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Philadelphia is known as the City of Brotherly Love and nothing
symbolizes this more clearly than the city's historic and artistic
landmarks. Through this essential guide for tourists, history
buffs, and the simply curious, 130 monuments and memorials are
showcased by 170 candid photographs displaying specific categorized
descriptions and locations of Philadelphia, e.g. Fairmount Park,
Chinatown, Independence Mall, Penn's Landing, Center City, and
more. Visit sites commemorating historical events, including the
famed Liberty Bell and memorials of over 40 military leaders; and
Robert Indiana's famous Love sculpture. Learn about eminent
citizens recognized for their battlefield tactics, business acumen,
philanthropy, or political savoir faire. Enjoy your next visit to
Philadelphia!
This revised and expanded second edition serves as your tour guide
to the monuments and memorials, traffic circles, parks, and
Arlington National Cemetery. Washington, D.C. is a great place to
learn American history. Many new images feature monuments to
American patriot Nathan Hale and the great writer Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow, presidents Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt, and
inventors Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin. Tour the American
Civil War Memorial, Iwo Jima/United States Marine Corps Memorial,
Tomb of the Unknowns, and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Learn
about the planned memorial for Martin Luther King, Jr. Easy-to-use
and essential for anyone planning a vacation in Washington, D.C.,
it provides a check-off list so you can see and do everything.
Tour the cemeteries of Pennsylvania's three original counties
(Philadelphia, Delaware, and Chester--"The Birthplace of America").
This fascinating guide includes twenty maps providing locations for
twenty burial grounds. Over 145 color images present graveyard
monuments, ranging from simple early headstones of the 1600s to
imposing Victorian ziggurats. View the penny-strewn grave of
Benjamin Franklin, the monumental marker of General "Mad Anthony"
Wayne, a granite obelisk commemorating the Revolutionary War's
Paoli Massacre, mausoleums of Millionaires' Row at Laurel Hill,
simple markers for runaway slaves seeking freedom, and the cast
iron gates believed to prevent the wandering of restless souls.
Fascinating stories, sure to captivate the reader, include tales of
such ghostly doings as ticking tombstones, a long departed general
in search of his bones, spectral appearances of soldiers from the
Revolutionary and Civil Wars, and races with the Devil. For those
readers with a passion for history, this book will be truly
compelling.
Some phrases conjure a sense of danger, at least the possibility
that something will go wrong. Few drivers become paralyzed with
fear when passing a sign warning of potentially adverse road
conditions. But there exists the small chance that a slippery
surface will cause the vehicle of some hapless motorist to careen
off the asphalt, smash through a guardrail and land upside down in
a culvert, the car's tires spinning helplessly seconds before a
hellish conflagration. (A bit dramatic, yes). Hence the title
Bridge May Be Icy for this compendium of mystery, mayhem and
murder.
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