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www.ParkStayCruise.com
www.Stay123.com
We offer the convenient cruiseport hotels and parking package at Port of Boston and at Boston Logan airport hotels & parking package at Boston Logan and many cruiseport and airports across the country, at deeply discounted rates.
Park Stay Cruise
(Stay123.com) is an ARC accredited agency (Airlines Reporting Corporation)
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PORT OF BOSTON CRUISEPORT HOTELS AND PARKING
BOSTON
LOGAN (BOS) HOTEL AND PARKING PACKAGE
Boston
More than 300,000 passengers use Cruiseport Boston each year. Whether
departing on a cruise to Bermuda or transatlantic voyage, or visiting Boston
on a port of call stop on a New England/Canada cruise, there are many
reasons Cruiseport Boston should be part of your vacation experience.
Plan ahead! View the 2011 cruise schedule.
Destination Boston
Boston is rich in history. But the city is also a 21st century powerhouse,
with world-renowned institutions of higher learning, a robust center of
high-technology and biotech; and unrivaled health care facilities. Our city
has award-winning restaurants and hotels, museums for every taste and
interest, as well as theater, music, shopping and championship sports teams
– all of which make Boston a great place to visit on a port-of-call for the
day or an extended stay before or after your cruise.
Boston’s Cruise Terminal
Cruiseport Boston’s Black Falcon Cruise Terminal is less than two miles from
historic Faneuil Hall and the Freedom Trail, and only three miles from
Boston’s Back Bay, which includes trendy Newbury Street and Copley Square
shopping areas. The Black Falcon Cruise Terminal recently underwent a
multimillion dollar renovation which makes coming and going easier than
ever! The cruise terminal is conveniently located just 10 minutes from
Boston Logan International Airport.
The 2011 cruise season runs from April into October, with more 100 vessel
calls. Voyages sail north along the New England and Canadian coastlines – a
fall favorite for New England’s spectacular foliage – or south to the
Caribbean or pink sand beaches of Bermuda. For more info about the Black
Falcon Cruise Terminal and Boston’s cruise industry, view our Cruiseport
Boston Fact Sheet.
Home-Ported in Boston
Three ships are currently home-based in Boston, the oldest continuously
operated port in the Western Hemisphere:
• Norwegian Cruise Lines' Norwegian Dawn
• Holland America’s Maasdam
• Royal Caribbean’s Jewel of the Seas
For more information about what Boston and the Bay State have to offer,
please visit the Greater Boston Convention & Visitors Bureau and the
Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism.
New England’s connection to the world for nearly 400 years
The Port of Boston is the oldest continually active port in the Western
Hemisphere, and New England’s maritime hub. The Port of Boston’s activity
supports 34,000 jobs, and contributes more than $2 billion to the local,
regional, and national economies through direct, indirect, and induced
impact.
Massport facilities are the port’s lifeblood for containerized cargo,
vacation cruises and Boston’s commercial fishing fleet.
The Port of Boston also hosts privately owned petroleum and liquefied
natural gas terminals, which supply more than 90% of Massachusetts' heating
and fossil fuel needs. Two ship repair yards, public and private ferry
operations, marinas, and Coast Guard’s Sector Boston also call the port
home.
Conley Terminal
Massport’s Paul W. Conley Container Terminal in South Boston serves three of
the world’s top 10 container lines. Conley handles nearly 1.5 million metric
tons of cargo each year.
Cruiseport Boston
Cruiseport Boston’s Black Falcon Cruise Terminal contributes nearly a half
billion dollars to the regional economy. Boston is a popular port-of-call
destination, and several major cruise lines serve Massport’s Cruiseport
Boston providing passengers with an attractive mix of cruises to Canada/New
England, Bermuda, the Caribbean, and Europe.
Boston Autoport
Automobile imports and exports are an important niche market for the Port of
Boston. In 1998, the Boston Autoport opened on an 80 acre site in
Charlestown. The Boston Autoport can accommodate the processing of of 70,000
cars per year for import or export.
