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YOUR GUIDE TO CULTURAL & HERITAGE TRAVEL AND THE LEADING MUSEUM STORES
Vol. 7 | 2015
AMERICA’S BYWAYSSee page 8
FINE INNS & FINE WINESSee page 20
www.AmericansForTheArts.org
Americans for the Arts is the national organization tying it all together.Get Connected Today.
Every year, America is host to 156 million domestic and international
They stay longer and spend more money than other travelers.
arts & culture travelersThey are right in your backyard...
100,000U.S. NONPROFIT ARTS DESTINATIONS
50STATE ARTS AGENCY HUBS
5,000LOCAL ARTS AGENCY NETWORKS
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 3
New Orleans Plantation Coun-try is home to some of the most beautiful and famous
plantation homes in the country, but it is their fascinating differences that make each worthy of a visit. When you visit these ten magnificent planta-tions, you’ll hear real stories about the people who lived here—English sugar barons, Creole women, slaves and soldiers. You’ll see artifacts and touch history—from the grand ballrooms to the impoverished slave cabins. Swamp tours, mouth-watering cuisine, and a feast of festivals also weave their magic into your adventure.
Along the Great River Road Sce-nic Byway between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, this unforgettable journey offers a unique look into the past. Visit slave cabins at Evergreen Plantation or Laura: A Creole Planta-tion, where the “Tales of Br’er Rabbit”
opens soon as the Museum of the History of Slavery in Louisiana.
Go from grandeur to the great out-doors with an exhilarating tour into mysterious swamps. Knowledgeable, fearless guides will show off the wet-lands, including Louisiana alligators.
You’ll savor world-renowned Louisi-ana cuisine. From mom-and-pop local eateries to five-star fine dining, a deli-cious culinary adventure is as much of the experience as these attractions.
Festivals throughout the year offer additional opportunities to experi-ence celebrations of food, music and culture.
Wherever your journey in New Orleans Plantation Country takes you, storytellers will captivate you, and you’ll leave with your own tales to tell!
New Orleans Plantation Country: VisitNOPC.com
Plantation CountryFind Your Place in Time
originated. See the legendary alley of 300-year old oaks and talk to “the Colonel” about the War Between the States at Oak Alley Plantation. Hou-mas House Plantation and Gardens features breathtaking gardens and sumptuous dining. Destrehan Plan-tation and San Francisco Plantation provide excellent educational tours with regular crafting demonstrations. Ormond Plantation features unique West Indies architecture, Poché Plan-tation is the state’s only RV resort and St. Joseph Plantation is still a working sugar plantation. Whitney Plantation
New Orleans
4 | The Cultural Traveler 20154 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
W e are pleased and proud to present to you the seventh annual
edition of The Cultural Traveler on behalf of our travel
partners, museums, attractions and destinations.
A special thank you to the American Alliance of Museums and
Americans for the Arts for their support of the guide. Both of these
associations are strong proponents of encouraging cultural travel and
appreciate that visitors are a mainstay in insuring the success of their
member organizations.
The Cultural Traveler is the only publication that exclusively
showcases cultural travel in the U.S. We hope you will be inspired to visit some of these destinations
featured in this guide and will make plans to experience their unique offerings in the near future. To help
you do so, we suggest that you check out the convenient Travel Planner section of the guide on pages
48–49 to discover even more about the rich travel experiences these destinations have to offer and to
design your own customized itinerary.
In addition, visit TheCulturalTraveler.com to read and/or download a copy of The Cultural Traveler
and to see the unique Cultural Traveler packages for you to experience. Also on the website, you can
conveniently search by destination and/or topic all of the cultural and heritage destinations featured in
past issues of The Cultural Traveler.
— Sheila Armstrong & Rosemary McCormick Co-Publishers/Editors, The Cultural Traveler 843-341-6392; CulturalTraveler@aol.com TheCulturalTraveler.com ShopAmericaTours.com
When we go on a journey, we connect—with the landscape we explore, the people
we meet, the food we eat, the art that inspires us and the world we see around us.
It’s the authentic connection to a community that travelers want to experience. It is
why arts and culture tourists stay an average of three nights longer at their destinations
than their traditional tourist counterparts—and that equals more dollars and increased
visitation for your community. Arts and culture organizations are a part of what connect
us all, and Americans for the Arts is the organization that champions and provides support for those
organizations. Won’t you join us on our journey to experience, celebrate, support and explore all the
truly unique arts and culture experiences America has to offer? Start at www.AmericansForTheArts.org.
— Robert L. Lynch, President & CEO Americans for the Arts
WELCOME WILLKOMMEN ¡BIENVENIDO! ようこそ! BIENVENUE BEM-VINDO!
Vol. 7 | 2015
The American Alliance of Museums is committed to championing cultural and
heritage travel. It expands horizons, encourages creativity and contributes to our
educational journey. It also encourages travelers to explore and be inspired by the
stories told by museums throughout our country.
