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Located in the northwestern part of Pennsylvania, Allegheny National Forest is the only national forest in the state and is composed of 517,000 acres. “Land of Many Uses” is the motto used to describe the forest, because of their passion ...
Categories: Allegheny National Forest
Allentown, Pennsylvania, served as the hiding place for the Liberty Bell when it was removed from Philadelphia for a short period in 1777 to keep it out of the hands of the British. The Liberty Bell Museum at Zion's Reformed United Church of Christ (...
Categories: Allentown
Bedford is a historic county in south central Pennsylvania. It is known for its beautiful countryside, friendly people, slower pace and family oriented activities. Guided historic walking tours, caves, covered bridges, scenic railroads, museums and o...
Categories: Bedford
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, 52 mi/83 km north of Philadelphia, is the heart of the steel industry that came to prominence in the 1800s. The city has several sights that revolve around its earlier history. The Moravian Museum of Bethlehem charts the deve...
Categories: Bethlehem PA
An area of exceptional historical and cultural interest, the valley of the Brandywine River (where southeastern Pennsylvania meets northern Delaware) is a popular weekend getaway for residents of Philadelphia and Wilmington, Delaware. Brandywine Vall...
Categories: Brandywine Valley PA
This historic area along the Delaware River is renowned for a gracious, wealthy lifestyle that has attracted celebrities from Oscar Hammerstein to Pearl Buck to James A. Michener. The county seat is Doylestown, where you will find some of the area's ...
Categories: Bucks County
Located 12 mi/19 km north of Philadelphia, Chestnut Hill was once the vacation spot of choice for colonial Philadelphians. Today visitors go there to stroll the cobblestoned streets dusted with more than 100 shops and the Morris Arboretum, where lite...
Categories: Chestnut Hill
Beautiful views are in store for visitors to the city of Delaware Water Gap and the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area. It offers river recreation and fetching ravines. Straddling easternmost Pennsylvania and westernmost New Jersey, the 70,0...
Categories: Delaware Water Gap
Categories: Easton PA
Erie, Pennsylvania, on the shore of Lake Erie 126 mi/203 km north of Pittsburgh, is Pennsylvania's only Great Lakes port. Extending out into the lake is Presque Isle State Park, which includes 11 mi/18 km of white-sand beach and 3,200 acres/1,300 hec...
Categories: Erie
Gettysburg is where the turning point of the Civil War occurred from July 1 - 3, 1863. Travel to the Gettysburg National Military Park, with over 1,000 monuments and cannon along over 40 miles of scenic roads, a battlefield shrine to the Union and C...
Categories: Gettysburg
Harrisburg, the capital of Pennsylvania was a Native American settlement before it became a European settlement. It was once a scenic pastoral town with acres of farmland that transformed into a Colonial Revival capitol with structured streets and br...
Categories: Harrisburg
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary is for the birds—and the people who like to watch them. Even if you're not an avid avian-watcher, the Kempton sanctuary might rope you into the hobby. The view from North Lookout is breathtaking, and there is 8 mi/13 km of tra...
Categories: Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
Categories: Hawley
From world-class luxury to rustic camping, this idyllic escape offers the latest, greatest hospitality. Hershey is the golf capital of Pennsylvania with 72 holes. Visit Hershey's Chocolate World, the official visitors center of Hershey Foods Corporat...
Categories: Hershey
Stop in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, located 67 mi/107 km east of Pittsburgh, to see just how good a small, regional museum can be. The Johnstown Flood Museum documents the tragic chain of events that led to one of the country's worst natural disasters—t...
Categories: Johnstown
Categories: Lake Erie
Lancaster has beautiful scenery, quiet country roads with covered bridges, and many things to see and do. In Lancaster, also known as Amish Country, you can ride in an Amish buggy, ride an historic steam locomotive, play a round of championship...
Categories: Lancaster (Amish Country)
Located 65 mi/110 km southeast of Pittsburgh and encompassing five counties of southwestern Pennsylvania (in the Allegheny Mountains), the gorgeous region of Laurel Highlands offers great hiking, fishing, hunting, white-water rafting and skiing. And ...
Categories: Laurel Highlands
Little Buffalo State Park is home to picnic areas, hiking trails, and a lake for fishing and boating. This historic park features a covered bridge; a restored, operating grist mill; and an old farmhouse built on the site of a colonial tavern. In wint...
Categories: Little Buffalo State Park
In the southeastern part of Pennsylvania 65 mi/105 km west of Philadelphia (centered on the city of Lancaster), this pretty, rural area of rolling hills is home to members of three religious communities: the Amish, the Moravians and the Mennonites, a...
Categories: Pennsylvania Dutch Country
Philadelphia has a treasury of American history like the Liberty Bell and Constitution Hall. The scenic countryside is home to the prosperous farms of the Pennsylvania Dutch country. Enjoy, golf, spectator sports, fine dining, museums, great activiti...
Categories: Philadelphia
Categories: Philipsburg PA
Pittsburgh's landscape is a rolling prairie filled with beautiful trees that change color with each season. Along with the majestic beauty Pittsburgh has fun festivals, arts and crafts, shopping, golf, spectator sports, fine dining, museums, great ou...
Categories: Pittsburgh
The Pocono Mountains, Pennsylvania's great year-round vacationland, offer every outdoor activity imaginable. Accommodations range from luxury resorts to motels, cottages, bed-and-breakfasts and campgrounds. Even though the area has a reputation as a ...
Categories: Pocono Mountains
Located 79 mi/128 km northeast of Pittsburgh, the small town of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, is the home of Punxsutawney Phil, the nation's revered groundhog. Each year on Groundhog Day (2 February), weather-watchers flock to Gobbler's Knob in Sportsm...
Categories: Punxsutawney
Reading, Pennyslvania, located 63 mi/102 km northwest of Philadelphia, is where the concept of factory outlets first developed in the late 1960s. Today, it has more than 300 outlet stores in six complexes, so it rightfully (and legally, according to ...
Categories: Reading
Scranton, Pennsylvania, and the surrounding area were once important to the iron and coal industry. Today, Scranton, which is 125 mi/201 km north of Philadelphia, has several attractions that allow visitors to appreciate the importance of heavy indus...
Categories: Scranton
Categories: Shenandoah
Located 24 mi/39 km northwest of Philadelphia, Valley Forge is famous for the pivotal events that took place there during the Revolutionary War. The Valley Forge National Historical Park commemorates the site of General Washington's winter encampmen...
Categories: Valley Forge
Categories: Williamsburg
Worlds End State Park will appeal to those who enjoy endless views and churning water. A valley runs alongside Loyalsock Creek, giving hikers something beautiful to look at while they tone their legs and increase their lung capacity. The park is loca...
Categories: Worlds End State Park
Once the nation's capital courtesy of the British occupation of Philadelphia, York, Pennsylvania, is a blend of colonial, Revolutionary and Victorian heritage. More than half of its downtown buildings appear on the National Register of Historic Prese...
Categories: York PA