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<<< - VIRGINIA
Recreation
and Places of Interest
Virginia is a popular vacationland.
Its varied topography and mild climate afford year-round
recreational opportunities. The state’s historic
sites draw many visitors. One of the most famous attractions
is at Williamsburg. There, extensive restoration of buildings,
gardens, and streets has recreated the city as it looked
when it was the capital of the colony during the 18th
century.
National Parks
National Park Service units in Virginia
include such areas of scenic beauty as the Shenandoah National
Park, covering a large area of the Blue Ridge Mountains,
and the Blue Ridge Parkway. The George Washington Memorial
Parkway, which skirts many historic sites associated with
George Washington, the first U.S. president, extends from
Maryland into Virginia. Sections of Cumberland Gap National
Historical Park and Assateague Island National Seashore
also lie within Virginia.
Colonial National Historical Park preserves
several historic sites, including most of Jamestown Island,
where the first permanent English settlement was founded,
and Yorktown, where a British surrender brought the American
Revolution to a close (see Yorktown, Siege of). National
Park Service units associated with the Civil War include
Manassas National Battlefield Park, which marks the site
of the two battles of Bull Run. Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania
County Battlefields Memorial National Military Park includes
parts of four battlefields. Petersburg National Battlefield
and Richmond National Battlefield Park preserve the sites
of the battles fought in defense of the two cities. Appomattox
Court House National Historical Park contains the restored
village of Appomattox Court House, where the Confederate
forces surrendered in 1865. Other National Park Service
units include the George Washington Birthplace National
Monument, Arlington House-The Robert E. Lee Memorial, Wolf
Trap Farm Park for the Performing Arts, Prince William
Forest Park, and a portion of the Harpers Ferry National
Historical Park. Two sites commemorate blacks who were
influential in the nation’s development: the Booker
T. Washington National Monument honors the noted educator
and the Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site recognizes
the first woman to found and serve as president of a bank.
Other federally-maintained sites include
Arlington National Cemetery, the burial site of prominent
American leaders and distinguished veterans of the armed
forces. The graves of President John F. Kennedy and American
politician Robert Kennedy are located in the cemetery.
Arlington National Cemetery is also the site of the Tomb
of the Unknowns (often called the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier)
where the remains of three unidentified American soldiers
are interred. The Marine Corps War Memorial (popularly
known as the Iwo Jima statue) is nearby.
National Forests
The two national forests in Virginia have
facilities for outdoor recreational activities. George
Washington National Forest, along both sides of the Shenandoah
Valley, and Jefferson National Forest, in the southwestern
part of the state, combined cover 670,000 hectares (1,648,000
acres). Both forests include recreation areas and sections
of the Appalachian Trail.
State Parks
Many of the 28 state parks in Virginia
offer camping, boating, and swimming facilities, as well
as hiking and riding trails. Breaks Interstate Park, on
the Kentucky-Virginia border and operated jointly by these
two states, is known for its spectacular 460-m (1,500-ft)
gorge known as the Breaks of the Cumberland, the longest
and deepest gorge east of the Mississippi River.
The largest state park is Clinch Mountain
in Russell County. Many of Virginia’s state parks
include lakes such as Swift Creek Lake in Pocahontas State
Park, which offers recreational facilities for nearby Richmond.
The Staunton River Park on the reservoir formed by John
H. Kerr Dam, and Claytor Lake State Park, in western Virginia,
are other large state parks. Seashore State Park in Virginia
Beach is the most-visited, attracting more than 1 million
people each year. Virginia has 11 state forests, the largest
of which is Appomattox-Buckingham State Forest, named for
the counties where it is located.
Museums
Among the fine arts museums in Virginia
are the Chrysler Museum of Art and the Hermitage Foundation
Museum, both in Norfolk, and the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller
Folk Art Museum, in Williamsburg. A number of historic
buildings and sites, including Monticello, Mount Vernon,
Stratford, and Arlington House, have been preserved as
museums, and the Valentine Museum, in Richmond, has exhibits
pertaining to the city. Along the James River between Richmond
and Williamsburg are the James River Plantations, including
Shirley, Berkeley, Edgewood, Evelynton, Westover, and Sherwood
Forest. Two of the most unusual museums in the country
are the Jamestown Settlement, whose exhibits dramatize
the early years of the colony, and Colonial Williamsburg,
a restoration of a section of 18th-century Williamsburg.
Other noted museums in Virginia include The Mariners’ Museum
in Newport News; the museum of the Virginia Historical
Society in Richmond; the United States Marine Corps Air-Ground
Museum in Quantico; the hands-on Science Museum of Virginia
in Richmond; the Virginia Living Museum (nature center)
in Newport News; Nauticus, a high-tech marine museum in
Norfolk; and the Virginia Museum of Natural History in
Martinsville. The Frontier Culture Museum in Staunton features
Irish, German, English, and early American farmsteads.
Other Places to Visit
Mount Vernon, George Washington’s
estate, and Monticello, which Thomas Jefferson designed
for himself, are Virginia’s most noted historic homes.
Other fine examples of 18th-century architecture are Ashlawn,
the home of James Monroe, which was also designed by Jefferson;
Gunston Hall, the home of George Mason, the author of the
Virginia Declaration of Rights; and Stratford Hall, the
ancestral home and birthplace of Robert E. Lee. There are
many historic churches and buildings, including Fort Monroe,
at Old Point Comfort, where Confederate President Jefferson
Davis was confined after the Civil War, and Saint John’s
church in Richmond, where Patrick Henry delivered his famous “liberty
or death” speech.
Among the most popular natural scenic
attractions in Virginia are the limestone caverns in the
Shenandoah Valley, such as Luray, Skyline, and Endless
Caverns, that were carved from solid rock by the action
of underground streams. Natural Bridge, south of Lexington,
is a huge arch of stone. Natural Tunnel, near Gate City,
was cut through a mountain by a creek and is 260 m (850
ft) long and 30 m (100 ft) high. The Natural Chimneys,
at Mount Solon, are seven huge towers of rock that rise
about 100 feet above the ground.
Source: MSN
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