The Town of Boston - Lincolnshire
Boston is considered by many to be one of the oldest settlements in England although no official record of it exists until much later.
Even the famous Domesday Book of 1086 does not name Boston in its records, instead calling the settlement under the name of a smaller settlement, Skirbeck, which is now considered to be a part of Boston itself.
The town became very religiously-oriented throughout the 13th and 14th Centuries, as no less than 4 different orders of friars started abbeys in Boston.
These abbeys were later closed by King Henry VIII during the English Reformation and many of these buildings were abandoned.
One of them, the Dominican Friary, eventually was converted into a theater which is still used today.
Boston itself became a place surrounded by religious controversy for as pressure to conform with the teaching of the English church bore down on them, many residents of Boston tried to emigrate to more open areas to worship.
Eventually, this led to many of these people joining group to sail the Mayflower and make a settlement in America.
They started up a settlement called Boston in the New World, which came to be the Boston which exists in the United States today.
After the religious controversy, Boston had the Fens around it drained and this proved to open up a great deal of fertile land.
Boston began exporting a number of cereal product to London and this helped the town to prosper.
In 1774, the first financial bank was opened in the town of Boston.
Boston currently features a number of sporting teams, offering a great deal of entertainment to those in the Lincolnshire area.
Landmarks cover the Boston area, from the Maude Foster mill to The Grand Sluice, which helps to keep the surrounding area from flooding.
Anyone who visits Boston will be sure to experience a great deal of culture and history from their time in this town.
Even the famous Domesday Book of 1086 does not name Boston in its records, instead calling the settlement under the name of a smaller settlement, Skirbeck, which is now considered to be a part of Boston itself.
The town became very religiously-oriented throughout the 13th and 14th Centuries, as no less than 4 different orders of friars started abbeys in Boston.
These abbeys were later closed by King Henry VIII during the English Reformation and many of these buildings were abandoned.
One of them, the Dominican Friary, eventually was converted into a theater which is still used today.
Boston itself became a place surrounded by religious controversy for as pressure to conform with the teaching of the English church bore down on them, many residents of Boston tried to emigrate to more open areas to worship.
Eventually, this led to many of these people joining group to sail the Mayflower and make a settlement in America.
They started up a settlement called Boston in the New World, which came to be the Boston which exists in the United States today.
After the religious controversy, Boston had the Fens around it drained and this proved to open up a great deal of fertile land.
Boston began exporting a number of cereal product to London and this helped the town to prosper.
In 1774, the first financial bank was opened in the town of Boston.
Boston currently features a number of sporting teams, offering a great deal of entertainment to those in the Lincolnshire area.
Landmarks cover the Boston area, from the Maude Foster mill to The Grand Sluice, which helps to keep the surrounding area from flooding.
Anyone who visits Boston will be sure to experience a great deal of culture and history from their time in this town.