Walden Pond
Where do I even begin with a town like Concord, a place so steeped in history that nearly every road, field and footpath seems to carry a story. This is a community that does not shy away from its past. Concord remembers, it marks, it preserves, and it invited visitors to slow down long enough to notice.
When friends from out of state ask us where to start, our answer is usually: Walden Pond.

It may surprise some people that in a town famous for Revolutionary War history, the place we recommend first is not a battlefield or monument, but a quiet body of water ringed by trees and walking paths.
This is where Henry David Thoreua lived for two years in a small cabin beginning in 1845, seeking what he famously called a life lived deliberately. The setting still holds a remarkable stillness, even with its many visitors moving along the shore.
We return here year after year, not to do anything in particular, but to just walk. What makes Walden so special is not only its natural beauty, but how deliberately Concord has chosen to protect it. This is not scenery accidentally preserved; it is landscape held sacred by community will. The site of Thoreau’s cabin is marked with simple stones,
Walden is our doorway into Concord. From here, we can branch out to the bridges, commons, cemeteries, writers’ homes and Revolutionary sites. But starting at Walden sets the tone and reminds us that this town is shaped by ideas, by conscience, and by generations of people who care enough to protect what mattered.
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Meriam House
This is the historic Meriam House, part of the Minute Man National Historical Park in Concord. Built around 1705, the house stood directly along the route taken by British troops returning from Concord on April 19, 1775. What makes the site especially important is that the land near the Meriam House marked a turning point in the first day of the […]
Old Manse
One homeschooling morning, I took Emmy and Erin to visit the Old Manse in Concord. As was often the case with weekday explorations, the house was nearly empty. Museums and historic sites were a big part of our schooling. Built in 1770 for the Reverend William Emerson, the Old Manse stands just steps from the […]
Minute Man National Park
On numerous acres stretches Minute Man National Historical Park. As a Massachusetts resident, we have visited this park several times. The park encompasses approximately 1,000 acres across the towns of Lexington, Lincoln, and Concord, preserving the landscape of April 19, 1775. This date was the opening day of the American Revolution. It was established as a National […]