Loews Hotel Magazine Spring/Summer 2015 | Page 65

The Empire State Building is open to visitors from 8 a.m. to 2 a.m. daily. Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, famed for the Headless Horseman SLEEPY HOLLOW CEMETERY PHOTO BY JUNE MARIE SOBRITO and William Rockefeller. If you’re feeling brave, walking tours will take you through the burial grounds by lantern. (Daytime tours are also available for travelers of a less courageous variety.) Bewitching Excursion Getting to Boston from the Bronx River Parkway should take about three hours, with numerous routes available. Once there, Loews Boston Hotel is the perfect jumping off point to see Faneuil Hall, Fenway Park, the New England Aquarium or any of the city’s other noted attractions. The hotel is just 15 minutes from the Freedom Trail, a 2.5-mile route that includes 16 historically significant sites, including Boston Common, America’s first public park; the Old Corner Bookstore, the longest-standing commercial building in Boston; the USS Constitution, the oldest commissioned warship still afloat; and the Paul Revere House. For road-hungry travelers who’d like just a little more time with their foot on the pedal, a short drive north will land them in Salem, the famed “Witch City.” Deriving its name from “shalom,” the Hebrew word for peace, the city’s claim to fame dates back to the 1692 witch trials. The Salem Witch Museum, the Witch Dungeon Museum and the Witch History Museum all provide a detailed look back at the scandal-filled historical period. All that time on the road will have any group thirsting for a little waterside fun. The seaport town of Salem also lured pirates, including the notorious Clam chowder, a New England classic Gloucester, Mass., is home to America’s original seaport. Captain Kidd and Blackbeard, and it was also the birthplace of Nathaniel Hawthorne, who penned “The Scarlet Letter.” Local attractions pay homage to both. Also worth visiting is the Peabody Essex Museum, one of the oldest museums in the country, home to an array of art and culture exhibitions. After investigating the former haunts of accused witches and infamous pirates, take to the road again, heading further northeast along Route 127. The route will take travelers to Cape Ann, and along the way, fishing villages, antique shops and numerous eateries serving up Massachusetts’ finest seafood will keep wanderers satisfied. A bowl of New England clam chowder is never far away. When reaching the fishing village of Gloucester, Mass., America’s original seaport, be sure to snap a photo with “the Man at the Wheel,” a statue memorializing sailors lost at sea. There are also four lighthouses in the area; take a lighthouse cruise for the best view. Art lovers will want to make a stop at the Rocky Neck Art Colony, one of the oldest working art colonies in the country. Or visit Motif No. 1, an iconic red fishing shack in nearby Rockport, Mass., which is considered the mostpainted building in America. Whether you traverse the entire coast, take a quick weekend jaunt along part of it, or just want to experience freedom on four wheels for a day, the road is calling—reminding us that life is sometimes about the journey, sometimes about the destination, and sometimes a little of both. L LOEWS MAGAZINE LO5_Road-eV2-e.indd 65 65 4/10/15 7:55 AM