Our museums welcome over 850 million visitors annually. (That is more than those
attending sporting events or theme parks!) The American Alliance of Museums supports
and strengthens these museums through advocacy and education. We are an essential resource to
our country’s museums from A to Z—art museums to zoos and all those who work for the success of
museums—to make a broader impact. To learn more about AAM, visit AAM-US.org.
We are proud to join with Americans for the Arts and the U.S. Cultural & Heritage Tourism
Marketing Council in presenting The Cultural Traveler. This guide serves as a rich resource of unique
and inspirational travel experiences.
— Ford W. Bell, President American Alliance of Museums
ContentsAmericans for the Arts .................. 2
New Orleans Plantations .............. 3
The Getty ...................................... 5
Vermont Byways ....................... 6–7
National Byways ....................... 8–9
St. Augustine/ St. Johns,Florida .............................. 10–11
America’s Leading MuseumStores ............................. 12 & 26
Greater Miami, Florida ................ 13
Savannah, Georgia................ 14–15
Hilton Head Island, South Carolina ................... 16–17
North Carolina ....................... 18–19
Fine Inns & Fine Wines ......... 20–21
Chicago’s North Shore, Illinois ............................... 22–23
Indianapolis Museum of Art . 24–25
The Henry Ford, Michigan........... 27
Bloomington, Minnesota ....... 28–29
Colorado Byways, Breweries &
Wineries ................................. 30
Denver, Colorado ........................ 31
Loveland, Colorado ............... 32–33
Durango, Colorado ....................... 34
Colorado Springs, Colorado ........ 35
Chickasaw Country, Oklahoma .... 36
Chicago Cruises .......................... 37
Santa Monica, California............. 37
Visit Stockton, California ............ 38
Pasadena, California ................... 39
Travel Portland, Oregon ........ 40–41
Tour Packages ...................... 42–43
Houston Convention Center District .............................. 44–45
Nevada ................................. 46–47
Travel Planner ....................... 48–50
Atlanta, Georgia .......................... 51
Visit Rochester, New York .......... 52
Publisher and Cover credits, see page 50
Sheila Armstrong & Rosemary McCormick tour Monet’s Gardens at Giverny.
Find unique gifts for everyone on your list, from
artisan jewelry and hand-blown vases to award-
winning arts publications and elegant scarves
and ties. The Children’s Shop is sure to inspire
the younger set with hands-on activity kits, toys
that encourage creative play, and beautifully
illustrated books for all ages.
Find Something They’ll Love at the Getty Store
©20
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One of the best ways to expe-rience Vermont is to travel the roadways that hug the
mountains and meet in the valleys. These are the roads that take travel-ers through Vermont’s forests and farmland to centuries-old villages and towns that today are vibrant hubs of culture, community, com-merce and recreation.
Vermont’s 10 designated byways range in length from 14 miles to over 400 miles, and they are located throughout Vermont. Explorations can range from an afternoon or a week to an entire summer.
Whatever the mode of transporta-tion—car, motorcycle, vintage auto-mobile or bicycle—touring provides visitors with front-row access to experiencing the intersection of the land, history and community. Muse-ums, art galleries, antique and curio
Exploring Vermont’s Byways
shops pop up everywhere. Iconic Vermont dairy farms, along with small-scale farms tied to the state’s vibrant farm-to-plate scene, sell their products at roadside stands. An amazing network of state parks and trailheads to swimming holes, water-falls, hikes and valley views provide easy access to Vermont’s stunning natural features. Side excursions un-earth the sublime—top-notch music festivals and outdoor events, and the delightfully down-to-earth—church suppers, flea markets, historical so-ciety museums and vibrant library programs.
Each byway offers themed itineraries that are perfect for jumpstarting a byway exploration. Developed by people who live and work along the byways, the itineraries are like getting advice from the locals. Carving Studio and Sculpture Center
Woodstock Middle Bridge 1969
For foodies and thirsty travelers, Chews & Brews recommends farmers markets, artisanal cheese makers, breweries, wineries and distilleries. For those inspired by the artistic and extraordinary, Arts & Culture reveals Vermont’s embrace of all things creative with galleries, museums, studios and performing arts venues. The state’s rich legacy
vacation packagesStart planning your trip today at VermontVacation.com
VERMONT
of historic resources is as diverse as it is engaging. History & Heritage recommends everything from a 12,000-year-old Native American site and an operating 19th century farm museum, to explorations of the stories revealed in historic villages and towns. For physical pursuits from mild to wild, Outdoor Recreation highlights year round activities,
whether they be in snow or air, or on mountain, land or water.
Many Vermonters refer to their state as one big town—wherever they go, they know someone or have connections with the place they are visiting. Vermont is a warm and engaging place, and the byways transport visitors to the heart of things. Plan a trip soon.
VermontVacation.com
Brattleboro Music Center Farmers Market
8 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
The National Scenic Byways Program is the vision of the Federal Highway Administra-
tion to “create a distinctive collection of American roads, their stories and treasured places.”
