US Cities

Reno/Lake Tahoe, Nevada

Did You Know...? Comstock produced $400 million worth of silver; today, there are 31 Comstock cemeteries. Reno is slightly west of Los Angeles. Lake Tahoe is 1,685 feet deep but between 6,220 and 6,230 feet above sea level. Reno originated as a railroad station and was named for a general

2020-01-29T13:49:05-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Raleigh, North Carolina

Did You Know? Raleigh was founded in 1792 specifically to be North Carolina's state capital. President Andrew Johnson, successor to Abraham Lincoln, was born in Raleigh (1808). The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is the nation's oldest state university (chartered 1789). Estey Hall at Raleigh’s Shaw University was

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Princeton, New Jersey

Did You Know? Rockingham, a house in nearby Kingston, was George Washington’s final wartime headquarters. The Indiana Jones life story names Princeton as the fictional character’s birthplace. Nassau Hall in Princeton was the first U.S. Capitol (six months in 1783). Princeton and Rutgers played the first American intercollegiate football game

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Did You Know? Portsmouth was first named Strawbery Banke for the wild strawberries on the riverbank. Paul Revere rode to Portsmouth to warn of British intentions there, months before his famous 1775 ride. The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard is in Maine. New Hampshire was the first colony to declare its independence

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Portland, Oregon

Did you know...? Portland got its name based on a coin toss. The name that lost? Boston. Powell’s City of Books is the world’s largest independent bookstore. Mill Ends Park is the world’s smallest dedicated park, a circle 24 inches across. In Portland, the visitor is never more than 15

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Portland, Maine

Did You Know ... ? Portland Head Light was commissioned by President Washington and is Maine’s oldest lighthouse (1791). Poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow grew up in Portland; his family home is the oldest structure in the downtown. When Maine became a state in 1820, Portland was its first capital. Portland

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Did You Know? The first U.S. public TV station was Pittsburgh’s WQED (1954). Heinz ketchup is no longer made at the firm’s Pittsburgh plant. Dr. Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine at the University of Pittsburgh (1954). The Nickelodeon in Pittsburgh was the first movie theater in the U.S. (1905).

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Phoenix/Scottsdale, Arizona

Did you know ... ? The Phoenix 320-acre town site cost $550 in 1874; downtown lots sold for $7 to $11. The now-defunct Ingleside Inn, this area’s first resort for winter visitors, opened in 1910. Residents of Phoenix are known as Phoenicians. Early Arizona resorts offered free room and board

2020-01-29T14:35:55-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Did You Know? Edwin Booth was owner of the Walnut Street Theatre when his brother john Wilkes Booth killed President Lincoln. The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia can churn out more than 2 million coins an hour. Philadelphia’s City Hall is the world’s tallest municipal building (548 feet, almost twice the

2020-01-29T14:11:22-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|

Pensacola, Florida

Did You Know? Pensacola is on the first attempted European settlement site on U.S. soil (1559). The 911-foot USS Oriskany is at the core of the world’s largest artificial reef. The 160-mile-long Gulf Islands National Seashore is America’s largest protected seashore (95,100 acres). Pensacola’s beaches are sugar white because of

2020-01-29T14:11:01-05:00January 16th, 2012|US Cities, US Destinations|
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