School is out, but history is always in. (Good luck with those Hamilton tickets.) These experts, including a national-park photographer and a Smithsonian Institution director, vote for their must-sees.
By Paige Porter Fischer, Real Simple
1
Gettysburg National Military Park, Pennsylvania
Most historians agree that the battle of Gettysburg was the turning point in the Civil War; it saw more casualties than any other battle in American history. You can explore the battlefields alone, with a guide, or even on horseback. Definitely see the national cemetery near the High Water Mark, where the Union dead are buried and where Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address. But remember that Gettysburg is more than a battlefield and a burial ground. The Eisenhower farm, the retirement home of President Dwight Eisenhower, is part of the park. And there’s the Eternal Light Peace Memorial, just north of town, which is especially meaningful to me. I think about the dedication by President Franklin Roosevelt, in 1938, to honor the 75th anniversary of the battle. While FDR spoke about the value of peace, the rest of the world was preparing for war.
2
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho
I’ve photographed a lot of national parks. I’m on assignment for National Geographic, visiting all 59 national parks for the 100th anniversary of the U.S. National Park Service. But I could spend years shooting Yellowstone and never capture its entire essence. You’ve got bison roaming freely, prismatic springs
that paint rainbows
on the ground, geysers.… Yellowstone was America’s first national park, so in addition to being beautiful, it paved
the way for land conservation. That is
a uniquely American idea and, I think, might be our greatest gift to the world.
3
Lewis and Clark's Missouri River route, Montana
I was inspired to canoe down this stretch of the Missouri River in Montana by Stephen E. Ambrose’s* book about Lewis and Clark, Undaunted Courage. I began at Coal Banks Landing and finished at Judith Landing. Little has changed since Lewis and Clark came through in 1805, and Lewis kept such amazing notes that you can read along in his journals and experience things pretty close to the way they did. You’ll see no roads— and few people—and it’s one of the best ways I can think of to spend a week. It really helps you understand the power of America.
4
Thomas Jefferson's Library, Washington, D.C.
Jefferson’s personal collection—6,487 books that he called “unquestionably the choicest” in the United States—formed the basis of today’s Library of Congress. (Many were destroyed in a fire; about 2,000 remain and are on exhibit there now.) To see these books, knowing how much they meant to our third president and how strongly he believed in enlightenment and access to education as the foundations of democracy, is an electrifying experience. It’s as if he’s whispering his favorite passages into your ear. If you love books and libraries, you will find this place extraordinarily special.
5
Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia
It is so close to
Busch Gardens and Water Country USA that families are often tempted to give it short shrift—or they assume that Colonial Williamsburg is another adjacent theme park. But I think it is one of the most important historical displays in the United States.
The reconstruction
of the town, which started in the 1920s,
is ongoing, and those Colonial-attired docents are very
well trained. What
I especially appreciate is that they did not overlook the contributions of
the many African-Americans who lived there. The same attention to detail extends to the slave quarters as to the Governor’s Palace.