There are 150 designated byways in 46 states, designated by the U.S. Secretary of Transportation. These are based on archeological, cultural, historic, natural, recreational and scenic qualities.
Byways preserve, protect, interpret and promote the intrinsic qualities and resources on America’s most treasured roads. The mission of byways is to create unique travel experiences and enhance the local quality of life.
This program is founded upon the strength of the leaders for individual Byways. It is a voluntary grassroots program. We salute these dedicated leaders for their time and commitment to preserving and nurturing these treasured corridors for the benefit of us all.
Here are just a few of the remarkable byways that represent the depth and breadth of some of America’s byways, spanning across state lines to tell the American story in their individual, intrinsic way. Click in your seat belt, roll down your window, lighten up on the gas pedal and be prepared to stop and wonder on the side roads of America.
Historic Route 66 Arizona, California, Illinois, Missouri, New Mexico, OklahomaWe begin with the Historic Route 66— where it all began. They call it the “Mother Road,” and Illinois is where it all began in 1926. This road gave birth to service stations, motels, diners, neon signs and roadside “kitsch” to entertain travelers on their journeys.
The charm, the history and the atmosphere that make up “The Mother Road” bring travelers from all over the world to experience America the way it should be experienced—down a stretch of highway where “anything goes” is literal. From the majestic skyline of Chicago to the mighty Mississippi River to the Santa Monica, California coast, you’ll discover the legendary people and places that give travelers their “kicks” on Route 66.
Great American
The National Scenic Byways
General Store, Hackberry, Arizona
Byways.org
Road Trip!
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 9
Trail of the Ancients National Scenic Byway Colorado and Utah
Explore the long and intriguing occupation of the Four Corners region by Native American peoples. Travel through the archaeological heartland of America while crossing the beautiful and diverse landscapes of the Colorado Plateau. World-renowned Mesa Verde National Park, Monument Valley Tribal Park and Four Corners Monument are highlights on the trail.
Great River Road Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Tennessee, Wisconsin
Throughout history, the Mississippi River influenced many lives: the Dakota, Chippewa and Hopewell cultures; early French voyagers; A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n s seeking freedom on the Underground Railroad; and many more. Through its charming river towns and metropolitan cities, historic sites and cultural artifacts, today’s Great River Road still links resources, people and history.
Journey Through Hallowed Ground Byway Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia
The 180-mile Journey Through Hallowed Ground byway corridor from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to Monticello, Virginia, is “Where America Happened.” It is said that this three-state route, spanning Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia, holds more historic sites than any other in the U.S. This was an active transportation route during the Revolutionary War, a critical transition zone for the
U n d e r g r o u n d Railroad and a key battleground during the Civil War. This early corridor was the literal “roadbed” for the creation of our country and American ideals.
A1A Scenic & Historic Coastal Byway Florida
This byway lies between the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway on a narrow barrier island with breathtaking views. The environment supports a variety of wildlife, including 50 endangered species. History aficionados will enjoy touring St. Augustine, the oldest continually-occupied European settlement in the United States.
Historic Columbia River Highway Oregon
Travel to magnificent overlooks that provide views of the Columbia River and waterfalls, including Multnomah Falls. Springtime has magnificent wildflower displays, including many endemic plants. The Columbia River formed the last leg of the Lewis and Clark Expedition and was part of the early route of the Oregon Trail.
Are we there yet?
Mesa Verde National Park
Gettysburg Monument
Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine
Oak Alley
Multnomah Falls
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St. Augustine is celebrating its 450th anniversary with a year of celebrations of its arts, cul-
ture and heritage that have been de-
memoration exhibition. It showcases the story of how three intertwin-ing cultures—Hispanic, African and Native American—came together to form the foundation of the Ameri-can culture and create the blended society of today’s St. Augustine. The exhibit telling the 450 years of St. Augustine’s history can be seen at the Visitor Center, April 4–October 4, 2015.
The exhibit begins with the arrival of Don Pedro Menéndez to St. Au-gustine in 1565. He brought 800 col-onists to settle the New World in the name of Spain. It was an ambitious attempt at colonization and became the foundation for the most enduring settlement in the United States.
Congratulations
St. Augustine!The Nation’s Oldest City Celebrates its 450th Anniversary
veloped over these past 450 years. Tapestry: The Cultural Threads
of First America is the signature St. Augustine 450th anniversary’s com-
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The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 11
Onboard were Africans and His-panics. When they stepped off the ship into the first permanent colony in the United States, they became African-Americans and Hispanic-Americans. Their arrival was the be-ginning of both the African-American experience and the Latino-American experience in the New World. Native Americans were named so by Euro-peans and became this for the first time. The settlement at the Indian vil-lage of Seloy with the intermingling of Hispanics, Africans and Native Americans, was the very genesis of the American culture that character-izes our nation today. Archaeologists have confirmed the original settle-ment on the grounds of the Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park. Just north of the city is Ft. Mose, the first free Black settlement in the U.S. It is now a Florida State Park.
