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A national park area
Boston Harbor Islands

Leaving from Boston

 

Departures from Boston are described below. You may also leave from the South Shore of Massachusetts Bay. Remember to check What to Bring. Visiting Boston can be confusing for visitors, especially if you attempt to drive: see Tips for Traveling in Massachusetts.

if you have five hours

GEORGES ISLAND

Every day during the summer.

  • Hop aboard a Harbor Islands Express passenger ferry at Long Wharf and chill with the breezes and skyline view on the cruise out to Georges Island.
  • Arrive Georges, home to Fort Warren. On-island facilities: a snack bar and flush toilets.
  • Throw a Frisbee on the big lawn in Fort Warren's parade grounds. Take a guided tour of the fort or just explore the spooky black tunnels connecting rooms that were once filled with Civil War soldiers and prisoners.
  • Buy a rollup at the snack bar or find a spot for your picnic, at one of the picnic areas or on tables under the Edward Rowe Snow shade shelter.
  • Take a walk around the ramparts or along the shore. Fish, sketch, explore a tidal pool or simply sun. Unfortunately you can't swim here because of strong currents.
  • Head back into Boston on the ferry, soaking up the view of the city and water, seeing and hearing things that you missed on the way out.
  • Arrive Boston.

BOSTON LIGHT ON LITTLE BREWSTER ISLAND

Saturday & Sunday By Reservation

  • Ferries leave from the Fan Pier (reserve ahead). Tickets include free parking. Children must be 8 years or 50 inches tall to climb the lighthouse. Not bad for this cruise to the outer edge of the harbor.
  • Arrive Little Brewster. Just one acre, the island is a rocky anchor for the towering lighthouse. This is a guided tour. Learn how the country's first lighthouse was built here in 1716, about its early tragedies and how the British destroyed it as they evacuated Boston. The present lighthouse dates from 1783 and is the country's last to be staffed by the US Coast Guard. Climb the 76 spiral steps and two short ladders to the top and see Boston reflected in the giant Fresnel lens.
  • Picnic (bring one) on the rocks. Browse the exhibit and meet the lighthouse's black lab mascot.
  • Board boat for cruise back to mainland.
  • Boat arrives Boston.

Note:This excursion is also offered at 2:00 PM; also see Columbia Point departures below.

trip tips if you have the whole day
(The Way to Go!)

ISLAND IDYLLS VIA GEORGES

  • Leave Boston's Long Wharf on the ferry to Georges Island (for details see above).
  • Arrive Georges. Check on the water shuttle service to Peddocks, Grape, Bumpkin, and Lovells Islands. Water shuttles run throughout the day. You can visit two islands in one day: Georges and one other. Here are some options:

Peddocks Island: A 15-minute ride. This is the harbor's second-largest island. The water shuttle docks at Fort Andrews, a brick Spanish American War-era complex of 32 buildings on the island's eastern head.

Pick up a map to get a sense of the island's history at the pier information center and picnic on the rocky beach that forms a narrow neck of land beyond.

Follow the path along Middle Head. You will be walking near some cottages, but the land is public, so continue along the path, respecting the cottagers' privacy. If you still have the energy, continue on by the salt marsh into the woods on West Head. Stay as long as you can.

The last boat returns to Georges Island.

Last ferry departs from Georges Island for Boston.

Facilities: vault toilets and picnic tables. No water available.


Grape Island: Approximately an hour's ride from Georges Island. In Hingham Bay, just off Weymouth's Webb Memorial State Park, Grape is an island once known for its raspberries, as well as grapes. Mowed paths lead to secluded campsites in shady woods and beaches are a mix of mussels and shells. This was a favored Native American summer spot for 7,000 years before settlers arrived and you can understand why.

Pick up a map at the dock and follow the trail past the stone foundation, past the marsh wildflowers and along the shore to the picnic tables under the big willow at Sunset Point.

Follow the path with its vista of Bumpkin Island and the Hull shoreline. Short side trails lead to the northern shore. Circle the island once and cross it through the high grasses in the middle. Pick a spot to sun, read or snooze.

Catch the last boat to Georges.

Last ferry from Georges back to Boston.

Facilities: vault toilets and picnic tables. No water available.


Bumpkin Island: Approximately a 30-minute ride from Georges Island. Like Grape, Bumpkin lies in Hingham Bay, not far off Hull. Masonry walls and a terrazzo floor recall the World War I period in which 1,800 men lived here at a naval training center, and an area of rubble marks the site of a vintage 1900 children's hospital. Spruce and poplar, salt-spray rose (Rosa rugosa), bayberry, staghorn sumac have, however, reclaimed this 35-acre island.

Picnic near the pier, overlooking Slate and Grape Islands. Follow the path alongshore, and pick a spot to spend a few hours.

Catch water shuttle back to Georges

Facilities: vault toilets; no water available.

  • Take the last ferry from Georges to Boston.

THOMPSON ISLAND

Saturdays only

  • The Thompson Island shuttle leaves from the EDIC Pier 10 in South Boston.
  • Ferry arrives Thompson Island. Friends of the Harbor Islands volunteers offer guided walks of this large, varied island.
  • Picnic by the water. (Bring your own)
  • Walk the rim of the island, first looking inland toward the JFK Library, then out into the harbor. There's plenty of space here to get far away from the brick campus (now housing Outward Bound Programs) near the pier. Within minutes you feel out in the country.
  • Boat from Thompson Island for mainland.

trip tips if you have two days

And you are lodging on the Mainland . . .

Look over the above one-day tours and put together two very different days, for example: The first day, take the ferry to Georges and visit Great Brewster. The second take a tour out to Boston Light or spend the day on Thompson Island.

Or you will be camping on an Island . . .

Every island grows in size if you camp there. The last water taxi of the day leaves and the day-trippers are gone. Birds and small animals emerge and the light is amazing.

Camping is allowed on Bumpkin, Grape, and Lovells, Peddocks islands. Permits are required.

 

 
 
This site brought to you by Boston Harbor Island Alliance and National Park Service