dog friendly park

Fort Washington Park

Overview: Fort Washington Park is rated 4.3/5 from 56 Google reviews. Downsides: Some reviews mention a smaller layout than some visitors expect.

4.3Google rating
56reviews
6photos
Overview

What stands out here

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4.3(56 reviews)

Overview: Fort Washington Park is rated 4.3/5 from 56 Google reviews. Downsides: Some reviews mention a smaller layout than some visitors expect.

Best for

general off-leash exercise

Quick facts

Address95 Waverly St, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Phone(617) 349-6200
City pageCambridge
Imported fromCambridge, MA

Useful details

These tags come from the imported Google export and help visitors scan the park vibe quickly.

general off-leash exerciseparktourist attraction6 Google photos56 reviewsOpen now

Park photos

Real photo coverage helps visitors judge size, atmosphere, and maintenance before they head out.

Recent Google review highlights

Showing the actual texture of owner feedback makes the park page much more useful than a bare directory card.

Leland Morris3 months ago

Cool little place of history. Love the fence posts made out of old cannons. A lot of people bring their dogs here.

Nick Lazarisa year ago

I can't believe that I just discovered this tiny Park behind MIT in Cambridge. This used to be on the Charles River waterfront before land was filled in due to MIT. When George Washington arrived in 1775 to take over colonial forces and encircled Boston, he authorized this fort to be built. Their embankments and three Canon and the most amazing fence. I have seen being made of small cannons. When near MIT it's worth the 10-minute walk to get to this site which is the only revolutionary war site in Cambridge.

Stuart Rudolph6 years ago

A must see special place. This is the last remaining Fort from the revolutionary war that was built along the rivers edge. It was captured by the British... It is a must see. The original earth mounds with civil war cannon fence.

BRIAN CAMa year ago

2024 04 27 Flagpole VANDALIZED AGAIN! CAMBRIDGE UNPATRIOTIC HANDS HATE AMERICA! "Fort Washington is a symbol and a vision, a reminder of what we are, where we came from, and what we can do," BERNARD RUDOLPH In 1968, with the help of his wife, Marion K. Rudolph, they organized raffles and other events and raised $1075 dollars for the installation of a new flagpole at the park. Bernie Rudolph and his son Stuart, would raise the flag every morning and lower it every evening, for five years, flying flags procured by Tip O'Neill, the late speaker of the House who represented this neighborhood, until, Bernie got the city and the utility company to put lighting in so the flag could be displayed around the clock. Flag Day, June 14th, 1968, Ceremonies at Fort Washington, were attended by the Late Senator, Ted Kennedy, Attorney General, Elliot Richardson and veteran organizations. Fort Washington was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1973. By 1975, with interest aroused by the bicentennial, Mr. Rudolph diligence finally paid off. Mr. Rudolph gained allies like the DAR, and M.I.T. Professor, Douglas Adams. The Cast Iron Fence was eventually restored to its approximate 1859 appearance at a cost of over $400,000, much of it Bicentennial and National Park Funds. Archeology studies confirmed the Revolutionary Earthworks are "original and fragile". The Madeline Lord Relief Sculptures, of Common Soldiers, modeled on Re-enactors, represent the Spirit of the over 16,000 American Soldiers that took part in the "Siege of Boston", better, than the likeness of an individual. These are a welcome reminder of who this Park honors. On October, 11th, 1998, in recognize of his efforts, the Cambridge City Council named the Fort Washington Area Bernard Rudolph Square. At the ceremony, Mr. Rudolph spoke affectionally about his Wife, Marion "my chief aide, my greatest critic and my biggest supporter." Those at the ceremony said it was typically Bernie to mention all the people who helped him his effort to save Fort Washington Park, including his "pro bono attorney Eddy Applestein," Cambridge Post 35 Jewish War Veterans, and the late Pasquale Reale, director of veterans' services for Cambridge, and his four grandchildren and daughter-in-law. Mr. Rudoloph’s 70 year Journey, from an Immigrant Lad to an American Patriot, sums up the American Experience in that he is a Brother, of the Patriotic Band of Brothers, that Washington spoke of. That through the generations have defended the freedom of the United States of America, that are honored here at Fort Washington. As Mr. Rudolph said "Fort Washington is a symbol and a vision, a reminder of what we are, where we came from", and what we can do," and thanks to Mr. Rudolph, Fort Washington, a Symbol of American freedom, is not just another parking lot.

Kelly “Kelbee” B3 years ago

Nice little dog park with a historic battery.

Opening hours

When Google exported structured hours, they’re surfaced here instead of being buried in the raw payload.

  • Monday: Open 24 hours
  • Tuesday: Open 24 hours
  • Wednesday: Open 24 hours
  • Thursday: Open 24 hours
  • Friday: Open 24 hours
  • Saturday: Open 24 hours
  • Sunday: Open 24 hours

Google map

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