US Destinations

Denver, Colorado

Did you know... ? Denver is the home of the cheeseburger, invented by Louis Ballast (1935). The entire world’s supply of Colorado onyx was used in the Capitol building; no one can build a structure blocking the view of the Rockies from the Capitol. At 4,530 square miles, the metro

2020-01-29T14:35:01-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Dearborn, Michigan

Did You Know? Dearborn's first automaker was the Detroit-Dearborn Motor Company (1909), which made 110 cars. In 1914, Ford’s assembly line could assemble a Model T in 93 minutes. Dearborn’s Ford Airport installed the first runways that crossed each other and were paved (1929). The Dearborn Inn was the world’s first

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas

Did You Know? The world’s first and largest convenience store, 7-Eleven, got its start in Dallas (1927). The integrated circuit computer chip (later, the microchip) was invented in Dallas (1958). Sixty percent of America's paper money is printed in Fort Worth. The Dallas Arts District is America’s largest contiguous urban

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Columbus, Ohio

Did You Know? Columbus is America’s largest city (more than 800,000) named after Christopher Columbus. The American Whistle Corporation is the only maker of metal whistles in the U.S. James Thurber, humorist and author of “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” was born in Columbus (1894). Columbus was founded specifically

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Columbia, South Carolina

Did You Know? Fort Jackson is America’s largest active training center for Army recruits. The Big Apple dance craze originated with Columbia’s African-American community (1937). Of 42 South Carolina flour mills in 1942, only Adluh Flour Mills in Columbia still operates. Columbia’s Town Theatre is America’s oldest community theater in

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Colorado Springs, Colorado

Did You Know? Pikes Peak Cog Railway is the world's highest cog railroad, rising to the summit (14,110 feet). Athletes at the Olympic Training Center consume 15,000 gallons of milk a year. Katharine Lee Bates was inspired to write “America the Beautiful” by a trip up Pikes Peak (1893). Colorado

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Did You Know ... ? Colonial Williamsburg is the world's largest living history museum at 301 acres. The Wren Building at the College of William and Mary is America’s oldest academic building (1700). Shirley Plantation, Virginia’s first plantation (1613), has been the site of the same family’s business since 1638.

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Coeur d’Alene, Idaho

Did You Know? Coeur d’Alene is home to the world’s only golf course with a floating green. The entire town of Wallace is on the National Register of Historic Places. Since 1884, the Coeur d’Alene mining district has produced 1.2 billion ounces of silver. The U.S. Forest Service’s nursery in

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Cleveland, Ohio

Did You Know? Cleveland’s Winton Motor Carriage Co. placed the earliest known car ads in Scientific American (1898). Cleaveland was the original name, but a newspaper dropped a letter to fit the name into its masthead (1831). Cedar Point’s first ride (1880s) was a trapeze that hurled customers into Lake

2020-01-29T14:35:02-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Cincinnati, Ohio

Did You Know? Cincinnati’s Gibson Greeting Card Company was the first to publish greeting cards in the U.S. (1850). Three presidents were born in or near Cincinnati: Ulysses S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison and William Howard Taft. Singing cowboy Roy Rogers was born Leonard Franklin Slye in Cincinnati in 1911. The

2020-01-29T14:35:22-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|
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