Place

King's Chapel

Boston National Historical Park

Granite building with an apse surrounded by stone columns and an unfinished steeple
King's Chapel at Tremont Street

NPS Photo

Quick Facts
Location:
Tremont and School Street, Boston
Significance:
1754 Stone Church Built for the First Anglican Church in Boston
Designation:
National Historic Landmark; Freedom Trail Site
MANAGED BY:

King’s Chapel, designed by Peter Harrison in 1749 for the first Anglican congregation in Boston, possesses one of the most elegant Georgian church interiors of the colonial era. The congregation was a stronghold of Loyalist opposition, and most of its members left for England and Nova Scotia in 1776. In 1787 those who remained organized the nation’s first Unitarian congregation. The burying ground next to the chapel contains the remains of John Winthrop, the colony’s first governor, as well as the gravestone that inspired Nathaniel Hawthorne to write The Scarlet Letter.

King's Chapel and Burying Ground
Photo Gallery

King's Chapel and Burying Grou...

2 Images

Images of King's Chapel and Burying Ground, a part of Boston's Freedom Trail.

Last updated: January 8, 2025