Rails, Sails, and New England Islands  

June 4 to 13, 2010

Tour from $2399.00

THIS TOUR IS CLOSED TO ALL BOOKINGS!

For 2010, Rail Travel Center again offers our unique tour in the Northeast, concentrating on Rhode Island, Block Island, Nantucket Island, the Cape Cod area of southern Massachusetts, and part of southern Connecticut.  Our program is timed for late spring, just before the major tourist influx comes to these extremely popular destinations.  The tour includes a five-night stay in Providence RI and two nights each on Nantucket Island and in Hyannis MA.  Nantucket Harbor

Transportation highlights include dinners in the diner on the Newport Dinner Train and the Cape Cod Central Railroad; rides on the Essex Steam Train, Shore Line Trolley Museum, Amtrak’s 150 mph ACELA EXPRESS, Block Island Ferry, and Hy-Line ferry to Nantucket; and mass transit rides in Providence. All train trips on the tour ride scenic lines once part of the vast New England empire of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad.  Other attractions include touring Newport RI,, a day on Block Island (tour and lunch included) with free time, touring and free time on Nantucket, and visiting Cape Cod National Seashore, the wonderful Heritage Museum and Garden in Sandwich MA, and Plimoth Plantation.  Please consider joining Rail Travel Center Vice-President/General Manager Carl Fowler on this great spring program.  All aboard!

Day One, Friday, June  4

Independent arrivals into Providence RI. Our program begins with independent arrivals today into Providence, Rhode Island. Our hotel for the next five nights is the Courtyard by Marriott Downtown Providence in the historic Union Station Plaza, just one block from the current Amtrak station or about 15 minutes from the airport. This was the landmark former New Haven RR depot.

Day Two, Saturday, June 5 (L,D)

Newport sightseeing:  Marble House; The Breakers; Newport Dinner Train. A short ride this morning takes us to Newport RI. Lunch is included on arrival, followed by tours at famous Marble House (built for William K. Vanderbilt in 1892) and The Breakers, the grandest of Newport’s summer “cottages”, built by Richard Morris Hunt in 1893 for Cornelius Vanderbilt II. Following a brief tour of the general area, we have free time before boarding the Newport Dinner Train for a run along the shores of beautiful Narragansett Bay as we enjoy a four-course dinner in their Budd dining cars.

Day Three, Sunday, June 6 (L)

Essex Steam Train; Shore Line Trolley Museum; Amtrak ACELA. Our motorcoach takes us southwest today, stopping first in the lovely village of Essex CT for a late morning ride behind steam along the Connecticut River on the Essex Steam Train. Upon our return, we have a fine included luncheon at the Griswold Inn, a Colonial inn operating since 1776. The Griswold claims to be America’s oldest continuously operated inn, although the Beekman Arms in Rhinebeck NY makes a similar claim! There is free time to walk, shop or make an optional visit to the Connecticut River Museum in the village before we depart for the Shore Line Trolley Museum. Here we can visit the museum itself, which contains almost 100 historic U.S. and Canadian trolleys, and ride a three-mile line (the last portion of the Branford Electric Railway in operation) on an historic trolley. Our day concludes with a ride on Amtrak’s ACELA EXPRESS high-speed train from New Haven to Providence, a ride of approximately one-and-one-half hours. We reach speeds of 150mph as we follow the very scenic former New Haven “Shoreline” along the coastline of the Long Island Sound and Narragansett Bay.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Day Four, Monday, June 7 (L)

Day trip to Block Island.  We depart this morning from Point Judith RI for a 30-minute high speed ferry trip to Old Harbor on Block Island.  We then tour the Island, learning about its history and current life on this detached part of Rhode Island.  Our day includes a visit to the Block Island Historical Society, an oceanside lunch, and free time in Old Harbor before our return ferry trip later in the afternoon. Block Island has a matchless Victorian feel and seems like a place lost in time. 

Day Five, Tuesday, June 8

Free day in Providence. Everyone on the tour is provided with a LINK trackless trolley pass for today, which allows visits to many of the important sites in Providence. The Gold Line in the Capitol Hill area stops at the Amtrak station; the State House (which contains a painting of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart, the original 1663 Royal Charter granted by King Charles II of England and other objects of interest); and Waterplace Park, a four-acre park in the city center which hosts WaterFire on some evenings. The Green Line includes Restaurant Row, the Eastside Marketplace, the First Baptist Church in America (established 1638 and housed in a 1775 structure with a 1792 Waterford crystal chandelier), and the famous Rhode Island School of Design. The Museum of Art at the Rhode Island School of Design contains over 80,000 works of art and is well worth the visit! The Gold and Green Lines join at Kennedy Plaza, within walking distance a few blocks from our hotel.

