Downtown Crossing offers unique appliance
stores like Sherman’s. Or, pamper yourself at The Body Shop, or
Bath & Body Works. Save your diet for tomorrow and indulge in
one of Mrs. Fields’ decadent cookies and a cup of hot chocolate.
Heaven for booklovers is at the Globe Corner
Bookstore or Brattle Book Shop, as well as the more conventional
Barnes & Noble and Borders.
For a quick snack, you can grab some of
those sweet smelling roasted nuts or a nice fat pretzel, but for
lunch, follow the crowds to the Boston Burrito stands. For a just
a couple of bucks, it’s a quick and satisfying meal.
For a heartier sit-down lunch, hang with the
natives at the Hungry Traveler. Hidden in an alley behind the Old
State House, it’s the kind of cafeteria style dining where you
can order a heaping plate of meatloaf, mashed potatoes and gravy,
and a slice of apple pie.
Nothing beats the crazed frenzy of Filene’s
Basement—especially right around high noon. Seriously, get there
early if you can. The Basement has an automatic markdown system
where after two weeks the price goes down 25 percent; after 21
days, you can get it for half price; and after 28 days, its 75
percent off. Some Basement followers have been known to start
small wars over a great pair of shoes, a cashmere sweater or a
sparkly necklace.
Once a year, Filene’s Basement sells
wedding dresses for about $250; that’s when you see the real
professional shoppers at work. Crazed women in various stages of
undress grabbing racks and racks of gowns, and by the end of the
day, those proper gowns have been stepped on, ripped, pulled and
thrown all across the shop floors. It’s such an
"event" that it gets coverage on the local news.
Downtown Boston isn’t just about shopping
and great places to eat, but historical and cultural sites along
the Freedom Trail, like the Old State House, where the Declaration
of Independence was first read. You can also join a free guided
tour from the Visitors Center. (15 State Street) Stops along the
way include the Old South Meeting House, whose inhabitants planned
the Boston Tea Party, as well as the site Benjamin Franklin’s
birthplace at 17 Milk Street.