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Extract from the Boston Travel Guides:
As it nears The Wash, the muddy River Witham weaves its way through
BOSTON
(a corruption of Botolf's stone, or Botolph's town), which was named after the Anglo-Saxon monk-saint who first established a monastery here, overlooking the main river crossing point in 645 AD. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the settlement expanded to become England's second largest seaport, its flourishing economy dependent on the wool trade with Flanders. Local merchants, revelling in their success, decided to build a church that demonstrated their wealth, the result being the magnificent medieval church of St Botolph, whose 272-foot tower still... read the whole Boston Travel Guides...
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