Day Six, Wednesday, June 9 (D)

Motorcoach to Hyannis; ferry to Nantucket. This morning our motorcoach transfers us to Hyannis MA for the noon fast ferry to Nantucket, with optional lunch available on the ferry. Upon arrival on Nantucket, we (and our luggage) are transferred to our hotel for the next two nights, the charming Nantucket Inn.

This property has both indoor and outdoor swimming pools, an exercise center, tennis courts, billiards and bicycle rentals. We are located about three miles outside the village, so the hotel provides complimentary hourly transfers to/from town or Surfside Beach. We have free time this afternoon before an included dinner at A. K. Diamond’s restaurant.

Day Seven, Thursday, June 10 (B)

Tour of Nantucket and free time. Following a lovely included breakfast buffet, we have a mid-morning tour of Nantucket Island, ending by mid-day. The afternoon is ours to explore on our own. Nantucket has a number of historic sites, shops and restaurants. We have included History Passes on this tour which allow free visits to the spectacular new Whaling Museum, the historic Hadwen House, the Oldest House, the Old Mill, the Old Gaol (jail), the Quaker Meeting House and the Fire Hose Cart House (fire equipment). The Historical Association also offers walking tours of downtown Nantucket at an optional cost. An inexpensive bus service is available to visit areas outside the village.

Day Eight, Friday, June 11 (B,L)

Cape Cod National Seashore. Following our breakfast buffet, we are transferred to the Nantucket ferry dock and ride the ferry back to Hyannis, where our motorcoach meets us. We then drive the Cape Cod National Seashore, with box lunches included, stopping at points of interest en route. The Seashore stretches for forty miles along Cape Cod, consisting of towering sand dunes, forests, cliffs and marshlands. Cottages, lighthouses and villages are found along the route.  In late afternoon we return to Hyannis, where we stay two nights at the Holiday Inn Hyannis.  Dinner is on our own this evening.

 Day Nine, Saturday, June 12 (D)

Heritage Museums and Gardens; Plimoth Plantation; dinner on the Cape Cod Central Railroad.  This morning we make a very short drive to Sandwich MA to visit Heritage Museums and Gardens, which specializes in American history and art.  A replica Shaker round barn houses a wonderful collection of antique automobiles including a Cord 812 Phaeton, a Duesenberg Model J, a 1962 Corvette and a 1932 Auburn 8-100A Boattail Speedster.  A working hand-carved carousel, Nantucket baskets, scrimshaw and numerous art works are located in the Art Museum; and the American History Museum includes antique toys, military miniatures and Native American artifacts.  Paths and a shuttle service provide access to the 100-acre site which includes gardens, nature trails, a maze and an old mill.  Optional lunches are available on site.   

We then continue on to Plymouth MA and visit Plimoth Plantation, a fine living history museum depicting both the 17th century English settlement established nearby and the Wampanoag Indian culture.  Here we learn the reality of life for the Pilgrims in that time.  Agriculture and crafts of the period also are presented.  Returning to Hyannis, we have time to freshen up at our hotel before our Farewell Dinner on the Cape Cod Central Railroad.  Our journey of three hours takes us along the Cape Cod Canal and across the historic Cape Cod Canal railroad bridge to Buzzards Bay.  We pass cranberry bogs, marshes and sand dunes while enjoying a five-course meal in the dining car.  Our diesel-powered train follows 23 miles of original trackage on the Old Colony Railroad.

Day Ten, Sunday, June 13

Tour ends.  This morning we depart on our chartered motorcoach back to Providence, where we provide drops at the Amtrak Station and the Providence airport for flights/trains leaving after noon. 

TOUR PRICES include all hotels; tour manager services; admissions; meals noted as included above; rail, motorcoach and ferry transportation; and luggage handling from arrival at our hotel on Day One to drop-offs at Amtrak and the Providence airport on Day Ten. Not included are connecting transportation to/from Providence, other meals, alcoholic beverages and items of a personal nature.

$ 2399.00 per person, double occupancy

$ 2999.00 single occupancy

 

 

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Last modified: March 02, 2010