Precipice Trail – Acadia National Park Maine

One of the best trails in Acadia National Park in Maine is the Precipice Trail. The trailhead is near the start of the Park Loop Road just before Sand Beach.

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Please note that the trail is closed for several months in the spring and early summer for peregrine falcon nesting. Although not the Knife Edge on Mount Katahdin or Angels Landing in Zion National Park the trail is still not for the faint of heart.

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The trail is less than one mile in length but it is almost straight up a 1500 foot cliff. There are iron rungs and ladders attached to the cliff face to aid ascent.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

When you reach the top and to be honest all the way up as well there are spectacular views.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

A word of warning it is lot scarier going down than coming up so be prepared to take a much longer trail down a gradual incline for your descent.

Little Round Top – Gettysburg National Military Park (Gettysburg, Pennsylvania)

We all have heroes in our lives and my father’s was Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, four time governor of Maine, college professor, Civil War general and winner of one of the most important battles in American history.

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I grew up surrounded by books about Chamberlain and the Battle of Little Roundtop and was excited that I got to take my father to Gettysburg National Military Park before he passed away. We explored the entire battlefield but eventually made our way up to the tiny hillside where so much blood was drawn.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Little Round Top was the extreme end of the Union’s fishhook shaped line with Chamberlain’s 20th Maine Regiment the the very last position on the left of the line. Brigadier General Gouverneur K. Warren immediately saw the the weakness on the left side of the line.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Colonel Strong Vincent commander of the third brigade took the initiative and ordered his four regiments to fortify the hill. Arriving just before the confederates Vincent ordered Chamberlain and this 20th Maine to hold the hill at all costs it being the extreme left. Chamberlain a professor of rhetoric at Bowdoin College in Maine pondered what was meant to hold the hill to the last; the last bullet? the last man? After defending and driving back several charges by Confederate commander William C. Oates Chamberlain was almost out of ammunition. He ordered his troops to fix bayonets and following an obscure textbook maneuver he “refused the line” and led his men in a charge down the hill swinging his troops like a gate swinging shut. Oates and his Alabamians were routed and the line was saved. The battle was not quite over until Colonel Patrick “Paddy” O’Rorke led his 140th New York regiment against Regiments from Texas in battles just to the right of Chamberlain’s position.

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There are numerous monuments and placards commemorating the battle on the hill today.

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New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

An important piece of history and a cherished memory with my Dad holds a special place in my heart.

Arlington National Cemetery – Arlington, Virginia

The ground surrounding the home of Robert E. Lee prior to the Civil war was confiscated by the Union and converted into Arlington National Cemetery by the Quartermaster General Montgomery C. Meigs. Meigs considered Lee a traitor to his country and reviled his former compatriot. At first the burials were away from the home but Meigs fought to have burials closer to the house. Eventually burials were taking place in Mrs. Lee’s rose garden including Meigs’ own sun who was killed while on a scouting mission in the Shenandoah Valley late in the war. Meigs was also instrumental in scouring battlefields and collecting unidentified remains forming the basis of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

The graves of many notable figures can be seen throughout the cemetery including the grave of John F Kennedy.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

There are a number of graves and memorials throughout the site,

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

but the most poignant site are the rows of graves of the common soldiery of our many wars.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Theodore Roosevelt Island – Washington, DC

Theodore Roosevelt Island in Washington is the perfect memorial for our most conservationist minded president. this wooded island in the Potomac River situated between Washington and Virginia has some walking paths leading to the memorial. This island of overgrown farmland was transformed into a living memorial to Theodore Roosevelt our 26th president. The parking area on the George Washington Memorial Parkway leads to a foot bridge going to the island. On the island there are two miles of walking paths and a centrally located memorial with a statue of Roosevelt and inscribed monoliths.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Jefferson Memorial – Washington, DC

Washington DC is full of memorials, one of the most striking but not as well known as some others is the Jefferson Memorial. The memorial is constructed from Danby marble from the state of Vermont with a typical Jeffersonian dome evident. Rudolph Evans’ bronze statue of Jefferson can be seen from a distance in silhouette through the exterior columns of the memorial. Quotations from Jefferson’s writing are carved into the walls of the memorial. Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. designed the memorial plaza and the Jefferson Memorial fits into this overall plan with a direct view of the White House.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos