During spring break this year, my granddaughter is going on an American Heritage Tour with her eighth grade class to Washington, D.C., the American Civil and Revolutionary War battlefield parks, Philadelphia, the United Nations, Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty, plus all the historic sites in and around Boston. She is leaving on March 21, from the Salt Lake Airport for a week of whirlwind travel.
When I heard about the upcoming trip, I felt it was an important enough experience that I volunteered to help her with the travel and hotel expenses. I am so excited for her – she is 14 years old and grew up in a single parent family in Pocatello. Although she has had some rough spots during her growing up years she has also been sheltered.
I was an adult when I was first visited our country’s birthplace and revolutionary and civil war battlefield parks and was amazed at how close all the places are on the east coast. Here in the west everything is so vast and spread out we think of distances in terms of how many hours or days it takes to drive there. On the east coast everything is so close travel time is estimated by how many minutes or hours it takes to drive there.
My husband and I lived in Fredersickburg, Virginia for a couple of years when he was in the Marine Corps stationed at Quantico. I thought it interesting how historic markers were welded or bolted to the sides of the buildings and stores in downtown Fredericksburg. The Battle of Fredericksburg was fought in the area where the city park is now located. The stonewall, where according to local legend Stone Wall Jackson got his nick name, still stands there in the park. One can find old civil war lead slugs, from the soldiers guns, in the woods there much like we find Indian arrow-heads in the desert here in southern Idaho. There is the remnant of an old slave-market in town and one can purchase slave auction posters from souvenir shops. Place names like Jefferson Davis Boulevard, Robert E. Lee Street and Martha Washington University abound. The pilgrims, the revolutionary and civil wars are as much a part of east coast everyday life as the gold rush, or cowboys and Indians are part of everyday life here in the west.
This trip will bring history and our nation’s birth and historic struggles alive for her. She is in for a great adventure. I told her I expected an emailed photo from her every day. We’ll see how that goes. I’ll bet she’ll be too busy gawking at the sights.
