PHILADELPHIA: Performance Tour
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For Performing Groups:
Performance Venues can be set up for you in Philadelphia...Call us for
details.
For Performing Groups requiring Adjudication
2008 Festival Dates are:
May 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Call for Motorcoach and/or Airline pricing
(800) 247-7969
FEATURED ATTRACTIONS Betsy Ross House where
the Colonial seamstress stitched the first American
Flag in 1777. The restored home
is furnished in the working-class manner of the period.
Christ Church was
the house of worship of 15 signers of the declaration
of Independence. Brass
plaques
mark the pews once occupied by George Washington,
Benjamin Franklin and Betsy Ross. Organized in
1695, the 1727 structure typifies early Georgian
architecture.
City Hall was planned to be the tallest structure
in the world when construction began in 1871.
However, it was surpassed in height by the Washington
Monument
and the Eiffel Tower before its completion in
1901. A 37 foot statue of William Penn tops the
City
Hall tower. The charter in Penn’s left
hand has the actual words of the charter inscribed
upon
it.
Edgar Allen Poe
National Historic Site contains
a visitor center, which has exhibits, and audiovisual
program and library, and the house where Poe
lived
1843-44.
Franklin Institute
Science Museum Hands-on
exhibits and demonstrations relate to science
and industry,
computers, physics, astronomy, geography, oceanography,
meteorology, mathematics, communications, and
history. The museum is the national monument
to Benjamin
Franklin and contains many of Franklin’s
personal effects.
Fels Planetarium opened in 1933, is among
the country’s
oldest. Computer generated images are projected
onto the 65 foot wide planetarium dome.
Tuttleman Omniverse Theatre projects films of
science and adventure onto a four story, 79 foot
wide domed
screen.
Independence National
Historic Park includes
buildings in Independence Square and others throughout
the
city that are closely associated with the Colonial
period, the founding of the nation, and Philadelphia’s
early role as the nation’s capitol. The visitor’s
center for Independence National Historic Park presents
the 30 minute John Huston film, “Independence” throughout
the day. In this park, you will find Congress
Hall, Declaration House, Independence Hall, Liberty
Bell
Pavaillion, and the National Constitution Center.
National Constitution
Center The National
Constitution Center is an independent, non-partisan,
and non-profit
organization dedicated to increasing public
understanding of, and appreciation for, the
Constitution, its
history, and its contemporary relevance, through
an interactive,
interpretive facility within Independence National
Historical Park and a program of national outreach,
so that We the People may better secure the
Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our
Posterity.
Congress Hall was occupied by the
US Congress 1790-1800.
Declaration House is
a reconstruction of the dwelling in which
Thomas Jefferson drafted
the
Declaration
of Independence in June 1776.
Independence Hall In this graceful 1732 brick building, the
Declaration of Independence and
The Constitution
were signed. It was here in 1775 that the 2nd
Continental Congress decided to resist England,
and George Washington
accepted the role of Commander in Chief of
the Colonial Armies.
Liberty Bell Pavilion is
a glass structure that forms a permanent
home for the Liberty
Bell,
which was moved from Independence Hall on January
1, 1976.
Penn’s Landing along the Delaware River,
marks the site where William Penn landed in
1682. The 37
acre area, which has several historic ships
maintained by the Philadelphia Ship Preservation
Guild and
a sculpture garden, features concerts, festivals
and
special exhibitions throughout the year.
United States Mint offers self-guiding audiotape
tours that take about 45 minutes. |