Synopsis
On the Road with eTravelogue is a weekly travel program containing insider tips, must-have information, and interviews with attractions suggested by YOU, the eTravelogue community. Chock full of road trip itinerary ideas!
Episodes
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Issue 45 - Washington DC - Part2
19/04/2007Back again to our Nation`s Capital we go. We`re headed for more of the 3 M`s - memorials, monuments and museums. Come with me as we visits presidents Lincoln and Roosevelt, and honor our fallen of Vietnam and Korea.Websites:Washington DC National Park - Monuments and Memorialshttp://www.nps.gov/namaWashington DC Tourismhttp://www.washington.orgeTravelogue.comhttp://www.eTravelogue.com/Be sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 44 - Washington DC – Part1
02/04/2007Museums, monuments & memorials – the 3 "M`s" that are part of Washington DC. Let`s not forget the 4th of July. Come along as I explore our country’s history during its birthday celebration – this is only the beginning.Websites:Smithsonian Institutehttp://www.si.eduArlington National Cemeteryhttp://www.arlingtoncemetery.orgHenley Park Hotelhttp://www.henleypark.comInternational Spy Museumhttp://www.spymuseum.orgWashington DC National Park – Monuments & Memorialshttp://www.nps.gov/namaWashington DC Tourismhttp://www.washington.orgeTravelogue.comhttp://www.eTravelogue.com/Be sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 43 Atlantic City
23/02/2007Casinos, the boardwalk, & Ripley’s Believe it or Not. These are just a few of things Atlantic City has to offer. Located on Absecon Island, Atlantic City is one of the east coasts oldest beach resort towns. Just an hour’s drive from the Philadelphia Airport and a short road trip from the New England area – here is a place that is easy to get to and can offer a little something for everyone.Websites:Atlantic Cityhttp://www.atlanticcitynj.comRipley’s Believe It or Nothttp://www.ripleys.comBruleehttp://www.bruleedesserts.comeTravelogue.comhttp://www.eTravelogue.com/Be sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 41 Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail
02/11/2006In 1776, as Americans fought for their independence in the East, Spanish Captain Juan Bautista de Anza led almost 300 people over 1200 miles to settle Alta California. It was the first overland route established to connect New Spain with San Francisco. Now thanks to the preservation of this historic trail, you can walk in their footsteps from Arizona to San Francisco, California. This week we're speaking with Margaret Styles from the National Park service about this historic trail.This week's interview: Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic TrailWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/jubaBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 40 Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site
26/10/2006In Saugus, a little town just north of Boston, is a site that has been called the "forerunner of America's industrial giants" Saugus Iron Works is the site of a 17th century iron making plant. The site contains the reconstructed iron works house, blast furnace, forge and rolling mill. Its amazing to think what could be created in the 1600s with only fire and the power of water.This week's interview: Saugus Iron Works National Historic SiteWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/sairBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 39 Big Hole National Battlefield
19/10/2006Big Hole National Battlefield is a memorial to the people who fought and died here on August 9 and 10, 1877.In 1877, about 750 non-treaty Nez Perce fled Idaho in the face of demands from the US Army that all Nez Perce move onto a reservation a fraction from the size of their traditional homeland. The Army was enforcing a national policy of placing all American Indians on reservations to make way for the westward expansion of the young United States. In early August, the non-treaty Nez Perce camped for several days along the North Fork of the Big Hole River. They knew they had crossed into Montana Territory, and believed they were safe from further pursuit. Just before daybreak on August 9, 1877, military forces attacked them as they rested after six weeks of conflict and flight. Although the soldiers and civilian volunteers attacked the village while most of the Nez Perce slept, the warriors quickly mounted a resistance and drove the military men to retreat to a wooded hill nearby. The soldiers dug trenches f
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Issue 36 Las Vegas
28/09/2006While it may be disheartening to think that there`s no way you could even sit in the same theater where the rat pack once performed, there`s one group trying to preserve a bit of Las Vegas history. And if you`ve been to Fremont Street, you`ve probably seen their work, which includes the 1966 lamp from the Aladdin and the 1967 Hacienda horse and rider.The Neon Museum is a non-profit group that has been collecting neon signs from all over Las Vegas and through generous donations they have been able to restore some of these mid-century wonders and install them in the downtown area as public arts displays. They are raising money to create an exhibit space from the lobby of the old La Concha hotel, which they hope to move from its current site to their land just north of downtown.This week's interview: The Neon Museum in Las Vegas, NevadaWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.neonmuseum.org/ Be sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program! Listen to this is
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Issue 35 Pipe Spring National Monument
21/09/2006This week we're speaking with Andrea Bornemeier, who is the Chief of Interpretation at Pipe Spring National Monument in Arizona. Pipe Spring National Monument preserves a slice of the old west. Native Americans had been using the waters at Pipe Spring for a thousand years before the Mormon settlement arrived. Later, it acted as a way station for people traveling across the Arizona Strip, the part of Arizona separated from the rest of the state by the Grand Canyon. Eventually, it became a private ranch, and today is surrounded by Native American lands, and hosts a visitor center and museum dedicated to them.This week's interview: Pipe Spring National Monument Websites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/pispBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program! Listen to this issue
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Issue 34 Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
14/09/2006This week we are speaking with Dean Alexander from Hopewell Culture National Historic Park in Ohio. The park contains nationally significant archeological resources including large earthwork and mound complexes that provide an insight into the social, ceremonial, political, and economic life of the Hopewell people, a number of different Native American groups which inhabited a large portion of eastern North America. The most striking Hopewell sites contain earthworks in the form of squares, circles, and other geometric shapes.Many of these sites were built to a monumental scale, with earthen walls up to 12 feet high outlining geometric figures more than 1000 feet across. Conical and loaf-shaped earthen mounds up to 30 feet high are often found in association with the geometric earthworks.This week's interview: Hopewell Culture National Historical ParkWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/hocuBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Lis
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Issue 32 Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site
31/08/2006Special Announcement: You could win a free GPS system just by sending us your photo! Check out http://www.eTravelogue.com for more information!The history of land and vegetation use in the vicinity of Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site begins with the Native American occupation. This occurred about 10,000 years ago when big game hunting and berry/nut gathering people traversed the area. For nearly a millennium this area was a trading hub established by the earthlodged Hidatsa and Mandan tribes with the primary commodity being Knife River flint. In addition, it is important as a place where Indian culture and agriculture developed. It should be noted that there were more people living along the Knife and Missouri Rivers in the 18th and early 19th Century than there are today. After the small-pox epidemic in 1837, the Hidatsa and Mandan tribes abandoned their villages here and moved approximately 60 miles up river to establish Like-a-Fishhook village.During the second half of the 19th Century s
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Issue 31 Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument
24/08/2006Special Announcement: You could win a free GPS system just by sending us your photo! Check out http://www.eTravelogue.com for more information!Once, thriving American Indian trade communities of Tiwa and Tompiro speaking Puebloans inhabited this remote frontier area of central New Mexico. Early in the 17th-century Spanish Franciscans found the area ripe for their missionary efforts. However, by the late 1670s the entire Salinas District, as the Spanish had named it, was depopulated of both Indian and Spaniard.What remains today are austere yet beautiful reminders of this earliest contact between Pueblo Indians and Spanish Colonials: the ruins of four mission churches, at Quarai, Ab, and Gran Quivira and the partially excavated pueblo of Las Humanas or, as it is known today, Gran Quivira. Established in 1980 through the combination of two New Mexico State Monuments and the former Gran Quivira National Monument, the present Monument comprises a total of 1,100 acres.This week's interview: Salinas Pueblo Mission
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Issue 25 Port Chicago Naval Magazine National Memorial
13/07/2006On the night of July 17, 1944, residents in the San Francisco area were awakened a massive explosion that lit up the sky. At Port Chicago Naval Magazine 40 miles east of San Francisco, 320 men were instantly killed when the munitions ships they were loading mysteriously blew up. It was the largest homeland disaster during World War II. Everyone within 1,000 feet of the loading dock perished The memorial preserves the site of the accident, and the incident plays an important role in American history, as it eventually lead to a mutiny court martial and was a catalyst in the desegregation of the US armed forces.The memorial is on an active military base, so reservations and security checks are required you to visit. More on that during the interview.This week's interview: Port Chicago Naval Magazine National MonumentWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/pochBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 24 - Salem, Massachusetts