While Jamestown Settlement, founded in 1607, and Plymouth Plantation are widely attributed as the beginnings of this nation, it was instead the Spanish Colonial settle-ment of St. Augustine and the exten-sive territory of La Florida that served as the model for subsequent colo-nial efforts by many countries. This was indeed the very foundation for the cultural and historical develop-ment of the nation. St. Augustine was the first America.
The arts scene dates back to the 19th century, when New England artists and wealthy tourists came to the area bringing their spirit of expres-sive freedom and arts appreciation. Mean-der through the St. Augustine Historic District to explore five centuries of architecture and history, with eclectic art galleries, music concerts, opera, theater, dance and celebrations year-round. Nearby, upscale Ponte Vedra is home to the PGA Tour headquarters and its regal history, as well as the unique Ponte Vedra Concert Hall. St. Augustine’s beaches offer a laidback vibe, unspoiled beaches and seafood, all with a colorful artistic flair.
VISUAL ARTSFrom modern galleries and exclusive exhibits to the designs of its
historic cathedrals, the visual arts of St. Augustine and Ponte Vedra offer an endless feast for the eyes—and the imagination.PERFORMING ARTS
Professional theater, classical concerts and a state-of-the-art performance venue, the St. Augustine Amphitheatre, all offer vibrant performances.LITERARY ARTS
Florida’s Historic Coast is a haven for authors, poets and writers. Literary events, book festivals, readings, workshops and more honor the history of the written word.FESTIVALS
From photography and arts and crafts to seafood and sunsets, there’s a festival for whatever you love about St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra and its beaches. LIVING HISTORY
Re-enactments, celebrations and interactive activities put you right in the middle of 450 years of history. Dedicated historians and re-enactors provide a glimpse of life from every era of the coast’s colorful history. MANY CULTURES
Timucuan. Spanish. French. British. African. Minorcan. Seminole. Swiss. In its 450-year history, Florida’s Historic Coast has been home to an especially diverse array of peoples—and they’ve all left their mark here. Experience the story of St. Augustine’s cultures through architecture, food, music, art, archaeology and more.
Visit St. Augustine and St. Johns County, Florida, and create your own journey at HistoricCoastCulture.com.
SGSDesignAndArt.comSGSD
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America’s Leading
Museum Stores
High Museum Shop Atlanta, GeorgiaThe High Museum of Art and contemporary
designer Molly Hatch have teamed up to create an exclusive collection of products for the Museum Shop at the High. The collection is inspired by the recent Molly
Hatch acquisition Physic Garden, now on view at the High. High.org
Indianapolis Museum of Art Museum Store Indianapolis, Indiana
The IMA Museum Store features merchandise inspired by the museum’s permanent collection and special exhibitions. Browse a thoughtfully curated selection
of printed reproductions, home décor, design objects, jewelry, textiles and stationery, as well as a comprehensive selection of art-related books and museum publications. Shop online anytime at IMAMuseum.org. continued on page 26
Denver Art Museum Denver, ColoradoThe Shops at the Denver Art Museum feature artistic
products that encourage visitors to continue the creative experience at home. Delightful and innovative gifts include jewelry, home décor, textiles, notecards, art books, prints, toys, puzzles and activity kits inspired by the museum’s collection and art from around the world. DenverArtMuseum.org
©Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau – The Offi cial Destination Sales & Marketing Organization for Greater Miami and the Beaches.
CS 01572
In my neighborhood, art is everywhere and inspires everything. You can fi nd it on the walls and doors. You can buy it in the galleries. You can taste it at our hip restaurants, coffee shops, and local breweries. You can even admire it at a hair salon. I’m Mali, check out my Wynwood video guide and learn about other cool neighborhoods at ItSoMiami.com
WYNWOOD – IT’S SO MIAMI®
14 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Discover Savannah’s rich past. This city offers many historic attractions including pre-Civil
War era Mercer-Williams House, a museum honoring the World War II-era Mighty Eighth Air Force and the Juliette Gordon Low House where the Girl Scouts of America began.
Tune in to world class music. Two events, the legendary Savannah Music Fest and newer Savannah VOICE Festival, bring the finest musicians to town each year. The Music Festival is one of the most distinctive cross-genre music festivals in the world,
Rich History Natural Beauty Eclectic Architecture Romantic AmbianceSavannah
while the VOICE Festival offers opera experiences unrivaled for its talent.
Try new tastes in an old town. New restaurants are all the rage this year. Celebrity Chef Hugh Acheson added The Florence to Savannah’s thriving culinary scene which has also produced new hotspots The Collins Quarter, Pacci Italian Kitchen + Bar and The Grey. Foodies should also check out the third annual Savannah Food & Wine Festival in November for tastings, events, dinners and more.
Explore the artistic side of Savannah. Premiering in October
2015, the Jepson Center of Telfair Museums is one of three museums in the country to house the special Monet & American Impressionism exhibit. Other museums, galleries and the influence of SCAD throughout the city make Savannah an art-lover’s paradise.
