Michigan
Isle Royale National
Park
800 East Lakeshore Drive, Houghton, MI 49931-1895
(906) 482-0984
The largest island in Lake Superior is distinguished by
its wild forests, timber, wolves, moose, beavers, and glacier-sculptured
landforms. Prehistoric peoples mined copper here.
Location: Lake Superior off Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
Park is reached by commercial or private boat, or by seaplane.
Pictured Rocks National
Lakeshore
P.O. Box 40, Munising, MI 49862
(906) 387-3700
Superlative scenic area on Lake Superior. Multicolored
sandstone cliffs, broad beaches, sand dunes, waterfalls, inland lakes, ponds,
marshes, hardwood and coniferous forests, and numerous birds and other animals.
Visitor centers with exhibits, campgrounds, hiking, wilderness camping, boat
tours, fishing, and swimming. Winter activities: Cross-country skiing,
snowshoeing, and snowmobiling.
Location: In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, southeast of
Marquette on M-28.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging available in Munising
and Grand Marais.
Keweenaw National
Historic Park
P.O. Box 471, Calumet, MI 49913-0471
(906) 337-3168
The park preserves a variety of features relating to the
first significant copper mining on land that is now part of the United States.
Location: Michigan's Upper Peninsula. From Houghton, take
U.S. 41 north.
Sleeping Bear Dunes
National Lakeshore
9922 Front Street, Empire, MI 49630-0277
(616) 326-5134
Beaches, massive sand dunes, forests, lakes, two offshore
islands, and Lake Michigan shore. Visitor center, exhibits, maritime museum,
hiking, canoeing, boating, fishing, birdwatching, wilderness camping,
crosscountry skiing.
Location: North of Frankfort, Mich., on Mich. 22, on
shores of Lake Michigan.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Frankfort and Glen
Arbor, Honor, Beulah.
Minnesota
Grand Portage National
Monument
Box 666, Grand Marais, MN 55604
(218) 387-2788
Gateway to the northern plains and woodlands for explorers
and traders. Preserves the strategic 8.5-mile Grand Portage and the Lake
Superior post (1778-1803) of the North West Company. Reconstructed fur trade
post includes the Great Hall of 1797, operating kitchen and pack warehouse
housing three birchbark canoes. Hiking trails, tours, exhibits, audiovisual
programs, and Chippewa craft demonstrations.
Location: Off U.S. 61, 36 miles northeast of Grand Marais,
Minn., on the Grand Portage Chippewa Reservation.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Grand Portage and
Grand Marais.
Pipestone National
Monument
Box 727, Pipestone, MN 56164
(507) 825-5464
Famed quarry for Indian ceremonial peace pipe materials.
Visitor and cultural center, museum exhibits, audiovisual program, upper midwest
Indian cultural center, interpretive programs, self-guiding trail,
demonstrations of Indian pipes being made from red pipestone, beadmaking,
occasional crafts displays.
Location: Pipestone, Minn., on U.S. 75, Minn. 23, 30, near
north boundary of Pipestone.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Pipestone.
Voyageurs National Park
HCR 9, Box 600
International Falls, MN 56649
(2181 283-9821
Forested lake country along Minnesota's northern border
offers wilderness experience in historical setting--the world of the
French-Canadian voyageurs. Fishing, swimming, waterskiing, and bird watching.
Motor boat, houseboat, and canoe rentals, and naturalist-guided boat tours and
evening programs. Ice fishing, Nordic skiing, and snowmobiling in winter.
Private and state campgrounds nearby.
Location: From Duluth, Minn., follow Route 53 north to
park.
Accommodations: Resort, motel, and hotel facilities in
International Falls, Kabetogama Lake, Ash River, and Crane Lake.
Mississippi
Natchez National
Historical Park
P.O. Box 1208, Natchez, MS 39121-1208
(601) 446-5790
This park preserves much of historic Natchez, which began
as a French trading post in 1714 and became the as a French trading post in 1714
and became the commercial, culteral, and social center for the South's "cotten
belt" in the years before the Civil War.
Location: Southwestern Mississippi, in downtown Natchez.
Missouri
George Washington Carver
National Monument
Box 38, Diamond, MO 64840
(417) 325-4151
Site of birthplace and childhood home of famous black
scientist. Landmarks include the spring, a grove of trees, and Carver family
graves. Self-guiding trail, visitor center. birthplace cabin, Carver family
home, limited picnic facilities, private campground nearby.
Location: 3 miles from Diamond, Mo. On County Hwy. V, 65
miles west of Springfield, Mo. Interstate 44 is 9 miles north of Diamond.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Diamond and Joplin,
Mo.
Harry S. Truman National
Historic Site
223 North Main Street, Inderpendence, MO 64050-2804
(816) 254-7199
Harry and Bess Truman lived here at 219 North Deleware
Street from the Time of their marriage in 1919 until they died.
Location: Downtown Independence. Visitor center is at 223
North Main Street.
Ulysses S. Grant
National Historic Site
7400 Grant Road, St. Louis, Mo 63123-1801 (314) 842-1867
This site preserves the core of the historic White Haven
farm, a property central to the lives of Ulysses and Julia Dent Grant from the
time Grant was stationed at the nearby Jefferson Barracks in 1843 until shortly
before his death in 1885.
Location: St. Louis area. From I-270 take Mo. 30 (Gravois
Road) exit. Head east; turn left on Grant Road and go 1/2 mile.
Wilson's Creek National
Battlefield
Rt. 2, Box 75, Republic, MO 65738
(417) 732-2662
Site of Civil War battle, August 10, 1861, for control of
Missouri. Visitor center, museum, film, fiber optic map, self-guiding driving
tour through the battlefield, interpretive signs, foot trail departure points,
picnicking.
Location: 3 miles east of Republic and 10 miles southwest
of Springfield, off U.S. 60 via Mo. M and ZZ.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Springfield.
Montana
Big Hole National
Battlefield
Box 237, Wisdom, MT 59761
(406) 689-3155
Site of turning point in Indian War of 1877, between Nez
Perce and U.S. 7th Infantry. Visitor center, museum, exhibits, self-guiding
trail through battlefield, picnicking. Forest Service and private campgrounds
nearby.
Location: On Mont. 43, 10 miles west of Wisdom.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Wisdom.
Bighorn Canyon National
Recreation Area
Box 458, Fort Smith, MT 59035
(406) 666-2412
Yellowtail Dam on the Bighorn River creates a 71-mile-long
reservoir that extends 47 miles through spectacular Bighorn Canyon. The Crow
Indian Reservation borders much of the area. Boating, camping, picnicking,
fishing, hunting, boat rentals.
