How was Mental Illness Viewed in Colonial Massachusetts?
Find out how people in seventeenth and eighteenth century Massachusetts recorded, understood and explained mental illness.
How was Mental Illness Viewed in Colonial Massachusetts? Read More »
Find out how people in seventeenth and eighteenth century Massachusetts recorded, understood and explained mental illness.
How was Mental Illness Viewed in Colonial Massachusetts? Read More »
Revolutionary Spaces will host an evening of storytelling, history, and community on Thursday, October 16, 2025, with two back-to-back events.
Revolutionary Spaces to Relight Historic Corner Lantern at Old South Meeting House Read More »
Revolutionary Spaces will host an evening of storytelling, history, and community on Thursday, October 16, 2025, with two back-to-back events.
Learn about historic patriot James Otis, Jr’s battle with mental health and about his final years living in Andover, Massachusetts.
In this exhibit, viewers will journey through James Otis’ life with maps and photos, and learn about his struggles with mental health after his caning in 1769.
Revolutionary Spaces is pleased to introduce Sensory-Friendly Mornings at the Old State House, a KultureCity Sensory Inclusive™ Certified Venue, beginning Friday, June 27th.
Revolutionary Spaces Launches Sensory-Friendly Museum Mornings at the Old State House Read More »
Hub Town Tours and Revolutionary Spaces are proud to announce a new partnership: The Freedom Trail Insiders Tour, an immersive 2-hour walking tour through Downtown Boston.
After being absent more than three years from its original perch on Boston’s Old State House, the state’s symbolic eagle returns to the site’s west façade.
Opening September 1, this interactive exhibit invites viewers to consider values of community, equality, and justice and how these notions cause harm when they conflict.
Old State House Explores Boston’s History of Desegregation and Busing in New Exhibition Read More »
Free May programs at Old State House & Old South Meeting House will look back on the power of civic engagement for disenfranchised people & invite people to move from civic bystander to civic agent.