A Stairway in Boston
Thursday, May 16
Jake Jaramillo in Boston, Bunker Hill Stairs, Volunteer Park, Water Tower

As we revisit Seattle stairways on our walks, memories start to build. There are the different views and textures we encounter at various times of year; who was walking with us; the story of a memorial along the way; what was going on in the larger world at the time. Slowly, our stairway explorations take on a personal stamp - which brings us to a story we saw recently in the New York Times.

Elena Barbara has built her own relationship with a particular stairway. The Bunker Hill stairs in Boston climb 294 steps above Breed's Hill in the Charlestown neighborhood. Stone steps inside a large obelisk, a National Monument honoring the Battle of Bunker Hill, rise 221 feet to yield 360-degree views. (Our Water Tower stairway in Volunteer Park features 106 steel steps that climb 75 feet, also providing wonderful all-around views of the city.)

Elena has climbed the Bunker Hill stairs each day to raise funds for the 14 amputee victims of the Boston Marathon bombing. She hopes to raise one dollar for each of the 8,820 steps she'll climb over a 30-day period. She doesn't know any of the victims, but nonetheless she enlisted the help of a fundraising website called "GoFundMe" to do something for them.

The Times story is linked here, and in turn, it has a link to Elena's GoFundMe page. The Bunker Hill Stairs will surely have special meaning for the people Elena is able to help!

Article originally appeared on Seattle Stairway Walks (http://www.seattlestairwaywalks.com/).
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