Can't afford a European vacation this summer? Do what our contributor Claire Duffett did: Explore Southeast Asia instead.
Are we talking about the same war? You don't know the history of the Vietnam War until you've learned about the "struggle against American aggression" from the tour guides at Ho Chi Minh City's Reunification Palace.
A brand-new visitor center at Gettysburg National Military Park opens today. The building, designed to look like a 19th-century barn, brims with multimedia presentations, a feature film "experience" and hundreds of thousands of Civil War artifacts.
The new 22-minute film is narrated by Morgan Freeman and focuses on both the battle and its important aftermath. (While the fighting only lasted three days, it took four months for Abraham Lincoln to visit the site and deliver what came to be known as the Gettysburg Address.)
The visitor center will also house the Gettysburg Cyclorama. The 360-degree painting is currently being restored, but should be back on view by September. And of course walking the battlefield itself is still the main draw.
Interestingly, the new visitors center is LEED-certified as a green building, so you can count this as both a learning holiday and green travel.
On March 22, 1933, the first Nazi concentration camp opened in the German town of Dachau, just north of Munich. Today, 75 years later, the grounds of the camp are a memorial to the hundreds of thousands of people imprisoned there until its liberation in 1945.
Among the many people who have gone to see the historic site was James Shiels, who was a 19-year-old Army private when his division rolled into Dachau. He recently spoke with NPR about the decision to go back:
My son is really... He was the one that got me going... He asked me one day if I'd like to go back there, and the more I thought of it... I thought it was the greatest idea and we found a tour.
When we visited the Anne Frank House last year, we were upset to learn that the chestnut tree behind the house was "seriously diseased." An icon of the home, the city planned to remove it because:
Its leaves curl golden in summer because of the horse chestnut leaf miner, a moth that infests it; two fungi, tinder polypore and honey mushroom, are rotting its trunk.
Now, it seems, the tree will stand fast after lengthy bureaucratic proceedings have worn the pro-removal side into submission. (Gotta love Europe.)
Museum officials--who originally supported removal--now say even replacing the tree with a sapling cut from the original won't fly. Instead, they're working to keep the tree as it is--a connection to the past and a reminder that a little girl once looked to its branches for hope.
We don't have to tell you that it's 9-11. New York held a service near the former World Trade Center site, while construction on a memorial continued. Outside the Pentagon in Washington, DC families gathered. And the attacks were remembered near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
A formal memorial at the Pentagon should be finished by next year, and the National Park Service will run a memorial in Shanksville by 2011. New York City's progress is harder to discern, but that doesn't keep people away from the 16-acre hole in Lower Manhattan. For better or worse, all three sites has become tourist destinations, and with that in mind, we have some links to help you get there.
We're betting you haven't hit the Scottish town of Linlithgow yet on your treks around the world. They'll admit they have never been a tourist mecca, but that's all about to change with the establishment of a memorial honoring the (fictional) birthplace of Montgomery Scott, aka the guy who gets asked "Beam me up, Scotty."
With official confirmation from the original Star Trek author that Scotty will be born on June 28, 2222 in Linlithgow, the town's got the go ahead from its local (believe it or not) Enterprise Committee to establish the memorial. The display will include Scotty's original costume, some personal items donated by the late Scotty actor James Doohan's family, and even a scale model of the spaceship.
So if you need to be beamed up or just want to take the controls of the Starship Enterprise, Linlithgow is the place for you. The nice thing is they're not even ashamed to say that they're doing it all just to create some niche tourism. The other nice thing is we're not going to end this with some "beam me up" joke.
Happy first birthday to the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin's serious grey Lego block ackonwledgement of the Holocaust that opened in May 2005. Three and a half million visitors have contemplated the grid of 2700 grey columns of differing heights, rocketing the Memorial straight into the record books as one of Germany's top tourist attractions.
Controversy's followed this concrete grid from the start. From the planning process onwards, complaints have included the exclusion of other Nazi victims, concerns that the sculptures are too abstract, and worries about the integrity of having a sausage stand on the edge of the block. Visitors are also the target of some complaints: although the anti-graffiti coating has kept tagging to a minimum (just 10 incidents since opening day), tourists who climb and jump across the top of the pillars or set up a cosy picnic amongst the grid are perhaps not taking the message of the memorial seriously. Morons.
This creepy memorial, painted in 2004, marks the site of the last stop James Dean made before dying in a car crash.
The artist, John Cerney, has been attracting more and more attention over the years for his larger-than-life murals -- dozens of them are in California and elsewhere in the West and Midwest. Check out, for instance, Big Baby, at the New York Times link below.