Location: From Hardin, Mont., follow Mont. 313 to
Yellowtail Dam, 96 miles southeast of Billings.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Lovell, Wyo., and in
Hardin and Fort Smith.
Little Bighorn National
Battlefield
P.O. Box 39, Crow Agency, MT 59022
(406) 638-2621
In the famous battle of the Little Big Horn, June 25-26,
1876--between 5 companies of the Seventh U.S. Cavalry and the Sioux and Cheyenne
Indians--Lt. Col. George A. Custer and about 268 of his force were killed.
Visitor center, National Cemetery, Custer Hill, Battle Ridge, museum exhibits,
interpretive programs. Local and private campgrounds nearby, picnicking outside
the park area.
Location: 17 miles from Hardin, Mont., via Interstate 90,
70 miles east of Billings.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Hardin.
Grant-Kohrs Ranch
National Historic Site
Box 790, Deer Lodge, MT 59722
(406) 846-3388
A complete cattle ranch headquarters of the type operated
in the West between 1850 and 1910. Elegant Victorian ranch house, bunkhouse,
granaries, carriage sheds, with early ranch implements, wagons, sleighs. Visitor
contact station, exhibits, guided tours, ranching demonstrations, active
blacksmith, horsedrawn vehicles. Summer programs re-create late 19th-century
ranch activities.
Location: At the north edge of Deer Lodge, Mont., on
Interstate 90.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Deer Lodge.
Nebraska
Agate Fossil Beds
National Monument
c/o Scotts Bluff National Monument Box 27, Gering, NE 69341
(308) 668-2211
Well-known quarries--one open for public display--contain
numerous, concentrated, well-preserved Miocene mammal fossils. Represent an
important chapter in mammalian evolution. Visitor center, fossil exhibits,
selfguiding trail to area of exposed fossils.
Location: Off Nebr. 29, near Agate, Nebr. Harrison, Nebr.,
is 30 miles to the north. Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Harrison.
Homestead National
Monument of America
Route 3, Beatrice, NE 68310
(402) 223-3514
Site of one of the first claims filed under the Homestead
Act of 1862. Includes Freeman School. Visitor center, exhibits, restored cabin
and schoolhouses, self-guiding trail, guided tours arranged for groups,
home-style grist mill for grinding corn available for visitors to operate. Local
and state campgrounds nearby.
Location: Off Nebr. 4, 4.5 miles northwest of Beatrice, 50
miles south of Lincoln, Nebr.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Beatrice.
Niobrara National Scenic
Riverway
P.O. Box 591, O'Neill, NE 68763-0591
(402) 336-3970
The Niobrara creates spectacular natural scenery. The
river's upper portion runs through Fort Niobrara Wildlife Refuge.
Location: North-central Nebraska. Near Towns of Valentine
and Ainsworth; access to river is by unpaved country roads.
Scotts Bluff National
Monument
Box 27, Gering, NE 69341
(308) 436-4340
This landmark of towering bluffs was passed by tens of
thousands of westward-bound pioneers on the Oregon Trail, 1843-1869. In pass
through bluffs, ruts are still visible. Visitor center, exhibits, museum, Oregon
Trail ruts, covered wagons, living history demonstrations, interpretive
programs, self-guiding trail, bicycle trail. Camping and picnicking nearby.
Location 3 miles west of Gering, on Nebr. 92.
Accommodations Meals and lodging in Gering and Scottsbluff
(5 miles).
Nevada
Great Basin National
Park
Baker, NV 89311
(702) 234-7331
Ancient bristlecone pine forest, southernmost glacier in
the United States on 13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, and the tunnels and decorated
galleries of Lehman Caves. Guided tour of cave, picnicking, concessioner
services, camping.
Location: At terminus of State Highway 488. From U.S. 6
and 50, take State Route 487 south to 488 west.
Accommodations: Food service and gift shop. Meals and
lodging in Baker, 5 miles.
New
Hampshire
Saint-Gaudens National
Historic Site
RR # 3, Box 73, Cornish, NH 03745
(603) 675-2175
Memorial to American sculptor, Augustus Saint-Gaudens.
Contains his home, Aspet, and studios and gardens. Dramatic view of Mount
Ascutney across Connecticut River. Home, Little Studio, new gallery, historic
stables, cooperating association-sponsored Sunday concerts and art exhibitions,
sculptorin-residence in summer, nature trails. House and studios closed October
to May.
Location: Off N.H. 12A in Cornish.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in surrounding area.
New Jersey
Edison National Historic
Site
Main St. and Lakeside Ave.
West Orange, NJ 07052
(201) 736-5050
Buildings and equipment used for experiments by Thomas A.
Edison. Library, papers, and models commemorate important phase of nation's
technological progress. Glenmont, Edison's 23-room house, furnished as he and
his family lived in it. Guided tours at laboratory, exhibits, old movies,
library, world's first movie studio, Glenmont Home tour.
Location: Lakeside Avenue and Main Street, West Orange.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging nearby.
New Mexico
Aztec Ruins National
Monument
P.O. Box 640, Aztec, NM 87410
(505) 334-6174
Ruins of large Pueblo Indian community with 12th-century
buildings of masonry and timber. Misnamed by early American settlers. Visitor
center, museum, native crafts exhibits, self-guiding tours, local campground
near monument, picnicking.
Location: Outskirts of small northwestern New Mexico city
of Aztec.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Aztec.
Capulin Volcano National
Monument
Capulin, NM 88414
(505) 278-2201
Lone symmetrical cinder cone rising above northeastern New
Mexico plain, landmark for pioneers on Cimarron cutoff of Santa Fe Trail.
Geologically young (10,000 years) volcano. Grassland, forest, wildflowers.
Visitor center, exhibits, picnicking, self-guiding nature trails, handicapped
access. Private campgrounds nearby.
Location: Entrance on N. Mex. 325, 3 miles north of town
of Capulin.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in nearby Capulin, Des
Moines, Clayton, and Raton, N. Mex.
Chaco Culture National
Historical Park
Star Route 4, Box 6500
Bloomfield, NM 87413
(505) 786-7014
Major Indian ruins unsurpassed in the United States.
Represent highest point of Pueblo pre-Columbian civilization. Hundreds of
smaller ruins. Visitor center, campground, museum, self-guiding trails, hiking,
conducted tours, evening programs.
Location: N. Mex. 57 in northwestern New Mexico, 64 miles
south of Aztec, N. Mex.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Aztec.
