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A fens by any other name would be a spongy bog of sorts, but in
Boston The Fens is a scenic link in the chain of green space
dubbed Boston's Emerald Necklace. Located west of Mass. Ave.
between Beacon Street and Huntington Ave., The Fens was, in
fact, the first link in 19th-century landscape architect
Frederick Law Olmsted's Emerald Necklace - a chain of open space
that stretches across the urban landscape encompassing Boston
Common, Public Garden, Commonwealth Avenue Mall, Charlesgate,
Back Bay Fens, Muddy River at the Riverway, Jamaica Park, Arnold
Arboretum, and Franklin Park.
Hired by city managers in the late 1870s to develop a plan to
address the swampy conditions created by earlier in-filling of
the Back Bay, Olmsted proposed installing a tidal gate to manage
the flow of sea water in and out of the area. The subsequent
damming of the Charles River several decades later wreaked havoc
with Olmsted's original park design by gradually changing
the environment from a salt to fresh water marsh, but
replacement plantings suited to the new fresh water environment
thrive today. Highlights include a magnificent Rose Garden and a
series of Victory Gardens planted during World War II.
Noted attractions in the area include Fenway Park, homefield for
the Boston Red Sox; The Fenway, a parkway that runs adjacent to
The Fens; and the Museum of Fine Arts, one of the nation's
premier art museums. The Fens is also home to one of Boston's
most unique attractions - the Isabella Stewart Gardner
Museum. Site of what the Boston Herald dubbed "the heist of
the century" where, in March 1990, two art thieves
disguised as security personnel broke in and stole paintings and
artifacts valued at $13 million, the museum's collection
features thousands of items collected over the years by its
flamboyant patron Isabella "Mrs. Jack" Stewart
Gardner. The eclectic
collection includes works by masters including Rembrandt,
Titian, Rubens, Raphael, Whistler, and Sargent in addition to an
array of antiques and collectibles. The treasures are displayed
in a home Gardner had designed to reflect the style of a
Venetian palazzo complete with an interior courtyard. In her
will, Gardner stipulated that her entire collection remain open
to the
public and that each piece remain displayed in the exact
location where it stood at the time of her death which came in
1924. Subsequent overseers have honored that stipulation, so the
museum remains true to Gardner's vision. The Isabella Stewart
Gardner is located at 280 The Fenway. Call (617)566-1401
for hours and fees.
Hours:
Daily dawn to dusk
Admission/Fees:
Free
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