06/07/2006Living on Bostons North Shore, I decided it was time to take the etravelogue.com gang on a tour of one my favorite places Salem, MA. With its rich seafaring history, the infamous Witch Trials of 1692 and the home of great American author Nathaniel Hawthorne Salem has a little bit of everything.Join me on a tour of the Witch City as we visit the Salem Witch Museum, the House of Seven Gables and what Halloween in Salem is all about.Websites:http://www.salemwitchmuseum.com http://www.witchdungeon.com http://www.7gables.comhttp://www.hauntedhappenings.com Be sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 23 Chiricahua National Monument
29/06/2006Twenty seven million years ago a volcanic eruption of immense proportions shook the land around Chiricahua National Monument. One thousand times greater than the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, the Turkey Creek Caldera eruption eventually laid down two thousand feet of highly silicious ash and pumice. This mixture fused into a rock called rhyolitic tuff and eventually eroded into the spires and unusual rock formations of today. The monument is a mecca for hikers and birders. At the intersection of the Chihuahuan and Sonoran deserts, and the southern Rocky Mountains and northern Sierra Madre in Mexico, Chiricahua plants and animals represent one of the premier areas for biological diversity in the northern hemisphere.Of historic interest is the Faraway Ranch, a pioneer homestead and later a working cattle and guest ranch. It is a significant example of human transformation of the western frontier from wilderness to the present settlement. Faraway Ranch offers glimpses into the lives of Swedish immigrants Ne
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Issue 21 Fossil Butte National Monument
15/06/2006Sometimes its amazing just how many natural wonders we have here in this country. Theres just so much that it can be overwhelming, but I guess thats what the National Parks Service is for.Take Fossil Butte National Monument in Wyoming for example. Its one of the richest fossil locations in the world. Its a 50-million year old lake bed that is so complete, that complete ecosystems spanning over 2 million years are preserved. Wow.Visitors are also encouraged to take part in the work being done at the site, and to help in discovering the next great fossils on display in the museums collection. Well give you the details of that in interview, so you can bring your kids out to take part in a real fossil dig!This week's interview: Fossil Butte National MonumentWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/fobuBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 20 - South Florida
08/06/2006I recently took a trip to South Florida and am going to share with you some of the unique spots I found to visit. From unique and unusual architecture to just the unique and unusual well be taking a quick spin through the South Beach, Miami Art Deco District, to a castle made of coral and on to the crazy world of Robert Ripley at Orlandos Believe or Not Museum.Websites:eTravelogue Americas Complete Road Trip Plannerhttp://www.eTravelogue.com/Art Deco Districthttp://www.mdpl.comCoral Castlehttp://www.coralcastle.comRipleys Believe It or Nothttp://www.ripleys.comBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue
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Issue 19 Booker T. Washington National Historic Site
01/06/2006From the National Parks website:"On April 5, 1856, a child who later called himself Booker T. Washington, was born in slavery on this 207-acre tobacco farm. The realities of life as a slave in piedmont Virginia, the quest by African Americans for education and equality, and the post-war struggle over political participation all shaped the options and choices of Booker T. Washington. Washington founded Tuskegee Institute in Alabama in 1881 and later became an important and controversial leader of his race at a time when increasing racism in the United States made it necessary for African Americans to adjust themselves to a new era of legalized oppression. Visitors are invited to step back in time and experience firsthand the life and landscape of people who lived in an era when slavery was part of the fabric of American life."This week's interview: Booker T. Washington National Historic SiteWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/bowaBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you t
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Issue 18 Eugene ONeill National Historic Site
25/05/2006How about a little culture this week? Eugene O'Neill is Americas only Nobel Prize winning playwright.Eugene ONeill National Historic Site preserves the home where he lived in California at the climax of his writing career. He and his wife, Carlotta, built and lived at the home in the hills above Danville from 1937 to 1944. It is here that he wrote his final and most memorable plays; "The Iceman Cometh," "Long Day's Journey Into Night," and "A Moon For the Misbegotten."Note that because of its location, reservations are required to visit the site but more on that in the interview.This week's interview: Eugene ONeill National Historic SiteWebsites:http://www.eTravelogue.com/http://www.nps.gov/euonBe sure to stop by our site and suggest attractions that you think we should cover on the program!Listen to this issue