Get spooked on a ghost tour. Test your bravery on a haunted ghost tour through Savannah, which has been called “America’s most haunted city.” Some of our spirits are sad, some sassy, some friendly and some scary. According to local legend, they’re all around us. VisitSavannah.com
Telfair Academy
Jepson
16 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Hilton Head Island is a colorful island resort com-munity with a warm, relaxed attitude and unique southern charm. Its spectacular natural beauty with
sparkling blue waters, lush greenery, magnificent live oak trees and bright sun-blessed days create a rainbow of sce-
nic inspiration. The Island’s population and visitors are equally as diverse and inspi-rational, hailing from not only the 50 states, but from diverse countries around the world. It is not unusual to hear a variety of foreign languages being spo-ken on the Island today as they have been for over 450 years.
The first confirmed visitors to Hilton Head Island were actually international visitors from Spain. In 1521, Fran-cisco Cordillo led a Spanish expedition to Hilton Head and initiated European contact with local tribes.
A French Connection with the Island began in 1562 when French explorer Jean Ribault representing Admiral Gaspart de Coligny, a leader in the Huguenot Protestant
Hilton HeadIsland& The Lowcountry’s Colorful Colonial Past
movement, sailed into Port Royal Sound. Today, the Is-land’s most popular park at Coligny Beach, and its retail village, Coligny, maintain that French connection for the Island. Many other names of local sites, churches and roads echo Hilton Head Island’s Spanish heritage, includ-ing Cordillo Parkway.
More than 40 years before the English settled at James-town in Virginia, the Spanish established a town and fort on the shores of Port Royal Sound in Beaufort County, S.C. Santa Elena was located on the present day military grounds at Parris Island, which is the deepest natural port in the Southeastern United States. It became the first major European settlement in 1566 and colonial capital in 1569 of what is now the United States.
Hilton Head Island’s strong English connection began in 1663 when English sea captain William Hilton explored the Carolina coast. Sailing The Adventure from Barbados into Port Royal Sound, Captain Hilton sighted the Island’s oak treed headland and promptly claimed the Island for the British crown, naming it “Hilton’s Head.”
In 1698, Hilton Head began its Irish connection when John Bayley of Ireland took title to 16,200 acres. 24 years
Spaniards in the New World, Circa 1521
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 17
later, his son appointed Alexan-der Trench to be the first real estate agent. The Island was referred to then as Trench’s Island.
One of the more inspiring chap-ters in Hilton Head Island’s history occurred over 150 years ago when hundreds of slaves began a new life of freedom there. In 1862, General Ormsby Mitchel established the town of Mitchelville. It was the first self-governed freedmen’s village in the United States.
Today, many of the descendants of West Africans who settled along the southeastern coast are preserving their culture, known as the Gullah Heritage. This culture is considered to be the purest form of African culture still alive among African Americans and represents more than a quarter million people. The Beaufort County’s Gullah Consortium and its member organizations strive to preserve this sea-island lifestyle, including its system of beliefs, customs, artforms, foodways and language practices.
To accomplish that, members of the Mitchelville Preservation Project and the entire Gullah community are working diligently to replicate and
Savor the Lowcountry is a history and culinary walking tour of Hilton Head Island’s South End. It offers tastings from some of the Island’s best dining establishments and gourmet specialty shops, spiced
with entertaining stories and interesting facts about the Island.For additional information and to book a tour:
SavortheLowcountry.com
preserve Mitchelville and the Gullah story. To learn more about the Mitch-elville Freedom Park project and the Gullah Community of Hilton Head, visit HiltonHeadGullah.org.
To learn more about Hilton Head Island, visit HiltonHeadIsland.org.
Take a History & Culinary Walking Tour of Hilton Head Island’s South End
William Hilton’s ship The Adventure
20 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Many of today’s inns cater to those discerning travelers who select to stay in an inn that offers luxurious accommodations, inviting charm and
gracious hospitality. They also want the properties they choose to include a sophisticated culinary experience paired with fine wines.
“There are many inns which offer wine experiences,” says Jay Karen, CEO of Select Registry. “These inns cater to their guests’ interest in fine wines by offering wines from their local area or from their own extensive wine cellar.”
Inns are also expanding their offerings to wine tastings, cooking classes and wine pairings with gourmet dinners. Many inns are rightfully proud of their wine cellars, some of which contain thousands of bottles. Some inns not only have an extensive wine cellar but are also on a winery property.
Whether you are looking for a total wine experience or just a total relaxing interlude that includes wine, many inns across America not only offer unique charm and hospitality, but they also have excellent wines.
Cheers!
Inn at Black Star Farms Bed & BreakfastSuttons Bay, Michigan
Black Star Farms is a unique agricultural destination that features two winery production facilities with tasting rooms, a distillery, inn and equestrian facility. The winery and distillery produce some of the most sought after and
awarded Michigan wines and spirits. The luxurious inn is the perfect place to host private special events, including weddings, cor-porate retreats and fam-ily celebrations. Casual and upscale farmstead cuisines are available seasonally at
Hearth and Vine and the inn. Nearby, visit the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, voted the “Most Beautiful Place in America” by viewers of ABC’s Good Morning America.