El Malpais National
Monument
P.O. Box 939, Grants, NM 87020-0939
(505) 287-3407
El Malpis is a catolog of volcanic features, including
spatter cones, a 17-mile-long lava tube system, and numerous caves.
Location: Western New Mexico. From I-40 at Grants, take
N.Mex. 53 south and west or N.Mex. 117 west.
El Morro National
Monument
Route 2, Box 43, Ramah, NM 87321
(505) 783-4226
Soft sandstone of monolithic Inscription Rock bears
hundreds of inscriptions: 17th-century Spanish explorers, 19th-century American
emigrants and settlers. Also pre-Columbian petroglyphs. Visitor center,
self-guiding trail, wayside exhibits, picnicking, camping.
Location: 58 miles southeast of Gallup, N. Mex., via N.
Mex. 32 and 53.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Grants and Gallup.
Fort Union National
Monument
Watrous, NM 87753
(505) 425-8025
100 acres of adobe ruins. Remnants of Southwest's largest
frontier fort and supply depot, active 1851-91 as Santa Fe Trail guardian. Key
role in Indian Wars and Confederate defeat at Glorieta Pass. Trail ruts still
visible on prairie here. Visitor center, museum, selfguiding trail through
ruins, picnic area.
Location: 90 miles north of Santa Fe via Interstate 25 and
New Mexico 477.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Las Vegas, N. Mex., 26 miles south.
Gila Cliff Dwellings
National Monument
Route 11, Box 100, Silver City, NM 88061
(505) 536-9461
Well-preserved cliff dwellings in natural cavities on face
of overhanging cliff. Visitor center, hiking, self-guiding trails, guided pack
trips. Forest Service and local campgrounds nearby.
Location: 44 miles north of Silver City, N. Mex. via N.
Mex. 15.
Pecos National
Historical Park
P.O. Drawer 418, Pecos, NM 87522
(505) 757-6414
Foundations of 17th-century mission church praised in
Spanish writings. Ruins of 18th century church. Remains of Pecos Pueblo that
housed 2,000 Indians. Restored kivas. Visitor center, museum exhibits,
self-guiding ruins trail, introductory film, summer cultural demonstrations.
Location: 25 miles southeast of Santa Fe, via Interstate
25.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Pecos and Santa Fe.
Petroglyph National
Monument
4735 Unser Boulevard N.W., Albuquerque, NM 87120-2033 (505) 839-4429
More than 15,000 prehistoric Indian and Hispanic
petroglyphs stretch 17 miles along Albuquerque's West Mesa escarpment.
Location: Visitor center is located in Albuquerque, 3
miles north of I-40 on Unser Boulevard.
Salinas Pueblo Missions
National Monument
P.O. Box 496, Mountainair, NM 87036-0496
(505) 847-2585
Ruins of 800-year-old pueblo villages stand next to
outstanding examples of the remains of Spanish Franciscan missions.
Location: Main visitor center is in Mountainair, at
junction of U.S. 60 and N.Mex. 55.
NewYork
Castle Clinton National
Monument
c/o NPS Manhattan Sites 26 Wall Street, New York, NY 10005
(212) 344-7220
Built 1808-11, served first as New York Harbor defense,
then promenade and entertainment center, and immigration depot for 8 million
people entering nation, 1855-90. Structure being restored to reflect both
immigration and promenade eras. Will serve as amphitheater for cultural
activities in the New York City area.
Location: In Battery Park in New York City.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in New York City.
Eleanor Roosevelt
National Historic Site
519 Albany Post Road
Hyde Park, NY 12538
(914) 229-9115
Mrs. Roosevelt's beloved retreat, Val-Kill. Home and stone
cottage set among trees and ponds. Planned shuttle bus to site from FDR Home.
Guided tours of stone cottage and Val-Kill home/Depression factory.
Location: Entrance off Rt. 9G in Hyde Park. Site about 3
miles from Franklin Roosevelt Home-Library on Rt. 9 via St. Andrew's Road.
Off-season personal vehicle parking only: summer-fall bus shuttle.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging along Rts. 9 and 9G.
Federal Hall National
Memorial
c/o NPS Manhattan Sites, 26 Wall Street New York, NY 10005
(212) 264-8711
Graceful 1842 building on site of original Federal Hall,
where the Stamp Act Congress convened, 1765; the Second Continental Congress
met, 1785; Washington took the oath as first U.S. President, and Bill of Rights
was adopted, 1789: and where John Peter Zenger's trial, testing freedom of the
press, was held in 1735. Museum, motion picture, displays, audiovisual exhibits.
Location: 26 Wall Street, New York City.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in New York City.
Fort Stanwix National
Monument
112 East Park Street, Rome, NY 13440
(315) 336-2090
The August, 1777, American stand here helped repulse
British invasion from Canada. Site of Treaty of Fort Stanwix, 1768, with the
Iroquois. Accurately reconstructed 18th century fort, living history program May
- September, guided fort tours.
Location: Downtown Rome, at intersection of State Routes
26, 46, 49, 69, and 365.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Rome.
General Grant National
Memorial
122nd St. and Riverside Dr.
New York, NY 10027
(212) 666-1640
Largest mausoleum in America holds remains of General and
President Ulysses S. Grant and his wife Julia. "I cannot spare this man--he
fights," President Abraham Lincoln said of him. President Grant signed act
establishing the first national park, Yellowstone, in 1872. Self-guiding tours,
pleasant walks in surrounding Riverside Park.
Location: Riverside Drive and 122nd Street, and Henry
Hudson Parkway, overlooking Hudson River.
Accommodations: In New York City, Upper Manhattan area.
Hamilton Grange National
Memorial
287 Convent Avenue, New York, NY 10031
(212) 283-5154
The Grange, home of Alexander Hamilton, American statesman
and first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury. Guided house tour, exhibits.
Location: At Convent Avenue and West 141st Street. Can be
reached by 8th Avenue IND subway to West 145th Street. Accommodations Meals and
lodgingin New York City.
Martin Van Buren
National Historic Site
P.O. Box 545, Kinderhook, NY 12106
(518) 758-9689
The Lindenwald, estate of eighth President, Martin Van
Buren, the first President born in America. He grew up in this rural, eastern
New York State village. Built in 1797, house belonged to life-long friends, the
Van Ness family. In 1839, while President, Van Buren bought it and engaged
architect Richard Upjohn to design additions and alterations. Guided tours of
house, self-guiding walks on grounds. Van Buren gravesite in nearby Kinderhook
Village.
Location: Off rural Route 9H south of Kinderhook Village.
Accommodations: Small towns nearby. Traveler services on
nearby New York State Thruway and Taconic Parkway.
