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Snow Day on Spectacle Island

It’s been home to a quarantine station, a horse rendering plant, and a city landfill over the centuries, but today Spectacle Island is a recreational jewel in the middle of Boston Harbor. During the summer, the island is filled with swimmers, kayakers, and hikers soaking up the sun. But this Saturday, February 20, Boston’s Best Cruises is sponsoring a boat trip out to Spectacle Island for some wintertime fun on the island.

Hopefully, there’s a blanket of snow since REI will be sponsoring snowshoeing and cross-country skiing, and it will be providing a limited number of loaner snowshoes on a first-come, first-served basis. If you prefer to keep your boots on the ground, you can also hike the island trails that lead to incredible vistas of downtown Boston and the other islands.

Visitors will be able to leave their gear and use the restrooms aboard the boat. The boat’s snack bar will also be open in case you want to warm up with some chowder, hot chocolate, or coffee.

Boats leave from Quincy and Boston’s Long Wharf. Cost is $14. Click here for more information and to purchase tickets.

If you need a traveling companion for the cruise with full visitor information and history of Spectacle Island— and all the islands— check out Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands.

February Break Activities

I don’t know about everyone else in the world, but at my house we’re glued to the 2010 Olympics coverage. Somewhat to my surprise, my daughter loves the snowboarding competition, while not surprisingly, my husband can’t get enough of hockey. Me? I’m a sucker for pairs ice skating. But really, it’s not healthy to stay inside glued to the TV.

If you are inspired by the winter sports, get out and try some. The Department of Conservation and Recreation is holding its own version of the Olympics with an Opening Ceremony this Friday night at Revere Beach from 6-8 p.m. And yes, here’s another plug for the Harbor Islands – head to Spectacle Island on Saturday from 11-2 p.m. with your snowshoes, cross-country skis or hiking boots for Snow Day with park rangers and REI staff who will lead winter activities. Finally, on Sunday, there will be ice skating and winter sports at the Reilly Rink at Cleveland Circle in Brighton from 2-4 p.m. Activities are free and there are sure to be lots of fun surprises. Visit www.mass.gov/dcr/ for more info.

And if you’d rather shed your coat and put on a swimsuit instead, a couple of area hotels offer day passes at their indoor pools. The Boston Harbor Hotel charges $25 for adults and $15 for kids and the Seaport Hotel charges $20. Call for specific hours. You can also try your local YMCA. If it has a pool, it likely has non-member hours. Visit www.ymcaboston.org to check.

Don’t forget! Box Office Babies Author Event

IS THE WINTER WEATHER GETTING YOU AND YOUR NEWBORN DOWN? 

Switch up the routine and get out of the house! Bundle up baby and head over to the Coolidge Corner Theatre  for a family-friendly matinee of The Last Station (nominated for two Academy Awards.) Arrive at 12:30 to meet Kim Foley MacKinnon and chat about her new book, Boston Baby: A Field Guide for Urban Parents. To learn more about the Box Office Babies click here.

Christopher Klein on NECN!

Chris Klein, author of Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands, will be LIVE on NECN at 7:45am this Thursday, February 18, 2010. The timing of the interview could not be better, as Scorsese’s Shutter Island hits theaters on Friday. Tune in as Klein reveals the true stories behind the reformatories, quarantine stations, and social institutions that once existed on the Boston Harbor Islands.

Be sure to catch the interview and turn to the pages of Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands for a more historical perspective on the real harbor islands–plus be sure to pick up a copy for all the Shutter Island fans in your life!

For media inquiries, author events, and trade distribution, contact publicity@unionparkpress.com.

Author Event in Roslindale

Looking for things to do with the kids over February break?

Head off the usual vacation-week madness and get the wee ones to the Roslindale Branch Library. The library and Roslindale’s Village Books have teamed up to host Kim Foley MacKinnon at 11am. Kim will give a short presentation about Boston Baby: A Field Guide for Urban Parents, sign books, and stick around to talk about all things family-friendly in and around Boston. (Think: Summer Camps!) 

When: Saturday, February 13, 2010 at 11AM
Where: Roslindale Branch Library, 4238 Washington Street, Roslindale, MA 02131
For more information call the library at 617-323-2343 or email Union Park Press at publicity@unionparkpress.com.

The “Real” Shutter Islands

If you’ve been watching television the last few weeks, you may have seen commercials previewing the movie “Shutter Island,” which will be released on February 19. “Shutter Island” has a lot of star power behind it. Martin Scorsese directs. Leonardo DiCaprio is in the lead. And the story is based on the novel by Boston’s own Dennis Lehane, who also wrote Mystic River and Gone Baby Gone.