Other Maritime Properties
The Massachusetts Port Authority owns, operates and leases approximately 500
acres of property in Charlestown, East Boston and South Boston, located
within what is called a Designated Port Area (DPA), restricted to maritime
industrial activities supporting the working Port of Boston.
The Port of Boston, (AMS Seaport Code: 0401,[2] UN/LOCODE: US BOS), is a
major seaport located in Boston Harbor and adjacent to the City of Boston.
It is the largest port in Massachusetts as well as being one of the
principal ports on the east coast of the United States.[1]
The Port of Boston was historically important for the growth of the City of
Boston, and was originally located in what is now the downtown area of the
city. Land reclamation and conversion to other uses means that downtown area
no longer handles commercial traffic, although there is still considerable
ferry and leisure usage of the downtown waterfront. Today the principal
cargo handling facilities are located in the Boston neighborhoods of
Charlestown, East Boston, and South Boston, and in the neighboring city of
Everett. The Port of Boston has also been an entry point for many
immigrants.[3]
Before the colonization of the Americas, the area served as a trading post
for Native Americans in the region. After the establishment of the Boston
settlement by John Winthrop in 1630 and the creation of a local shipbuilding
industry, the port served the rapidly expanding American colonies. During
that time, trade involved finished goods from England in exchange for
lumber, fully constructed vessels, rum, and salted fish.
With the rapid growth of the Mid-Atlantic colonies in the 1750s, the ports
of New York and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania began to surpass Boston for
inter-colony trade. In response, Bostonian merchants established trade with
foreign nations besides Great Britain. This trade led to a huge increase in
wealth amongst Bostonian merchants. However, the British government's
imposition of regulations restricting trade to Great Britain, combined with
newly enacted taxes on the colonists, caused Bostonian merchants to join the
more radical elements in American society. After the Boston Tea Party, the
British Parliament passed the Boston Port Act which shut down the port until
the East India Company was compensated for the damaged tea. These actions
led to the American Revolutionary War.
Though economically devastated by the Revolutionary War, the Port of Boston
was again prospering with trade with various foreign ports such as Shanghai.
The port's fortunes were further augmented with a navy base at Charlestown.
By the mid-19th century, the shipbuilding industry reached its peak as
displayed by the clipper ships developed by Donald McKay. The port also saw
many land reclamation projects and the construction of new piers.
The port of Boston, 1876.
With the start of the Industrial Revolution in the United States, activity
in the port turned towards trade between the states. Starting in the
mid-19th century, the Port of Boston was eclipsed yet again by other eastern
seaboard ports such New York City as local merchant companies were bought
out by New York businessmen. In 1956, control of the port was handed to the
Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport), which began the process of
modernizing the port. During the 1980s and 1990s, a project dedicated to the
cleanup of Boston Harbor was overseen by the Massachusetts Water Resource
Authority (MWRA).
In 1966, Sea-Land introduced containerized shipping and later established
one of the first container ports on Castle Island, where Conley Terminal now
stands. To meet the growing demand for container shipping, Massport
constructed a common-use container port on what is now Moran Terminal.
However, the port faced a setback with the closure of the Charlestown Navy
Yard in 1974.
In the mid-1990s, the port went through another round of modernization.
Container shipping operations were consolidated at Conley Terminal while
Moran Terminal was dedicated to automobile shipping. A project of dredging
the harbor commenced in 1997. Through the Central Artery/Tunnel Project (Big
Dig), ground access to the South Boston facilities were improved with the
extension of I-90 and the construction of the Ted Williams Tunnel linking
South Boston with Logan International Airport. The port has also seen a
burgeoning cruise industry as well as expanding commercial and residential
developments on the Boston waterfront.
[edit] Traffic
Container ship being unloaded at Conley Terminal.