Sagamore Hill National
Historic Site
20 Sagamore Hill Road
Oyster Bay, NY 11771
(516) 922-4788
Estate of Theodore Roosevelt from 1885 until his death in
1919. Original furnishings. Guided tours of home and garden.
Location: Oyster Bay, N.Y., end of Cove Neck Road, 25
miles from New York City, on Long Island.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging on Long Island.
Saratoga National
Historical Park
RD 2, Box 33, Stillwater, NY 12170
(518) 664-9821
Scene of American victory over British in 1777; turning
point of Revolution and a decisive battle in world history. Maj. Gen. Phillip
Schuyler's country home. Visitor center, exhibits, self-guiding tour of
battlefield, Schuyler Home.
Location: 30 miles north of Albany, N.Y., on U.S. 54 and
N.Y. 32.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Schuylerville, N.Y.
Theodore Roosevelt
Birthplace National Historic Site
28 E. 20th Street
New York, NY 10003
(212) 260-1616
Birthplace in 1858 of 26th President of United States..
Guided tour of furnished Roosevelt family home, museum, movies, video tapes.
Location: 28 E. 20th Street, New York City.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in New York City.
Theodore Roosevelt
Inaugural National Historic Site
641 Delaware Avenue,
Buffalo, NY 14202
(716) 884-0095
Ansley Wilcox House, where Teddy Roosevelt was sworn in as
26th President, has served as commandant's home, living quarters for famous and
successful Buffalo citizens, and as a restaurant. Demolition plans in 1960s were
curbed by citizens' campaign. Wilcoxes lived here until 1930s. Guided and
self-guiding house tours.
Location: North Buffalo on Delaware Avenue near North
Street. Reached from Niagara Thruway, Main Street, or Franklin Street.
Accommodations: In Greater Buffalo Area.
Women's Rights National
Historical Park
P.O. Box 70, Seneca Falls, NY 13148
(315) 568-2991
Focuses on women's rights movement and founders. Bostonian
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and friends held famous 1848 convention here to publicize
long-standing injustices to women. Sites scattered around Seneca Falls Historic
District, which encircles Van Cleef Lake. Visitor center exhibits. Stanton House
tours.
Location: Visitor Center at 116 Fall Street near State
Street, in center of Historic District. Stanton Home at 32 Washington Street.
Park near junction of Rts. 414 and 20. New York State Thruway Exit 41 is about
15 miles from park.
Accommodations: Small towns in the Finger Lakes section of
Upstate New York.
Upper Delaware Scenic
and Recreational River
RR 2 Box 2428, Beach Lake, PA 18405-9737
717-685-4871
24 hour River Conditions Hotline: 914-252-7100
This is a 73.4 mile stretch of free flowing river between
Hancock and Sparrow Bush, NY., along the Pennysylvania-New York border. Public
fishing and boating access provided. The area is also home to the Roebling
Bridge, believed to be the oldest, existing, wire cable suspension bridge. The
Zane Grey home and museum are also here.
North
Carolina
Cape Lookout National
Seashore
3601 Bridges Street, Suite F
Morehead City, NC 28557
(919) 728-2250
Protects undeveloped barrier island environments extending
50 miles between Portsmouth Village and Cape Lookout. Extensive beaches and salt
marshes, low dunes, historic Portsmouth, and the 1859 Cape Lookout lighthouse.
Surf fishing, shell collecting, boating, lighthouse history talks,
naturalist-led walks, hunting, hiking, primitive camping.
Location: Visitor center off U.S. 70 on Harkers Island.
Seashore reached only by concessioner-operated ferry from Harkers Island, Davis,
Atlantic, or Ocracoke.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Beaufort, Morehead
City, and Atlantic Beach.
Carl Sandburg Home
National Historic Site
1928 Little River Road, Flat Rock, NC 28731
(704) 693-4178
The picturesque 250-acre farm of celebrated poet and
Lincoln biographer, Carl Sandburg, includes house, barns, and other buildings,
surrounded by rolling pastures, and gardens. Information center, self-guiding
tours, picnicking, guided tours of Sandburg Home, special interpretive programs,
farm animals.
Location: 3 miles south of Hendersonville, N.C.: 26 miles
south of Asheville, N.C., via Interstate 26 or U.S. 25.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Hendersonville.
Fort Raleigh National
Historic Site
Rt. 1, Box 675, Manteo, NC 27954
(919) 473-5772
Site of first English attempt to colonize New World,
during 1580s. Home of Lost Colony, whose fate remains a mystery. Visitor center,
exhibits. movie, self-guiding trails, reconstructed earthen fort, and
interpretive programs in summer.
Location: 3 miles north of Manteo on U.S. 64-264.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Manteo.
Guilford Courthouse
National Military Park
2332 New Garden Road, Greensboro, NC 27410-2355
(910) 288-1776
The battle fought here on March 25, 1781, was the most
hotly contested action of the Revolutionary War's climatic Southern Campaign.
The serious loss of British manpower suffered at Guilford Courthouse
foreshadowed the American victory seven months later at Yorktown.
Location: From U.S. 220 (Battleground Avenue) in
Greensboro, take New Garden Road to park entrance.
Moores Creek National
Battlefield
Box 69, Currie, NC 28435
(919) 283-5591
Scene of February 27, 1776 battle between North Carolina
Patriots and Loyalists. Patriot victory advanced revolutionary cause in South.
with North Carolina becoming first colony to vote independence. Visitor center,
exhibits, self-guiding tours, picnicking.
Location: 23 miles northwest of Wilmington, N.C., via U.S.
421 and N.C. 210.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Wilmington.
North
Dakota
Fort Union Trading Post
National Historic Site
Buford Route, Williston, ND 58801
(701) 572-9083
Foundation ruins of largest. most imposing 19th-century
trading post on Missouri River. Reconstruction planned; authentic setting
preserved. Visitor center. exhibits. guided tours, slide shows.
Location: On County Road 4. off U.S. 2.25 miles southwest
of Williston.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Williston. Camping at
Fort Buford State Historic Site.
Knife River Indian
Villages National Historic Site
RR 1, P.O. Box 168, Stanton, ND 58571
(701) 745-3300
Remnants of historic and prehistoric Indian villages, last
occupied 1845 by the Hidatsa. contain array of Plains Indian culture artifacts.
Visitor contact station, interpretive and exhibits, picnicking.
Location: 3 miles north of Stanton.
Accommodations: Limited meal and lodging services in
nearby Stanton, Beulah, Washburn.
