Revere, Massachusetts


 

Revere is a city located in Suffolk County, Massachusetts and borders Winthrop, East Boston and Chelsea to the south, Everett and Malden to the west, Saugus and Lynn to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to the east. It comprises 10.0 square miles, although 4.1 miles are open water and wetlands and not suitable for development. Of the 5.9 miles of developed land, 70% is used for housing. Revere is located approximately 5 miles from downtown Boston. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 47,283.

Attractions

  • Revere Beach is the oldest public beach in the United States. It has a fairly active beachfront district.
  • From its inception, Revere Beach was "the people's beach", used mostly by the working class and the many immigrants who chose to settle in the area.

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    When people reminisce about Revere Beach it is not the sand and surf they remember most. It is the amusements. The Whip, the Ferris Wheel, Bluebeard's Palace, the Fun House, Hurley's Dodgems, the Pit, Himalaya, Hippodrome, Sandy's, the Mickey Mouse, the Virginia Reel and many more provided hours of enjoyment for residents and visitors alike. Of course, the biggest attraction was the Cyclone, among the largest roller coasters in the United States. Opened in 1927, its cars traveled at a speed of 50 miles per hour and its climb reached a 100 feet.

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    In addition to the sand, surf and amusements, there were two roller skating rinks, two bowling alleys, and numerous food stands. There were also the ballrooms, including the most famous, the Oceanview and the Beachview, each the site of many dance marathons which were popular in the 1930s.

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    The Beach began to deteriorate in the 1950s, and by the early 1970s had become a strip of honky tonk bars and abandoned buildings. The "Great Blizzard of '78"' proved to be the final death knell for the "old" Revere Beach, as many of the remaining businesses, amusements, pavilions and sidewalks and much of the sea wall were all destroyed. The Beach was the focus of a major revitalization effort by the Metropolitan District Commission and the City in the 1980s and was officially reopened in May 1992. It now boasts high rise housing units, a resanded beach, restored pavilions and a renovated boulevard. Revere commemorated the centennial of the first opening of Revere Beach on the weekend of July 19, 1996.

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  • Home of Horatio Alger, Jr.
  • Rumney Marsh was the site of the first naval battle in 1775.
  • Bell Isle Marsh Reservation is the largest surviving salt marsh in Boston Harbor, it showcases plants and wildlife now rare to the Metropolitan area.
  • Wonderland Greyhound Park - Pari-Mutuel wagering was legalized by the Massachusetts Legislature in 1934. Wonderland Greyhound Park opened the following year and has offered quality greyhound racing continuously for the past 70 years. Constructed on the site of the old Wonderland Amusement Park in Revere, the site had been converted from an amusement park to a bicycle track at the turn of the century. Wonderland Park is one of the state's few remaining greyhound racing tracks.

~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
History
Geography
Attractions
Transit
Demographics
External links

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