BlackStarFarms.com
The Villas at Gervasi VineyardCanton, Ohio
This Tuscan-inspired inn and gathering place is an up-scale boutique hotel in the Village of the Gervasi Estate adjacent to the Gervasi Vine-yard. Experience luxurious accommodations, casual Venetian-style dinners, food and wine pairings at the Crush House and tours of the winery. For a fun, inspiring and educa-tional experience filled with delicious food and memorable wines, take a cooking and/or wine class taught by top-notch instructors at the Cucina Culinary and Wine Education Cen-ter. This is the ultimate Tuscan experience offering a memo-rable winery experience in Northeast Ohio.
GervasiVineyard.com
Friends Lake InnChestertown, New York
In the midst of the Adirondacks overlooking a small, pristine lake, the Friends Lake Inn offers luxury accommodations in a rustic country setting. This charming and intimate inn has a highly acclaimed restaurant that offers innovative New-American cuisine featuring the freshest local ingredients and creative seasonal
Great Pairings Fine Inns & Fine Wines
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menus. Meals are complemented by a superior wine collection and served in the rustic elegance and warmth of a 19th century dining room or enjoyed as a more casual meal in the taproom featuring regional microbrews. The private wine cellar dining room is also available for small parties.
FriendsLake.com
Gateways Inn Bed & BreakfastLenox, Massachusetts
There is a special el-egance in the Gateways Inn Bed & Breakfast. The man-sion has been converted into a timeless Berkshire B&B, in-fused with charm and hospi-tality. Visitors are pampered with luxurious guestrooms and an understated elegant dining experience in its res-taurant and lounge that offer a distinctive mixture of ambi-ance and taste for the discerning. The inn’s extensive wine list has received the Wine Spectator’s Award of Excellence. It also has an outstanding selection of single malt Scotch and Italian grappa to tempt you.
GatewaysInn.com
Beechwood InnClayton, Georgia
Beechwood Inn, Geor-gia’s Premier Wine Country Inn, is all about wine. Its restaurant is the only res-taurant in Northeast Geor-gia with a Wine Spectator Award of Excellence for its
wine list. The inn’s Cellar is filled with unique varieties and rare wines which reflect the innkeepers’ world travels. They also make several wines from Georgia grapes. Guests can sample these at the “wine-thirty” receptions and enjoy them with the fine dining experiences of farm to table fare and monthly wine dinners in the inn’s inviting restaurant. It’s no wonder this inn is recognized for its wine expertise, gourmet offerings and warm hospitality.
BeechwoodInn.ws
Carter House InnsEureka, California
The Carter House Inns are an enclave of three mag-nificent Victorians perched alongside Humboldt Bay in Old Town Eureka. The luxurious accommodations and
the sumptuous dining at its Restaurant 301 (considered among Northern Califor-nia’s best restaurants) sets an indulgent tone for a visit to the giant redwood forests, rugged Pacific beaches and all the won-ders of Northern Califor-nia’s Redwood Coast. The accommodations and service are outstanding. The award-winning cuisine is prepared with local organic products and fresh herbs, greens and vegetables harvested daily from the inn’s extensive gar-dens. The inn also produces its own wine under the label Carter Cellars.
CarterHouse.com
Youngberg Hill Vineyards and Inn Bed & BreakfastMcMinnville, Oregon
Oregon’s premier wine country estate and one of Wine Spectator’s favorite locations is set on a 50-acre hilltop surrounded by a 25- year-old organic vineyard.
Their passionate farmers and winemakers are thrilled to share, educate and talk wine. Their environmental respect and philosophy focus is key to how they craft their wines, care for their land and host their guests. They care for their wine and guests with this same respect and philosophy.
Centrally located in the Willamette Valley with over 100 wineries and tasting rooms within a 20-minute drive.
YoungbergHill.com
About Select Registry:Select Registry is a portfolio of more than 300
premier inns, bed and breakfasts and boutique hotels throughout North America. Each property must pass an unannounced, rigorous, 200-point quality assurance inspection to earn and maintain its membership in Select Registry. No other organization goes to such lengths to ensure that travelers receive exceptional service, unique and authentic lodging, and an unforgettable experience.
SelectRegistry.com
22 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
B ordering Chicago along Lake Michigan, Chicago’s North Shore is the most picturesque
region in the metropolitan Chicago area. Boasting a scenic byway along the lakefront rich in natural beauty and homes and gardens of distinction,
from five-star luxury to affordable rooms for the budget traveler. Famous chefs have honed their trade in some of Chicago’s North Shore award-winning restaurants. Outdoor dining options, along with dozens of boutiques providing unique gifts and finds, can be found along the tree-lined streets of downtown Evanston and Winnetka. For power-shoppers, the area boasts three major shopping centers: Westfield Old Orchard, the Glen Town Center and Northbrook Court.