The movie unfolds on a fictitious island in Boston Harbor that’s home to the Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane. While Shutter Island may be fictitious, Lehane’s setting was inspired by the real-life history and uses of the Boston Harbor Islands. And in some cases, the truth is stranger than fiction.

While the Boston Harbor Islands have always been gateways to the city—the first pieces of land spied by visitors sailing or flying into the city—they have also been treated as Boston’s backyard—a place to dump and sequester undesirable people and material unwanted in the city proper. Many islands were home to reformatories, poorhouses, prisons, and, yes, psychiatric hospitals. This was particularly true in the 1800s as Victorian-era social institutions were created and moved to the last pieces of open land, the islands, as the city population exploded.

Dating as far back as 1717, islands (including Spectacle, Rainsford, Long, and Deer) were used as quarantine stations, which protected the city from outbreaks of smallpox and other deadly, contagious diseases. Many victims of those diseases died on the islands, and today these forgotten cemeteries are as common as the ruins of old military installations.

These isles are among the stories of the “real” Shutter Islands profiled in Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands:

On Rainsford Island, the old quarantine station was converted to an almshouse in 1852 and a home for Civil War veterans following the end of the conflict. Between 1895 and 1920, Rainsford Island hosted the House of Reformation (renamed the Suffolk School for Boys in the early 1900s). Ruins of some of the institutional buildings can still be seen on Rainsford Island along with inscriptions carved into the seaside cliffs by former resident physicians of the island.

Thompson Island was home to the Boston Farm School in 1833. It soon merged with the Boston Asylum for Indigent Boys, which was founded in the wake of the War of 1812 to care for boys left orphaned and destitute by the fighting. The institution became a farm and trade school at the turn of the twentieth century. The islands is now owned by Outward Bound, but visitors are welcome on summer weekends.

Bumpkin Island was home to a children’s hospital built in 1902 by Albert Cameron Burrage, one of Boston’s wealthiest men. (He owned the chateau-style mansion at 314 Commonwealth Avenue, which still stands in the Back Bay.) The hospital provided care and treatment for poor children with physical disabilities. It held as many as 150 children during the summer months. The island can be accessed by public ferry, and you can still see the rubbled ruins of the hospital.

A hospital and quarantine station were built on Deer Island in the late 1840s to handle the massive influx of Irish immigrants during the Great Famine. Nearly 5,000 of those who arrived on the “coffin ships” between 1847 and 1850 were quarantined on the island, and 800 passed away. The island was also used as an almshouse, house of industry, school for paupers, and house of reformation. From the 1880s to 1981, Deer Island was a veritable Atlantic Alcatraz, home to prisons and the Suffolk House of Corrections. Deer Island, which is attached to the tip of Winthrop, can be visited year-round, and there is a small parking lot and walking trails.

Long Island is the one island still continuing the institutional tradition of the harbor islands. Off-limits to the public, Long Island is home to more than a dozen human-service programs, ranging from addiction treatment centers to homeless shelters. The large institutional complex in the middle of the island includes some dilapidated and shuttered buildings, including an old safe house, that would certainly spark the imagination of any thriller writer.

While Peddocks Island was not home to any social institutions, the ruins and brick buildings of defunct Fort Andrews were used as filming locations for “Shutter Island.” Public ferries in the summertime serve Peddocks Island, so you can check it out for yourself.

For more information on the institutional uses of the harbor islands and visitor information, consult Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands.

Boston Baby Featured on Momcentral.com

That’s right! We’re proud to announce that our very own Boston Baby was featured on the national website, Mom Central. Click here to take a look at the full review (it’s awesome!) To sum up their feelings about the book: “Navigating the big city doesn’t have to be a big, drawn out ordeal with this all-purpose guide for Boston parents!”

We couldn’t agree more. And local parents, we’d love to hear your thoughts on the book too. Send us some comments!

Also, while you’re checking out the Boston Baby review, be sure to browse through Mom Central’s advice, blogs, surveys, reviews, and forums they have to offer busy moms around the country (and in Canada, too!).

Author Event: Box Office Babies @ Coolidge Corner Theatre

 

boston-baby-field-guideAt 12.30PM on Friday February 19th, join Kim Foley MacKinnon, author of Boston Baby, and local parents for a baby-friendly matinee at the Coolidge Corner Theatre’s Box Office Babies. Featuring first run films, ample parking for strollers, and Koala changing tables in the bathroom, the Coolidge is a treat for new parents who can’t find (or quite yet stomach) a sitter!

Kim will be on hand in the lobby to answer all your Boston Baby questions. And books will be for sale if you decide to buy a few extra copies for all the mommies and daddies in your life!