Overview: Follow this guide through the Boston Public Garden to visit all the major sculptures and monuments in the area. I've provided links in... more »

Overview: Follow this guide through the Boston Public Garden to visit all the major sculptures and monuments in the area. I've provided links in... more »
Tips: The Public Garden is located in downtown Boston. The easiest way to get there is to park outside the city at a T Station and take the A... more »
This fountain is a nice break from all the historical figures you will find on this walk.
This statue commemorates the first president as the leader of the United States and commander-in-chief of the Army.
This monument commemorates more than 200 people who had ties to Massachusetts who died in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Sumner was an outspoken abolitionist who opposed compromising on anything with the South before the Civil War.
The Polish-Lithuaninan immigrant became an American military hero in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.
Cass was an Irish immigrant who founded the Fighting Ninth Regiment of volunteers during the Civil War.
Adorned with great eagles and surrounded by benches, this memorial honors Goody, who was chairman of the Boston Art Commission and friend of the Public Garden as well as a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor.
Hale was a writer and another Unitarian minister who edited the Boston Daily Advertiser.
This is the most adorable bronze art in the whole garden. It was created in 1987 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Public Garden and is inspired by the book of the same name.
This statue stands at the edge of a fountain to honor one of Boston's most famous philanthropists.
This is a tall (40 feet) monument that commemorates the use of ether as an anesthetic.