|
About Providence
Courtesy of the Providence Warwick CVB
Providence was founded in 1636 by renegade preacher Roger Williams,
who was forced to flee Massachusetts because of religious
persecution. Williams purchased land from the Narragansett Indians
and started a new settlement with a policy of religious and political
freedom. He named his new home "Providence," in thanks to God for
protecting him during his exile from Massachusetts.
Easily
accessible by water, Providence became a major New World seaport.
During the Revolutionary War, Providence's craftspeople and merchants
supplied goods to the Continental and French armies. Ever the
entrepreneurs, Providence businesses were financing expeditions to the
Mediterranean, Middle East and Far East by 1781. With trade booming,
the city grew and flourished. Traditional wooden homes began yielding
to ornate brick mansions.
The
Great New England Hurricane of 1938 wove a path of death and
destruction through the city, with a tidal-wave like storm surge and
wind gusts of more than 100 miles per hour. The storm's effect on
Rhode Island was so severe, that earthquake instruments 3,000 miles
away recorded it on seismographs. In 1954, Hurricane Carol caught
Rhode Island by surprise and Providence suffered the greatest amount of
concentrated damage—upwards of $41 million. Gusts of wind, at a rate
of 72 to 100 miles per hour, blew into Providence, while portions of
the downtown area sat under eight feet of water.
In the late 1970s, the City began to upgrade the infrastructure of
the neighborhoods, downtown and commercial districts. For decades, the
world's widest bridge had obscured the Moshassuck and Woonasquatucket
Rivers, two narrow, but significant waterways which snake through the
city of Providence and converge to become the Providence River, the
head of Narragansett Bay. In the 1990s, the two rivers running
through downtown were uncovered and moved.
Today,
those two rivers are edged by cobblestone walkways, flanked by park
benches, trees and flowering plants, and bisected by a series of
graceful Venetian bridges connecting downtown Providence to the city's
East Side. In keeping with this old-world flair, visitors may glide
lazily through the waterways in one of the city's gilded gondolas. The
centerpiece of this revitalization is WaterPlace Park, which boasts a
stone-stepped amphitheater for summer concerts and serves as the
starting point for Providence's world-renowned WaterFire, a
multi-sensory art installation of more than 100 dancing bonfires that
wind along the Providence River.
Providence
also boasts a flourishing cultural and academic community. The Tony
Award-winning Trinity Repertory Company and the Providence Performing
Arts Center are not only historic landmarks, but also feature Broadway
musicals, children's performances, popular seasonal ballets, opera,
plays and musical concerts. Students and alumni of Brown University,
Providence College and Rhode Island College bring vitality to the
city's intellectual life. The famous Rhode Island School of Design
lends the city a hipster cool, with many young artists coming to study
and staying to begin their careers. The world's largest culinary
educator, Johnson & Wales University, has had a tremendous impact
on Providence's much-lauded restaurant scene.
|