Ohio
Hopewell Culture
National Historical Park
16062 State Route 104, Chillicothe, OH 45601-8694
(614) 774-1125
The 23 burial mounds and large geometric earthworks at
Mound City Group, as well as finely crafted trade goods reresent the culture of
the Hopewell people from about 200B.C. to A.D. 500.
Location: FromChillicothe, take Ohio 104 north for 3
miles.
Perry's Victory and
International Peace Memorial
P.O. Box 549, Put-in-Bay, OH 43456
(419) 285-2184
Memorial near site where Commodore Oliver H. Perry won
greatest naval battle of War of 1812: World's most massive Doric columns.
Observation platform. State and private campgrounds, picnicking nearby.
Location: 39 miles from Toledo, on South Bass Island in
Lake Erie, about 4 miles from mainland. Reached by autoferry from Catawpa Point
and Port Clinton. Air service from Port Clinton airport.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging on South Bass Island and
on mainland within 10 miles of ferry dock.
William Howard Taft
National Historic Site
2038 Auburn Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45219-3025
(513) 684-3262
William Howard Taft, 27th President and later Chief
Justice of the United States, lived in this house from his birth in 1857 until
his young adulthood.
Location: Downtown Cincinnati. At 2038 Auburn Ave.
Oregon
Fort Clatsop National
Memorial
Route 3, Box 604-FC, Astoria, OR 97103
(503) 861-2471
Lewis and Clark Expedition wintered here in 1805-6.
Reconstruction of fort site, exhibits, audiovisual programs, self-guiding
trails, summer costumed interpretation of Lewis and Clark Expedition--flintlock
rifle demonstrations, candle-making, dressing skins, making buckskin clothing,
building canoes. Picnicking and state and private campgrounds nearby.
Location: 5 miles southwest of Astoria; on U.S. 101,96
miles northwest of Portland.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Astoria.
John Day Fossil Beds
National Monument
420 W. Main, John Day, OR 97845
(503) 987-2333
Area records last 40 million years of Age of Mammals.
Monument has three separate sections. Streams and mountains. Fishing, trails,
picnicking, visitor center, overlooks. wayside exhibits.
Location: Headquarters at John Day. Visitor center 40
miles west near Dayville.
Accommodations: Food and lodging in nearby communities.
Oregon Caves National
Monument
19000 Caves Highway
Cave Junction, OR 97523
(503) 592-2100
Poet Joaquin Miller called these caves "The Marble
Halls of Oregon." Passages in limestone with intricate flowstone
formations. Surrounded by virgin forests of Siskiyou Mountains. Guided cave
tour, information station. Campground in Siskiyou National Forest 8 miles on
Ore. 46.
Location: 20 miles east of Cave Junction on Ore. Route 46;
50 miles south of Grants Pass.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging June 11 through
September 4, write Oregon Caves Chateau, Box 128, Cave Junction, OR 97523. Food
service and child care. Other meals and lodging in Cave Junction.
Pennsylvania
Allegheny Portage
Railroad National Historic Site
Box 247, Cresson, PA 16630
(814) 886-6150
Traces and structures of Allegheny Portage Railroad, built
1831-34. Lifted passengers and cargoes of Pennsylvania canal boats over
Allegheny Mountains. Visitor center and museum at Lemon House, picnicking
half-mile west. Living history demonstrations, interpretive talks, trails,
cross-country ski trails.
Location: In Blair and Cambria Counties. U.S. 22 is main
route through area. Visitor center on U.S. 22, 2 miles east of Cresson.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Cresson.
Edgar Allan Poe National
Historic Site
313 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
(215) 597-8780
Edgar Allan Poe's 6 years in Philadelphia were his most
productive. He published "The Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Goldbug."
Of his Philadelphia residences, only this home survives. House tours, exhibits,
audiovisual program, small garden next to site.
Location: On 7th St. 6 blocks north of Market St. By car,
take 3rd or 5th Sts. north to Spring Garden, then west to 7th. From the Benjamin
Franklin Bridge, turn right on 7th to Spring Garden (street will detour). Free
parking on street. By public transportation: from Market St. take #47 bus north
from 9th St., or from Liberty Bell take #50 trolley north at 5th and Market to
Spring Garden. walk 2 blocks west to 532 N. Seventh St.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Philadelphia.
Eisenhower National
Historic Site
97 Taneytown Rd., Gettysburg, PA 17325-2804 (717) 338-9114
Built in the 1830's, the railroad portage over the
Allegheny Mountains, through only a short section section of the Pennsylvania
Main Line canals of eastern and western Pennsylvania.
Location: Park can only be reached by shuttle bus from the
Gettysburg National Military Park visitor center, off U.S. 15 (Emmitsburg Road).
Fort Necessity National
Battlefield
RD 2, Box 528, The National Pike
Farmington, PA 15437
(412) 329-5512
Scene of battle opening French and Indian War, July 3,
1754. Colonials under Lt. Col. George Washington, aged 22, met French troops and
Indians. Also Mount Washington Tavern, refurnished 19th-century stagecoach inn.
Visitor center, slide program, archeological exhibits, reconstructed fort,
guided tours of tavern, picnicking. Private and state campgrounds nearby.
Location: 11 miles east of Uniontown, Pa. on U.S. 40.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Uniontown.
Friendship Hill National
Historic Site
c/o Fort Necessity National Battlefield RD 2, Box 528, TheNational Pike
Farmington, PA 15437
(412) 329-5512
Young Swiss immigrant Albert Gallatin made his home here
on frontier's edge in 1780s. Gallatin, Secretary of the Treasury 1801-13, served
his adopted country in business, politics, diplomacy, and scholarship. Conducted
tours of unrestored 35-room Gallatin house, visitor center with exhibits and
slide program, 5.4-mile hiking/cross-country ski trail, limited picnic
facilities. Private and state campgrounds within 30 miles.
Location Along State Route 166, 3 miles north of Point
Marion, Pa., about midway between Uniontown, Pa. and Morgantown, W. Va.
Accommodations Meals in Point Marion and Masontown, Pa.
Meals and lodging in Uniontown and Morgantown.
Hopewell Furnace
National Historic Site
R.D. # 1, Box 345, Elverson, PA 19520
(610) 582-8773
Finest example of early American iron plantation. Hopewell
produced iron 1771-1883. Restored charcoal-fueled iron furnace, waterwheel, cast
house, ironmaster's mansion, workers' homes, and other industrial and domestic
buildings. Visitor center with slide program and exhibits, summer living history
program, walking tour. Camping and recreational facilities in adjoining state
park.
