Cherry Hill Campaground
College Park, MD
We are staying at Cherry Hill, the closet campground to DC. This place is huge and is getting bigger with ongoing expansion, construction, and improvements. If you are going to DC in an RV, this is an easy place to do. You are fairly close to the subway station that takes you right into DC and drops you off at the National Archives, where the Declaration of Independence, Constitution and Bills of Rights are displayed. It is very easy to get around.
We arrived on Friday early afternoon and went to our site. It was so tight we couldn't open our slides without hitting the neighbors awning. Our door opened right into theirs. I called the office to see what else was available, drove around and found a much better site for coaches. A simple move and we were in for 5 days. The campground holds a tour seminar every day that explains how to get into the city, how to buy and fill your subway card and of course sells tours. We decided to do the night time bus tour as we do not travel at night anymore, let alone in a strange city. It was interesting and gave us a lay of the land so to speak so we could get around on our own later.
The monuments were amazing at night. It gave a different perspective to them all. There were a lot of people wandering about.
On Saturday we took the subway in and visited the National Archives, the Smithsonian American History Museum, the US Capitol, and the Library of Congress. Whew, busy full day.
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No photos allowed inside to protect the Documents. They are something to see.
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The Natural History Museum
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There is that comedy album again!
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The Ruby slippers were a light hearted break
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The Capitol is undergoing renovations of the dome
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George Washington is sitting in the middle. The donut protects the Rotunda from the renovation.
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Stained Glass at the Library of Congress
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Sunday we took the day and went to Fort McHenry and take a drive thru Delaware. We did a little podcast for the classroom of the Star Spangled Banner and the War of 1812.
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This flag went into space
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Monday we were booked up with live podcasts for the class from the Lincoln Memorial, WWII Memorial, Korean War Memorial and Washington Memorial. We did a recorded video from the Vietnam Memorial. I am not sure if she will use it. It was really hard to do and it came across very somber. I had a POW Bracelet I wore in the 70's. I had researched Nicholas Brooks and found his name on the Wall. His remains were one of the very few that were returned from Laos in 1982. His pilot has not yet been returned. After that we headed over to Fords Theatre. By then I was tired and a little down from all the memorials, wars and death. Maybe doing all of the memorials in one day is too much, but now we done.
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The Korean War Memorial
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The Gun that killed Lincoln
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We thought we had visited everything we wanted to, but wait-there's more! On Tuesday we headed to the US Supreme Court for a lecture in the Court room. Very well done with a knowledge docent driving home how few cases are heard every year. No photos are allowed in the Court room.
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The Court Room |
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The old Supreme Court Room in the Capitol
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The model for the statue Freedom
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After that we decided to do the Capitol tour again since there were so few people wandering about. So glad we did as we got into a small tour and visited other parts of the building we didn't get to see Saturday. We went to Harry Reid's office to get passes for the Senate and House Gallery's. Nothing was going on, but it was nice to see the Chambers. Again, no photos as they take away your phone and any electronics before you go in.
The students wanted a podcast from the White House so we walked the 2 miles to the White House and walked around the entire area. It was nice seeing it during the day and wow things have changed. When we were here before you could get a little closer but roads are now shut down and there is lots of security everywhere you look.
So after 5 days in Washington DC we spent a total of $150.00, $80.00 of which was the night time bus tour. This included lunches and subway fares. Everything we went to was free. This is a great city and easy to do on a budget. My vivo-fit counted about 8 miles a day as we walked everywhere. I enjoyed the history and learned a lot.
Next up is visiting my cousin. I am looking forward to catching up with her as I haven't seen her in 5 years and I've always felt close to her. Get ready Virginia-here we come!
Your whirlwind tour brought back great memories of when we lived in No VA ... just 14 miles from DC. We had a bit more time to visit all that DC has to offer since we lived there for over 20 years.
ReplyDeleteAgree there is so much to do in DC that even our ten day visit was not enough. But you are lucky you had a night time tour which we did not do.
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