The Rhode Island State House dome glowing white above downtown Providence at twilight
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Providence

"A hundred small fires burning on the water, and a whole city gone quiet to watch them."

Lia and I hadn’t planned our visit around WaterFire — we didn’t even know it existed — and then on our first night we followed a drifting crowd toward the river and found the water itself alight. Braziers set in the middle of the three rivers that meet downtown, each one tended by black-clad figures in boats, a hundred small bonfires reflecting on black water while opera played from hidden speakers. We stood on a bridge, not speaking, the woodsmoke in our hair, and I remember thinking that no guidebook had prepared me for this. Providence is full of that.

Benefit Street and the hill

By day the city reveals its bones. We climbed College Hill to Benefit Street, the so-called “Mile of History,” where colonial and Federal houses stand shoulder to shoulder in a row so intact it feels staged. It isn’t — people live behind these doors, and we watched one of them water her window boxes in a bonnet of morning light. The Brown University campus spills across the top of the hill, and the RISD Museum, small and superb, kept us for two happy hours. Lia sketched a marble figure while I read every label. There’s an intellectual hum to Providence, thick with students and secondhand bookshops, that we both found quietly intoxicating.

Colonial and Federal-era houses lining historic Benefit Street on College Hill in Providence

Federal Hill and a very long dinner

Then there’s the food. Federal Hill is Providence’s Little Italy, and we walked in under the arch with its bronze pinecone and simply gave ourselves over to the evening. We shared a table with strangers at a loud trattoria, ate handmade pasta and clams in white wine, and let the meal stretch past two hours because no one seemed to want us to leave. The owner sent out limoncello. Lia, who negotiates hard against dessert, surrendered without a fight. Afterward we wandered the hill’s little parks and salumerias, full and slow, the smell of garlic and coffee everywhere.

The bronze pinecone arch marking the entrance to Federal Hill, Providence's Italian quarter

The State House and the water

On our last morning we walked down to the water where the Rhode Island State House sits on its low rise, its white marble dome — one of the largest self-supported domes in the world, a proud local will tell you — catching the sun. We circled it, then followed the riverwalk back through downtown, over the Venetian-style bridges the city built to bring itself back to its rivers. A rowing crew slid past. Providence had rusted for decades, our innkeeper told us, and then decided to uncover its water and its old streets and love them out loud. You can feel that decision everywhere.

The white marble dome of the Rhode Island State House seen from the downtown riverwalk

Getting There

Providence is refreshingly easy to reach. T.F. Green Airport sits just fifteen minutes south of downtown and is a calm, manageable alternative to flying into Boston. If you’re coming from Boston, the commuter rail and Amtrak both run down in under an hour, dropping you at a station walkable to everything. Once you’re here, leave the car — the whole city center, from College Hill down through downtown to Federal Hill, is a comfortable walk of twenty or thirty minutes end to end, and the hills are gentle. Time your visit to a WaterFire evening if you possibly can; the schedule runs through the warmer months, and it is the single best thing we did in New England.