Location: 5 miles south of Birdsboro, Pa., on Pa. Route
345, 45 miles northwest of Philadelphia.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Reading, Portstown,
and Morgantown.
Johnstown Flood National
Memorial
P.O. Box 355, St. Michael, PA 15951
(814) 495-4643
Memorializes tragic Johnstown Flood of 1889, caused by
break in South Fork Dam on Little Conemaugh River tributary. Visitor center at
dam site. interpretive talks during summer months, interpretive trails, picnic
facilities.
Location: Along U.S. 219 and Pa. 869 at the South Fork Dam
site, 10 miles northeast of Johnstown near St. Michael, Pa.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Johnstown.
Steamtown National
Historic Site
150 S. Washington Ave. Scranton, PA 18503-2018
(717) 340-5200
The former Deleware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad
yard-including the remains of the roundhouse, switchyard, associated buildings,
steam locomotives, and railroad cars-tell the story of early-20th-century steam
railroading in America.
Location: In downtown Scranton; entrance is off Lackawanna
Ave. at Bridge Street.
Thaddeus Kosciuszko
National Memorial
c/o Independence National Historic Park
313 Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19106-2278
(215) 597-9618
The life and career of this Polish-born patriot and hero
of the American Revolution are commemorated at the site where Kosciuszko lived
in 1797-98.
Location: Downtown Philadelphia. At 301 Pine Street.
Upper Delaware Scenic
and Recreational River
RR 2 Box 2428, Beach Lake, PA 18405-9737
717-685-4871
24 hour River Conditions Hotline: 914-252-7100
This is a 73.4 mile stretch of free flowing river between
Hancock and Sparro w Bush, NY., along the Pennysylvania-New York border. Public
fishing and boatin g access provided. The area is also home to the Roebling
Bridge, believed to be the oldest, existing, wire cable suspension bridge. The
Zane Grey home and museum are also here.
Rhode
Island
Roger Williams National
Memorial
282 N. Main Street
Providence, RI 02903
(401) 521-7266
Undeveloped site commemorates Roger Williams, 17th-century
advocate of religious freedom and democracy, who rounded Colony of Rhode Island
in 1636. Located in the College Hill Historic District. Slide program, exhibits,
area information, and a small formal garden memorializing the Roger Williams
Spring.
Location: 282 North Main Street, Providence.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in the Greater
Providence Area.
South
Carolina
Congaree Swamp National
Monument
200 Caroline Sims Road, Hopkins, SC 29061
(803) 776-4396
Last significant tract of pristine southern bottomland
hardwoods in southeast United States. Great variety of trees, many of state or
national record size. Visitor contact and first-aid station, fishing, hiking
trails, canoeing, guided walking tours on Saturdays, guided canoe tours on
Sundays. Boardwalk under construction.
Location: 20 miles southeast of Columbia off S.C. 48
{Bluff Rd.t. Signs lead to the park on Old Bluff Road.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging available in Columbia.
Cowpens National
Battlefield
P.O. Box 308, Chesnee, SC 29323
(803) 461-2828
Site of Brig. Gen. Daniel Morgan's victory over British
Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton on January 17.1781, about three months after the
American success at Kings Mountain. Visitor center, museum exhibits,
self-guiding trail. battlefield tour road, picnic facilities, multi-image slide
presentation, battlefield map display.
Location: 11 miles northwest of Interstate 85 at Caffney.
S.C.. and two miles southeast of U.S. 221 at Chesnee, at the intersection of
S.C. 11 and 110.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Gaffney.
Kings Mountain National
Military Park
Box 40, Kings Mountain, NC 28086
(803) 936-7921
Site of important American frontiersmen victory at
critical point in Revolution, October 7, 1780. Visitor center, museum exhibits,
self-guiding trail, hiking and horse trails, living history camp and evening
programs on summer weekends. Camping and picnicking in adjoining state park.
Location: In South Carolina, 35 miles northeast of
Spartanburg, S.C., on U.S. 29.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Gaffney and
Spartanburg, S.C.
Ninety Six National
Historic Site
Box 496, Ninety Six, SC 29666
(803) 543-4068
Important backcountry trading village held briefly by
British in Revolution was scene of Nathanael Greene's siege in 1781. Earthwork
embankments, remains of two historic villages. colonial plantation, and
prehistoric sites. Visitor center, picnicking, Revolutionary War interpretive
trails. Camping in Greenwood State Park, 8 miles away.
Location: 9 miles east of Greenwood and 2 miles south of
Ninety Six, S.C., on State Highway 248.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Greenwood.
South
Dakota
Jewel Cave National
Monument
R.R. 1, Box 60AA, Custer, SD 57730
(605) 673-2288
Caverns in limestone formation. Series of chambers
connected by narrow passages. Many side galleries and fine calcite crystal
encrustations. Visitor center, cave tours, picnicking.
Location: 13 miles west of Custer, on U.S. 16.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Custer and in
Newcastle, Wyo.
Tennessee
Andrew Johnson National
Historic Site
P.O. Box 1088, Greeneville, TN 37744
(615) 638-3551
Home, tailor shop, and grave of 17th President of United
States, 1865-69. Includes Andrew Johnson National Cemetery. Visitor center,
museum, tailor shop, Andrew Johnson Home.
Location: In Greeneville, Tenn., 70 miles northeast of
Knoxville, Tenn.
Accommodations Meals and lodging in Greeneville.
Fort Donelson National
Military Park
P.O. Box 434, Dover, TN 37058
(615) 232-5706
Site of February, 1862 Civil War battle, first major Union
victory. Began Ulysses S. Grant's rise to prominence. Remains of Confederate
built fort, water batteries, and outer defenses. Dover Hotel, restored site of
surrender. Visitor center, exhibits, self-guiding auto tour, National Cemetery.
Location: West side of Dover on U.S. 79.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Dover.
Obed Wild and Scenic
River
P.O.Box 429, Wartburg, TN 37887-0429
(615) 346-6294
The Obed River and its two main tributaries cut deeply
here into the sandstone of the Cumberland Plateau.
Location: From Wartburg, take U.S.27 north to Tenn. 62
west.
Stones River National
Battlefield
3501 Old Nashville Highway
Murfreesboro, TN 37129
(615) 893-9501
Scene of a fierce mid-winter battle, December 31,
1862-January 2, 1863, which began Union offensive to trisect Confederacy.
Visitor center, self-guiding auto tour of battlefield, interpretive exhibits,
National Cemetery. picnicking. Army Corps of Engineers and private campgrounds
nearby.
Location: Northwest corner of Murfreesboro, 30 miles
southeast of Nashville, Tenn.. on U.S. 40.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Murfreesboro.