Of course, a visit to Lake Michigan is a must. Evanston’s lakefront is free of commercial enterprise and is perfect for walking, jogging, biking or sunbathing and swimming in the clear waters of the lake during the summer months.
VisitChicagoNorthShore.com
Illinois Holocaust Museum
Downtown Evanston
Illinois Holocaust Museum
North ShoreChicago’s
the region is home to Northwestern University, Chicago Botanic Garden, the only Bahá’í House of Worship in the Western Hemisphere, the Illinois Holocaust Museum, the North Shore Center for Performing Arts in Skokie and the Charles Dawes Gates House, which houses the Evanston History Center.
Chicago’s North Shore begins to the north of the city of Chicago in Evanston—a cosmopolitan city with unique stores and diverse cuisine nestled in the charm of a college town. Evanston is home to Light Opera Works, Next Theatre, Piven Theatre Workshop, Piccolo Theatre and Actors Gymnasium.
Chicago’s North Shore is only 20 minutes from downtown Chicago, and its 20 lodging options offer a broad variety of accommodation options, Chicago Botanic Garden
The most picturesque region in metropolitan Chicago can be found
twenty minutes from the heart of the city along Lake Michigan on
Chicago’s North Shore. Our vibrant neighborhoods have their own
great dining, hotels, culture, shopping, and history, and you are
just minutes away from Chicago’s world- famous stores, music and
museums via the famous “EL” — Chicago’s public transit train, or by
commuter rail or car, making us a great base for a Chicago visit.
Chicago Botanic GardenA 385-acre living plant museum situated on nine islandsfeaturing 26 display gardens and surrounded by four natural habitats
Charles Gates Dawes HouseHome to Former U.S. Vice PresidentStart of Daniel Burnham Architectural Walking Tour
Chicago’sBordering Chicago, along Lake Michigan
www.visitchicagonorthshore.comContact us: askme@cnscvb.com
North ShoreOther area attractions include:
Bahá’í House of Worship
Illinois Holocaust Museum
Northwestern University
Frances Willard House
Grosse Point Lighthouse
Sheridan RoadLakefront Byway
24 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
The Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA) offers visitors a unique and immersive experience.
The IMA, founded in 1883, has grown into an expansive 152-acre campus featuring the Oldfields—Lilly House & Gardens, including the Lilly House and Formal Gardens, The Virginia B. Fairbanks Art & Nature Park: 100 Acres and its famous sculpture Funky Bones, immortalized in John Green’s novel The Fault in Our Stars. As one of the nation’s top 10 largest art collections highlighting over 54,000 works dating back over 5,000 years, the IMA is also home to Robert Indiana’s original LOVE Sculpture and the recently installed Five Brushstrokes by Roy Lichtenstein. After spending your
exhibition featuring rare concept cars from the early 1930s to the 21st century, will showcase some of the most unique vehicles ever created by top names like General Motors, Chrysler and Cadillac at the Indianapolis Museum of Art May 3–August 23, 2015. Along with conceptual drawings and scale models, the exhibition will explore the evolution of revolutionary automobile design that pushed the limits of the imagination and shaped the future of the industry.
Indianapolis Museum of ArtCollections & Dream Cars
whole day touring the collection and the grounds, get lost in the IMA Museum Store, shopping its fabulous gift and jewelry selection. Then treat yourself to a smooth cup of coffee in the IMA Café and enjoy the view of the Sutphin Fountain from a cozy seat. The IMA has a little something for everyone year-round.
Just in time for the “Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” a new type of motor display is coming to Indianapolis. Dream Cars: Innovative Design, Visionary Ideas, a major
General Motors Firebird I XP-21, 1953. Designed by Harley J. Earl, Robert F. “Bob” McLean and GM Styling Section staff. Courtesy of General Motors Heritage Center. Photo by Michael Furman.
LOVE by Robert Indiana
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 25
If oil and gasoline don’t get your heart racing, perhaps the sight of the newly acquired Five Brushstrokes by the famed artist Roy Lichtenstein, installed on The Dudley and Mary Louise Sutphin Mall, might. This monumental, outdoor sculpture series evokes the movement and color of paint on canvas. The totem-like works suspend the artist’s sweeping brushstrokes in midair, balancing one on top of the other in a dynamic sculptural spectacle. This installation is a true engineering marvel.
The next time you stop by the “Racing Capital of the World,” be sure to purchase your tickets for Dream Cars: Innovative Design, Visionary Ideas at IMAMuseum.org and enjoy the many splendors the Indianapolis Museum of Art has to offer.
Roy Lichtenstein (American, 1923–1997), Five Brushstrokes, designed 1983–1984, fabricated 2012. Robert L. and Marjorie J. Mann Fund, Partial Gift of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation, 2013.443A-E.4 © Roy Lichtenstein Foundation.
