Travelrific® Travel Journal

Picture postcards in prose.™ Check out the blogroll on the front page for official merchandise and other resources!

Archive for travel writing

The Mob Mentality in Las Vegas

By Linda Tancs

In the heart of downtown Las Vegas is a former federal courthouse and U.S. Post Office included on both the Nevada and National Registers of Historic Places.  Hearings on organized crime were conducted in this building at a time when legendary mobsters ruled The Strip.  Nowadays it’s better known as the Mob Museum, where theater presentations, artifacts, and interactive exhibits capture the struggle between organized crime and law enforcement.   Nothing but the truth prevails here, if you can handle it.

Indoors at the Globe

By Linda Tancs

Like in Shakespeare’s time, London’s Globe Theatre is open to the elements–thus sometimes hath the brightest day a cloud, as The Bard wrote in Henry VI.  But even the staunchest theatregoer wouldn’t mind some cover, 17th century protocols notwithstanding.  That’s where the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse comes in.  The newest addition to the Globe is an indoor candlelit theatre, accessible through the main foyer.  The venue offers plays, concerts, opera and comedy.  The Globe is best accessed on foot.  Use a footpath along the Thames from Waterloo or Southwark Bridge.

World War Museum Opens

By Linda Tancs

In Bastogne, Belgium, thousands of soldiers died in WWII during the Battle of the Bulge.  Their valor is commemorated at the Bastogne War Museum.  Opening tomorrow, this new museum will feature interactive exhibits dedicated to the battle and World War II.

Aligning with the Heavens in Ohio

By Linda Tancs

The largest surviving prehistoric effigy mound is Serpent Mound, located in Peebles, Ohio.  The undulating serpent-shaped earthwork stretches for almost 1350 feet, evoking over the years interpretations related to mysticisms and heavenly alignments.  No wonder, then, that the park grounds are open for extended hours today–the spring equinox–marking Earth’s balance between day and night, a time of many rituals and traditions.  Be prepared for an astronomically good time.

Home of the Original Cuban Sandwich

By Linda Tancs

Plenty of American cities and states have staked their gastronomic claim to fame–Philly has its cheesesteak, Maryland boasts crab cakes, lobsters reign in Maine, etc.  So who lays claim to the original Cuban sandwich?  Answer:  Tampa, Florida.  In particular, it’s Ybor City’s signature sandwich that has local hearts all aflutter.  Tampa’s National Historic Landmark District, Ybor City (the Latin Quarter) exudes old world charm with its wrought iron balconies and narrow brick streets.  Founded by Vicente Martinez-Ybor as a cigar manufacturing center, Ybor City welcomed a melting pot of immigrants from Spain, Cuba, Germany and Italy.  Florida’s first industrial town, it is one of only two National Historic Landmark Districts in the state.

 

An Ostrogothic Wonder in Italy

By Linda Tancs

Kissed by the Adriatic Sea by virtue of the Candiano Canal, the Italian city of Ravenna boasts a unique collection of early Christian mosaics–unless you’re visiting the Mausoleo di Teodorico.  Devoid of consecrated mosaics, the Mausoleum of Theoderic is a tomb commissioned by Theoderic the Great, king of the Ostrogoths from 493 to 526.  The only surviving emperor’s tomb from this period, the structure is a geometric mishmosh comprising a decagon in the lower half and a circular upper half.  Carved of white Istrian stone, it is a stunning example of Ostrogothic artistry.

St. Patrick’s Rock

By Linda Tancs

In the heart of Ireland’s County Tipperary, Cashel is one of the most visited sites thanks to the Rock of Cashel.  Known as St. Patrick’s Rock, this elevated limestone peak is the former seat of the High Kings of Munster.  Legend has it that St. Patrick baptized Aenghus the King of Munster there in the fifth century.  The ruins of Hore Abbey, a Cistercian monastery, are at the base of the Rock and provide great views of it.   The area is easily accessible via public bus from Dublin.

The Start of Great Britain

By Linda Tancs

Scotland’s Highland coastal village of John O’ Groats is, as the locals will tell you, the northerly end of the longest distance between two points on the  British mainland (the other being Land’s End).  For heaven’s sake, don’t call it the most northerly place on mainland Britain; that honor goes to Dunnet Head.  Either the start of Great Britain or the end of the road (depending on how you look at things), this rugged outpost is just six miles from the Orkney islands, an area boasting over 5000 years of history.  Enjoy a coastal walk from John O’ Groats along the north coast to Duncansby Head Lighthouse and onto the massive rock stacks called the Stacks of Duncansby.

Tobacco Road

By Linda Tancs

Tobacco was a cash crop in the 17th and 18th centuries, particularly in tobacco-growing regions like Port Tobacco in southern Maryland, the state’s smallest town.  Once the site of the Native American village of Potobac, this tiny hamlet’s link to its most powerful export is represented by a weathered tobacco barn, where leaves would hang until they were cured.  An icon of America’s tobacco-growing past, the region’s barns are in a sad state of disrepair.   Thomas Jefferson and George Washington number among the tobacco-growing elite.

The Crossroads of War

By Linda Tancs

What is now known as the State of New Jersey began on March 12, 1664 when Charles II of England granted land on the east coast of North America to his brother James, Duke of York (later, King James II).  On the occasion of New Jersey’s 350th birthday today, it seems fitting to highlight its major role in the Revolutionary War.  Although many no doubt recall the battles of Princeton, Trenton and Monmouth from their grade school history books, the fight for independence actually spans 2155 square miles across 14 counties–the Crossroads of the American Revolution National Heritage Area.  This area includes, of course, Morristown’s Ford Mansion and Jockey Hollow, the nation’s first historical national park, commemorating the sites of General George Washington and the Continental Army’s winter encampment of December 1779 to June 1780.  During six years of conflict,  George Washington and the Continental Army spent more days in New Jersey than any other state.