Texas
Alibates Hint Quarries
National Monument Box 1438, Fritch, TX 79036 (806) 857-3151
Quarries used from 12,000 years ago to 1870s.
Multi-colored flint was used for tools of survival. Undeveloped. Guided tours
daily Memorial Day to Labor Day; by reservation at other times.
Location: Adjoins Lake Meredith Recreation Area, 40 miles
north of Amarillo, Tex.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Fritch and Borger.
Big Thicket National
Preserve
3785 Milam, Beaumont, TX 77701
(409) 246-2337
Great biological diversity. Plants and animals from
eastern deciduous forests, southern pine savannahs, and prairies. Visitor
information station, hiking, guided walks, self-guiding trails, fishing,
boating.
Location: Widely separated units scattered north of
Beaumont. Information station on FM 420, 2.5 miles east of U.S. 69, 7 miles
north of Kountze.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Beaumont and smaller
towns of Woodville, Silsbee, and Kountze.
Chamizal National
Memorial
800 S. San Marcial, El Paso, TX 79905
(915) 532-7273
Memorializes signing of 1963 treaty resolving 99-year
boundary dispute between United States and Mexico. Area presents International
Boundary history. Activities preserve cultural heritages of both nations.
Visitor center, museum, interpretive exhibits, documentary film, travel
information, graphic arts galleries, biking, picnicking, theatrical
performances. Auditorium open 8 to 5 daily, evenings as scheduled. Festivals in
March, May, July, September, and October.
Location: In south-central El Paso on International
Boundary. Entrances from San Marcial Street and Delta Drive, easy access to and
from Interstate 10.
Accommodations Meals and lodging in El Paso and Juarez,
Mexico, adjacent to park.
Fort Davis National
Historic Site
Box 1456, Fort Davis, TX 79734
(915) 426-3224
Strategic west Texas defense post from 1854-1891. Troops
guarded traffic on the San Antonio-El Paso Road, protected region's settlers,
and campaigned against Comanche and Apache Indians. Visitor center with museum
and audiovisual program, restored and refurnished historic buildings,
interpretive programs, picnic area.
Location: Northern edge of town of Fort Davis. Reached
from Interstate 10 via Tex. 17 and 118 or from U.S. 90 via 505 and 166 or 17.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in town of Fort Davis
and in nearby Davis Mountains State Park.
Guadalupe Mountains
National Park
H.C. 60, Box 400
Salt Flat, TX 79847
(915) 828-3251
Most extensive exposed fossil reef on Earth. Scenic desert
lowlands, rugged canyons, and forested mountains. Highest peak in Texas.
Camping, backpacking. hiking, visitor center, guided hikes, primitive roads, and
interpretive programs.
Location: On U.S. 62-180, 55 miles southwest of Carlsbad,
N. Mex., 110 miles east of El Paso, Tex.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in White's City, 34
miles northeast on U.S. 62-180, and in Carlsbad.
Lyndon B. Johnson
National Historical Park
P.O.Box 329, Johnson City, TX 78636-0329
(210) 868-7128
LBJ's Birthplace, boyhood home, grandparents' log cabin,
and ranch, along with the Johnson family cemetery and much of the historic
landscape, commemorate the life and career of the 36th President.
Location: LBJ Boyhood home and Johnson Settlement are in
Johnson City. LBJ Ranch is 14 miles west of Johnson City off U.S.290.
Utah
Golden Spike National
Historic Site
P.O. Box W, Brigham City, UT 84302
(801) 471-2209
Marks joining of America's first transcontinental
railroad. Final spike driven here in 1869, uniting Union Pacific and Central
Pacific Railroads. Visitor center, interpretive programs, picnicking.
Location: 32 miles west of Brigham City.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Brigham City and
Tremonton.
Natural Bridges National
Monument
Box 1, Lake Power, UT 84533
(801) 259-5174
Sipapu, Kachina, Owachomo--stream-eroded bridges with
lyrical names. From 180 to 268 feet in span and 9 to 93 feet thick. Prehistoric
pictographs. Visitor center, campground, exhibits, hiking, nature trails,
picnicking, scenic view.
Location: 40 miles west of Blanding via Utah 95.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Blanding.
Rainbow Bridge National
Monument
c/o Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
Box 1507, Page, AZ 86040
(602) 645-2511
World's greatest natural bridge. Symmetrical arch of
salmon-pink sandstone rises 290 feet above gorge. Camping, picnicking, boating,
boat tours by concessioners. Scenic flights from Page.
Location: Reached by trail from base Navajo Mountain (15
miles): also by from Lake Powell in Glen Canyon Recreation Area.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Page. Camping in Glen
Canyon NRA.
Timpanogos Cave National
Monument
R.R.3, Box 200, American Fork, UT 84003-9803
(801) 756-5239
The Colorful limestone cavern on the side of Mount
Timpanogos is noted for helictites-glasslike formations that grow in all
directions and shapes.
Location: Salt Lake City area. Take I-15 south to Utah 92.
Virginia
Appomattox Court House
National Historical Park
Box 218, Appomattox, VA 24522
(804) 352-8987
Scene of surrender, on April 9, 1865, of Confederacy's
largest field army, under Gen. Robert E. Lee, to Federal Army under Lt. Gen.
Ulysses S. Grant. Courthouse, restored town, visitor center, exhibits, 6-mile
hiking trail. Camping and picnic areas nearby.
Location: 3 miles northeast of town of Appomattox on Va.
24, and 75 miles from Roanoke.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Appomattox.
Booker T. Washington
National Monument
Route 3, Box 310, Hardy, VA 24101
(703) 721-2094
Site of birthplace and childhood home of black leader and
educator. A Living Farm area with crops and farm animals. Park interpreters in
period dress, mid-June to Labor Day. Visitor center, exhibits, audiovisual
program, self-guiding trail, living history farm and picnic area. Private and
public campgrounds nearby.
Location: 16 miles northeast of Rocky Mount,Va., via Va.
122N, and 20 miles southeast of Roanoke via Va. 116S and 122N, and 21 miles
southwest of Bedford via 122.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Rocky Mount, Roanoke,
and Bedford.
George Washington
Birthplace National Monument
R.R. 1, Box 717
Washington's Birthplace, VA 22443
(804) 224-1732
Birthplace of first U.S. President, memorial mansion, and
gardens. Site of tombs of his father, grandfather, and greatgrandfather.
Restored and operating Colonial farm complete with crops, plowing, preparation
of period food, and guides in period dress. Historic mansion area, colonial
farm, burial grounds, hiking trails, picnic areas, visitor center.
