Dutch Country & DC Getaway
8 days / 7 nights
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ORDER TOUR:
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Choose tour language
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Choose tour date
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PLACES YOU WILL STAY STANDART HOTELS
Day 1: New York - Travel Inn
Day 2: New York - Travel Inn
Day 3: Lancaster - Brunswick Hotel
Day 4: Gettysburg - Best Western Gettysburg Hotel
Day 5: Washington, DC - Red Roof Inn Downtown
Day 6: Washington, DC - Red Roof Inn Downtown
Day 7: Philadelphia - Best Western Center City
Day 8: New York - No Overnight
PLACES YOU WILL STAY SELECTIVE HOTELS
Day 1: New York - Helmsley Middletowne Hotel
Day 2: New York - Helmsley Middletowne Hotel
Day 3: Lancaster - Brunswick Hotel
Day 4: Gettysburg - Best Western Gettysburg Hotel
Day 5: Washington, DC - Capital Hilton
Day 6: Washington, DC - Capital Hilton
Day 7: Philadelphia - Sheraton Society Hill
Day 8: New York - No Overnight
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Day 1
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NEW YORK
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Arrive in New York City, America’s premier city and greatest attraction. Transfer to your hotel in Midtown Manhattan, conveniently located within minutes of Times Square, the Broadway Theaters, Rockefeller Center, Fifth Avenue and Central Park
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Day 2
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NEW YORK
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Full day to explore New York and everything it has to offer. Start your day with a bagel and coffee or a full American Breakfast, then head out into the city and join in on the action. Whether it’s the museums on Central Park or the skyscrapers in Midtown, the theaters on Broadway or the clubs in the Village, there’s something for everyone on the streets of Manhattan
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Day 3
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NEW YORK » BETHLEHEM » LANCASTER (195 mi / 315 km)
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Depart New York City this morning to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, settled by German members of the Moravian Church. The Moravians trace their origins to Jan Hus, who established the first Protestant church in Bohemia and was burned at the stake in 1415. The church was persecuted until they found refuge in Saxony, Germany, in the early 1700’s. Soon afterward, they began sending missionaries to the New World who were especially successful in Bethlehem. The Moravians’ Gemienhaus (Communal Hall, 1741), the largest log building of its time, stands today as a museum, surrounded by many other historic buildings of the early settlement. Continue along the “Hex Highway”, scenic where you’ll pass barns decorated with hex signs, the colorful geometric folk art painted on barns by the Pennsylvania Dutch to bring good luck. Continue to Lancaster for your overnight
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Day 4
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LANCASTER » GETTYSBURG (60 mi / 100 km)
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Lancaster and Lancaster County are the heart of Pennsylvania’s Dutch Country. The name “Pennsylvania Dutch” actually refers to the Pennsylvania Germans (“Deutsche”) who settled here, particularly the “Plain People” of the Amish and Mennonite churches. Many Pennsylvania Dutch continue the dress, traditions and the dialect of their 18th-Century ancestors, with varying degrees of accomodation to the modern world. They remain a fascinating and thriving community in Lancaster, and a drive through the Lancaster countryside will most likely be slowed as you pass their horses and buggies. Their traditional arts and crafts, especially woodworkings and quilts, are available in local shops. Continue on to Gettysburg, a picturesque small town made famous by the Battle of Gettysburg, turning point of the American Civil War
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Day 5
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GETTYSBURG » WASHINGTON DC (85 mi / 135 km)
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This morning, tour the town and battlefied of Gettysburg, where a self-guided auto tour recounts the dramatic battlefield events of 1863. Abraham Lincoln’s eloquent Gettysburg Address is learned by every American schoolchild and remembered as one of the most important speeches in American history. Continue directly to Washington DC, or detour along “country roads” for an afternoon’s visit to West Virginia, just over an hour away. Overnight in Washington, DC
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Day 6
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WASHINGTON DC
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Full day to view the sites of America’s capital city. Grouped on or near the open lawns of the National Mall are all of the major institutions of the US government - the White House, Capitol, and Supreme Court buildings - as well as the museums of the Smithsonian Institute and memorials to past presidents. This evening, head out for dinner and the nightlife in Georgetown or Adams Morgan, perhaps combined with a driving tour of the government buildings at night, lighted in an impressive display
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Day 7
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WASHINGTON DC » BALTIMORE » PHILADELPHIA
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Continue on to Philadelphia, the “City of Brotherly Love”, making a stop along Baltimore’s Inner Harbor along the way. In Philadelphia, head to the visitor’s center at Independence National Historical Park, where printed materials are available in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish. Pick up your free tickets to Independence Hall, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which saw the signing of both the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution. On either side of Independence Hall stands the original Congress and Supreme Court buildings, and across the street the Liberty Bell is on display. Stroll down Elfreth’s Alley, the oldest continuously occupied residential street in the United States, and step into Christ Church, where Benjamin Franklin and George Washington once worshipped. For dinner, experience culinary history at City Tavern (1773), and dine on the same 18th-century recipes enjoyed by Washington, Jefferson and the Founding Fathers who frequently met here. In the evening, Philadelphia nightlife is easy to find, with plentiful restaurants and clubs clustered together in the Old City, along South Street, and south of City Hall
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Day 8
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PHILADELPHIA » NEW YORK (95 mi / 155 km)
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Return to New York for your flight home, or extend your stay in the Big Apple
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