In 2006, the port handled over 14 million metric tons of cargo, including
201,000 container TEUs. Other major forms of cargo processed at the port
include petroleum, liquefied natural gas (LNG), automobiles, cement, gypsum,
and salt. There were about 208,000 cruise ship passengers and 81 cruise ship
visits that year.[4]
In the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks, there have been concerns
about the security of LNG shipments within Boston Harbor, and increased fear
of terrorism. Because of the location of the LNG terminal in the Mystic
River, tankers traveling to and from the facility are forced to pass
directly offshore of downtown Boston. During their voyage through the
harbor, they are protected by a security zone that extends 2 miles (3.2 km)
in front of the vessel, 1-mile (1.6 km) behind it, and more than half a mile
on either side. This zone is enforced by escort vessels provided by the
Coast Guard and State Police.[5] The Tobin Bridge is closed as the escort
passes under it, and boating is forbidden within the security zone. As of
2005[update], there have been proposals to construct an offshore LNG
facility in Massachusetts Bay.[6]
The MBTA operates commuter boats between Long Wharf and Rowes Wharf on the
downtown Boston waterfront to Hingham, Hull, Quincy, and Logan Airport as
well as inner harbor ferries between downtown Boston, Charlestown, and South
Boston. Other fast passenger ferries operate to Provincetown and Salem.
Several companies operate cruise boats on the harbor, whilst water taxis
operate from various points on the downtown Boston waterfront, Logan
Airport, Charlestown, East Boston, and South Boston.[7] Ferries are also
provided for travel amongst the harbor islands.
There are occasionally marine accidents, as with a commuter ferry
Massachusetts going from Boston's Rowes Wharf to Hull in June 2006.[8]
[edit] Port facilities
Yachts moored at Rowe's Wharf
[edit] Ground transportation
The Port of Boston has access to I-90, I-93, I-95, and U.S. 1. A CSX rail
yard in the Boston neighborhood of Brighton serves the port. Limited on-dock
rail connections exist but are not currently used (as of 2009). There is
public transit access via the MBTA Silver line SL2 route.
[edit] Massport facilities
Conley Terminal, photographed from Black Falcon Terminal
The public facilities, operated by the Massport, are located in the
neighborhoods of Charlestown, East Boston, and South Boston. These include:
* Black Falcon Cruise Terminal (South Boston) - The Black Falcon Cruise
Terminal is owned and operated by Massport. Running from April through
November, the 2009 cruise season boasts more than 100 vessel calls and
200,000 passengers, sailing north along the majestic New England and
Canadian coastline, south to the pink sand beaches of Bermuda, or east
across the Atlantic to Europe. Only vessel passengers are authorized to
enter the Terminal's restricted areas; however, cruise-ship activity can be
viewed from the Sumner Street Bridge over the Reserved Channel and the small
park at the southern end of the cruise terminal.
* Boston Fish Pier (South Boston) - The oldest continuously operated fish
pier in the United States, this facility houses companies dedicated to the
processing and shipment of seafood.
* Conley Terminal (South Boston) - Conley Terminal serves as the container
facility for the Port of Boston. Started as the Castle Island Terminal by
Sea-Land Corporation in 1966,[9] Massport consolidated all container
operations at Conley and dredged the entrance channel to a depth of 45 feet
(14 m) in the mid-1990s. Today, the facility is capable of handling Panamax
and post-Panamax container ships.
* Boston Autoport (Charlestown) - Now dedicated exclusively to the
processing and shipping of automobiles, the site once served as the
common-use Moran Container Terminal.
Further information: Massachusetts Port Authority
[edit] Non-Massport facilities
Aside from a US Coast Guard facility, the Port of Boston has facilities
dedicated to bulk cargo, petroleum, and LNG shipment and storage. These are
primarily located on the Mystic River, notably along the city of Everett
waterfront as well as the Chelsea River area of East Boston, Chelsea, and
Revere. The Chelsea River depots also contain facilities handling jet fuel
for Logan International Airport. The Deer Island Waste Water Treatment
Plant, whose 150-foot-tall (46 m) egg-shaped sludge digesters are major
landmarks, ships treated sludge across the harbor by barge for further
processing into fertilizer.
The naval frigate USS Constitution ("Old Ironsides") is berthed at the
former Charlestown Navy Yard, now part of the Boston National Historical
Park. The park is also home to the USS Cassin Young a World War II museum
ship. A World War II era dry dock in the park was used for Constitution's
1992 overhaul. Two other World War II era drydocks in the harbor are still
operational (as of 2007), including Dry Dock Number 3 — the largest dry dock
on the U.S. East Coast. The Boston Harborwalk provides public access to much
of the harbor's edge.
MBTA Boat, water taxis, and private ferries and small cruise boats also use
docks at Rowes Wharf, Long Wharf, Boston Navy Yard, Logan International
Airport, Hewitt's Cove in Hingham, Pemberton Point in Hull, and the Fore
River Shipyard in Quincy, and a number of small docks at destinations around
the harbor.[10]
[edit] Piers and wharves
Boston's port was historically served by many more wharves and pier
facilities. Although Massport maintain the more notable ones, a handful of
docking facilities in the Boston Harbor are maintained by private interests
or other state agencies such as DCR. Further, some wharves have been
converted to residential condominiums, or hotel accommodations.
The Port's current and former wharves include:
Specific
1. ^ a b admin. (2010) "Port of Boston" Ports.com http://ports.com/united-states/port-of-boston/.
Retrieved June 23, 2011
2. ^ Service Port-Boston, Department of Homeland Security> U.S. Customs and
Border Protection unit
3. ^ Staff writer (Unk. date) "Passenger Manifest (1848-1891) Contents"
Massachusetts (state) Archives http://www.sec.state.ma.us/arc/arcsrch/PassengerManifestSearchContents.html.
Retrieved June 23 2011 "Over one million immigrants came through the Port of
Boston during this time period."
4. ^ "MASSPORT - About the Port - Port Stats". Massachusetts Port Authority.
http://www.massport.com/port-of-boston/About%20Port%20of%20Boston/PortStatistics.aspx.
Retrieved February 24, 2007.
5. ^ Massachusetts State Police Marine Section: Emergency Tactical &
Response Teams
6. ^ Lewis, Richard C (April 9, 2005). "R.I. officials rap gas terminal
expansion". The Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/04/09/ri_officials_rap_gas_terminal_expansion/.
Retrieved May 10, 2005.
7. ^ "MBTA Commuter and Excursion Boat Services". Massachusetts Bay
Transportation Authority (MBTA). Archived from the original on May 24, 2005.
http://web.archive.org/web/20050524191918/http://www.mbta.com/traveling_t/schedules_boats.asp.
Retrieved May 28, 2005.
8. ^ "NTSB Marine Accident Brief - Fire On Board U.S. Small Passenger Vessel
Massachusetts in Boston Harbor, Massachusetts, June 12, 2006". National
Transportation Safety Board. http://www.ntsb.gov/Publictn/2007/MAB0701.htm.
9. ^ http://www.massport.com/ports/about_histo.html
10. ^ "Water Transport". Massport. 2010. http://www.massport.com/logan-airport/Pages/WaterTransport.aspx.
Retrieved November 9, 2010.
General
1. Banner, David. "The History of Boston, Massachusetts." BOSTON HISTORY.
1997-2005. May 8, 2005.
2. Jourgensen, Thor (May 9, 2005). Council to review LNG line project. The
Daily Item of Lynn. May 10, 2005.
3. "Boston Harbor and Approaches." Coast Pilot 1 - 35th Edition, 2005. NOAA
Office of Coast Survey. 35th Edition. May 15, 2005.
4. Massport - About the Port: History. May 2005.
5. Seaport Advisory Council - The Port of Boston. May 2005.
6. Through the Eyes of a Mariner: Touring the Port of Boston. May 2005.
7. "Port Industry Statistics." AAPA Online. May 16, 2005.
External links
* Massport: Ports - The Port of Boston
* The Boston Harbor Association
* Boston Harbor resources site
* NOAA Soundings Map of Boston Harbor
* Boston by Boat - comprehensive listing of passenger services
* History of the Port of Boston (from Massport)
Boston Harbor | Massachusetts Port Authority | Geography of Boston,
Massachusetts | Ports and harbors of Massachusetts | Transportation in
Boston, Massachusetts
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