Retreat and Recreate: Peddocks Island

An island overview
Visitors can take a seat after touring the historic Fort Andrews chapel.
Evidence of the still-active summer-cottage community on the island
One of many First World War-era buildings at Fort Andrews

Peddocks Island/National Park Service
Ferry runs from June 20 through September 1

View the website

Camping reservations via ReserveAmerica

Skip the clogged commute to the Cape and start your vacation right now by riding the ferry to Peddocks Island in Boston. At 184 acres, Peddocks is the largest of the Harbor Islands and offers the most diverse terrain—woodlands, fields, and beaches—along with perfect views of the sun, both rising and setting, and the Boston skyline. “It’s big enough so you can lose yourself for a day,” notes Mike Dyer, vice president of development and external affairs at the Boston Harbor Alliance, “but has enough mystery to captivate you for the weekend.”

Where Georges Island’s Civil War-era Fort Warren attracts umpteen visiting school children a year and Spectacle Island’s Cinderella tale proves that landfills can become stunning urban parks, Peddocks, alone, offers yurt camping. Stay in one of the luxurious canvas-sided yurts just built this year, or go more rustic at a traditional tent site. Then spend the rest of the time exploring the island’s own military history, its summer-cottage colony, or go bird-watching, hiking, fishing, or swimming at sandy Petty Cove.

The island is divided by hills, or headlands: East, Middle, and West. The ferry docks at East Head, where the camping is located, and where visitors can walk among the remaining World War I-era brick buildings of Fort Andrews, including the newly renovated chapel (now open for public and private events), and learn some island history. Native Americans used Peddocks, says Dyer, before European farmers arrived in 1634. By 1776, more than 600 militiamen were stationed there to guard against British troops; the fort itself was active from 1904 through the end of World War II.

Hiking trails run throughout the island. The quarter-mile loops are good for smaller legs; for tougher types, a 2.5-mile route extends into the uninhabited West End. Hilly, tree-lined trails, rolling grasslands, and native roses and hedgerows abound. It may not be “wilderness,” but as a haven in a major American city, Peddocks gets wondrously close to unspoiled nature. And any time spent there is far more rejuvenating than hours spent sitting in a hot car on Route 3.

Click here for the July-August 2014 issue table of contents

You might also like

The 2025 Pulitzer Prizes Announced

Winners across five categories, from commentary on Gaza to criticism on public architecture

Doctors for Change

Countway Library exhibit explores historic anti-nuclear activism

Springtime with Mass Audubon

Springtime with Mass Audubon

Most popular

An Original Magna Carta, Hidden in Plain Sight

A rare original surfaces at Harvard at an “almost providential” moment. 

Harvard Discloses Top Administrator and Investment Manager Compensation

Investment manager compensation drops—top six managers’ earnings total a little more than $25 million

Harvard President Responds to Secretary of Education

Alan Garber outlines steps University has taken, emphasizes compliance with the law.

Explore More From Current Issue

Publications by Harvard Authors Spring 2025: New Releases

Operatic counterculture, a Passover graphic novel, James Joyce’s biographer, and more