th century,
the hall had become too small for the fast-growing town.
Charles Bulfinch, best known as the architect of the
Massachusetts State House,
expanded the building between 1805 and 1806. Bulfinch
doubled the building's width and added a third floor.
After Boston was incorporated as a
city in 1822, the meeting hall wasn't used for town
meetings anymore,
but
it continued to be the city's most important meeting
hall well into the next century.

Renovation
In the early 1970s, the Faneuil Hall
and Quincy Market, an 1826 expansion of the Faneuil
Hall market, had fallen into disrepair. The buildings
were slated for demolition, but architects were able
to convince the government to renovate the historic
buildings. In 1976 a large urban renewal project transformed
the whole area around Faneuil Hall into a modern urban
marketplace with a host of shops, restaurants and foodstalls.
The area, known as 'Faneuil Hall Marketplace' comprises
the Faneuil Hall, Quincy Market, North Market and South
Market and attracts over 12 million visitors each year.
Top image by Carol M.
Highsmith at PhotographsAmerica.com
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