Location: On Potomac River, 38 miles east of
Fredericksburg, Va., reached from Va. 3 via Va. 204. 85 miles southeast of
Washington, D.C.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Fredericksburg,
Montross, and Colonial Beach.
Maggie L. Walker
National Historic Site
c/o Richmond National Battlefield Park
3215 East Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23223
(804) 780-1380
Restored home of black community leader who was first
woman president of a U.S. financial institution. Period furnishings. Please call
before visit. Guided tours arranged. Restoration underway: projected opening in
1985.
Location: Downtown Richmond at 1101/2 East Leigh Street,
in Jackson Ward National Historic Landmark District.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Richmond.
Virgin
Islands
Buck Island Reef
National Monument
Box 160, Christiansted, St. Croix, VI 00820
(809) 773-1460
Among the finest coral reefs and crystal lagoons in the
Caribbean. Grottoes, sea fans, gorgonias, and tropical fishes. Underwater trail.
Rookery of frigate birds and pelicans. Habitat of sea turtles. Boating tour,
swimming, skindiving, underwater trail, nature trail, bathhouse, picnic areas,
snorkeling.
Location: Off northeast coast of St. Croix, Virgin
Islands. Reached only by boat.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Christiansted.
Christiansted National
Historic Site
Box 160, Christiansted, St. Croix, VI 00820
(809) 773-1460
Commemorates colonial development of Virgin Islands.
Preserves 18th- and 19th-century Danish colonial structures at former Danish
West Indies capital on St. Croix Island. Discovered by Christopher Columbus,
1493. Walking tour of restored buildings, information at Park Service visitor
center at Fort Christiansvaern in downtown Christiansted.
Location: In city of Christiansted on St. Croix.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging Christiansted.
Washington
Ebey's Landing National
Historical Reserve
P.O. Box 774, Coupville, WA 98239-0074
(360) 678-6084
This rural historic district-including farms little
changed since the 1850's-provides a continuous record of Puget Sound exploration
and settlement. The reserve includes prairies, beaches, and the Victorian
seaport of coupeville.
Location: Whidbey Island in Puget Sound. Island can be
reached by car, scheduled ferry, or by boat. Museum is in Coupville at 908 N.W.
Alexander Street.
Fort Vancouver National
Historic Site
612 E. Reserve Street, Vancouver, WA 98661
(360) 696-7655
Western headquarters of Hudson's Bay Company, 1825-49.
Trading and political hub for Pacific Northwest. Visitor center, museum
exhibits, reconstructed stockade, children's playground. Picnicking and private
campground nearby.
Location: Vancouver, Wash.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Greater Vancouver
Area.
Klondike Gold Rush
National Historical Park
117 South Main Street, Seattle, WA 98104
(206) 553-7220
Interprets: Seattle's role as main supply center for
Alaska and Klondike gold fields, 1897-1898, and relates gold rush drama. Mining
exhibits, artifacts. large historic photomurals, audiovisual programs.
Location: 117 So. Main in Seattle's historic Pioneer
Square area.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in immediate area.
San Juan Island National
Historical Park
Box 429, Friday Harbor, WA 98250
(206) 378-2240
Commemorates peaceful relations--United States, Great
Britain, and Canada--since 1872 boundary dispute here. Includes English and
American campsites. Limited camping in county-owned park, small commercial
trailer park, two small commercial campgrounds, remains of earthworks and two
structures in American Camp, four remaining structures in English Camp.
Location: Reached by autoferry from Anacortes, Wash.,
about 88 miles north of Seattle. Also, by private boats, or by air from Seattle
to Friday Harbor.
Accommodations: Limited overnight accommodations at Friday
Harbor and Roche Harbor.
Whitman Mission National
Historic Site
Route 2, Box 247, Walla Walla, WA 99362
(509) 522-6360
Commemorates Marcus and Narcissa Whitman's courage and
labor amongNative Americans in Old Oregon when American immigrants began
comingdown the Oregon Trail. Clash between Indian and American cultures led
totheir deaths in 1847. Visitor center, picnicking, museum, exhibits,
self-guiding trails, mission site, pioneer and Indian cultural demonstrations.
Location: 7 miles west of Walla Walla off U.S. 12.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Walla Walla.
West
Virginia
Bluestone National
Scenic River
c/o New River Gorge National River P.O.Box 246, Glen Jean, WV 25846-0246
(304)456-0508
This area protects 11 miles of this relatively unspoiled
river, along with the natural and historic Appalachian plateau landscape.
Location: There are river access points off W.V. 20
between towns of Hinton and Princeton, through Bluestone or Pipestem state
parks.
Gauley River National
Recreational Area
c/o New River Gorge National River
P.O. Box 264, Glen Jean, WV 25846-0246
(302) 456-0508
The 25 miles of free-flowing Gauley River and 6 miles of
the Meadow River pass through scenic gorges and valleys containing a wide
variety of natural and cultural features.
Location: From Summersville, take U.S.19 south, then W.V.
129 west to main river access point at Summersville Dam.
Wisconsin
Apostle Islands National
Lakeshore
Route 1, Box 4, Bayfield, WI 54814
(715) 779-3397
Twenty islands and a 12-mile strip on Lake Superior's
south shore. Sandstone cliffs, sea caves, lighthouses, sand beaches.
Headquarters and visitor center in Bayfield. Hiking, sailing, boat tours,
beachcombing, nature photography, commercial fishing, museum, hunting, fishing,
tent camping in designated and backcountry sites on most islands.
Location: Mainland unit 13 miles northwest of Bayfield.
Islands reached by concession operated or private boat.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Bayfield.
Wyoming
Fort Laramie National
Historic Site
Fort Laramie, WY 82212
(307) 837-2221
Site of fur-trading post and surviving buildings of major
military post guarding covered-wagon trails to West, 1834-90. Visitor center,
self-guiding tours, military and civilian life on a frontier military post
portrayed, including loading and firing demonstrations, and post trading
operations.
Location: 3 miles southwest of town of Fort Laramie on
U.S. 26.
Accommodations: Meals and lodging in Fort Laramie.
Fossil Butte National
Monument
Box 527, Kemmerer, WY 83101
(307) 877-4455
Nation's most extensive concentration of fossilized
freshwater fish, in 60 million-year-old layers of shale. Visitor center, hiking,
exhibits, picnicking, interpretive programs.
Location: 10 miles north of Kemmerer on U.S. 30.
Accommodations: Meals and logging in Kemmerer.
Lesser
Known Areas - Part 1
Last updated: Tuesday, 13-Jul-99 16:20:06