Oldfields-Lilly House (Front View)
26 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Jepson Center for the Arts Savannah, GeorgiaDiscover unique gifts that your friends and family will
love! The Jepson Center Store offers licensed reproductions of the Bird Girl statue in several sizes, striking jewelry and objects that reflect world-class art exhibits. Shop all year round, and watch for the annual Cool Yule sale in December. Telfair.org
The Getty Los Angeles, California
The Getty Stores offer a selection of unique gifts for everyone, including Getty Exclusives, a comprehensive selection of award-winning arts publications, children’s toys and kits, exhibition-related items, artisan jewelry, elegant
apparel and handcrafted, decorative objects. Sign up to receive notifications of new arrivals, private sales and special offers at Getty.edu
Portland Art Museum Portland, OregonPick up a catalogue for special exhibitions and browse
the eclectic selection of interesting gifts at this museum shop. The shop has one of the best selections of art books in the city and is open during museum hours. No museum admission is required to shop here.
PortlandArtMuseum.org
The Ringling Museum Sarasota, FloridaThe Ringling Museum Stores offer a wide range of gifts
that delight and entertain. Choose from fine art books, exquisite jewelry and unique apparel inspired by the gardens and historic mansion, Ca’ d’Zan. Step right up for circus-related toys and memorabilia appealing to children of all ages. Ringling.org
The Henry Ford Dearborn, Michigan
The Henry Ford, a national treasure and cultural resource, features five uniquely diverse museum stores. As a destination where people connect with America’s history, gifts range from our handcrafted glass, pottery and tin made by artisans in Greenfield Village to toys that engage and inspire play for all ages. TheHenryFord.org
America’s Leading Museum Stores continued from page 12
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 27
Amazing inventions, daring visionaries, and living traditions that span American
history—and that’s just the start. Discover 200 acres of mind-blowing sights, sounds and sensations at The Henry Ford.
A jaw-dropping gathering of ev-eryday genius, Henry Ford Museum is a remarkable destination that lets you experience the breakthroughs big and small that have made our world what it is today. From racers to free-dom riders, modular houses to mi-crochips, these are the breakthroughs
that have shaped our world. Greenfield Village brings the past
to the present—see, hear and touch 300 years of American history. Go places in the car that changed Amer-ica, the Model T, explore Thomas Edison’s lab, one of the greatest idea factories ever created, or take a ride on a real steam-powered locomotive.
The Ford Rouge Factory Tour puts you at the center of modern manufac-turing might. Named by USA Today as one of the top 10 places for inno-vation inspiration, this is where the trucks rule the road. A state-of-the-art
TheHenryFord
Dymaxion House, Henry Ford Museum
assembly floor puts Ford F150s to-gether before your eyes.
The immersive power of IMAX, The Henry Ford’s projection system, is regarded as the finest in the world for its unsurpassed size, sound, clarity and impact. See, hear and feel film like never before.
Dreamers, doers, movers and makers come here for unforgettable experiences that make yesterday feel like today. Gain perspective, get in-spired and make your own history at The Henry Ford.
TheHenryFord.org.
America’s GreatestHistory Destination
Model T Ride, Greenfield Village
The Ford Rouge Factory Tour
John F. Kennedy Limousine, Henry Ford Museum
28 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
When planning a shopping getaway to a destination, Bloomington, Minnesota,
is always top of mind, for shopping of course. But, Bloomington and Minneapolis/Saint Paul are so much more than the ultimate shopping des-tination—Bloomington is a dynamic mix of first-class attractions, vibrant
Get up to new heights inside Nick-elodeon Universe® and their new Barnacle Blast Zip Line. Take flight on the longest indoor zip line in North America at 55’ above the 27 rides in the park. Make a day of exploring everything new in Mall of America, including the Barbie™ The Dream-house™ Experience attraction, high-end stores and a Hard Rock® Café located in Nickelodeon Universe.
Wilderness Inquiry will get you on a canoe and paddling on the Mis-sissippi River within minutes of your departure from Mall of America. Adventure seekers will explore the Mighty Mississippi River up close and personal on a half-day guided canoe trip by paddling the Missis-sippi in a 24-foot cedar strip canoe. Be sure to be on the lookout for otters and beavers, again bountiful on the river banks, and the fishing is superb.
Bloomington Minnesota
restaurants and diverse hotel options, surrounded by natural beauty and Minnesota nice! Visit Mall of Amer-ica, with its 520 stores, more than 50 restaurants and attractions unique to no other. Start your itinerary in Bloomington at Mall of America and round out your stay with visits to at-tractions not to be missed.
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 29
Three Rivers Park District has your paddling options fulfilled with their variety of canoeing, kayaking or stand-up paddleboarding opportuni-ties on one of the 10,000+ lakes in Minnesota. Get exercise and fresh air while you explore the shorelines and bays where motorized boats can’t go. Along the way, keep your eyes open for a variety of animals, including swans, turtles and beavers. It’s peace-ful, it’s healthy and it’s fun for the whole family!
Fort Snelling State Park and Min-nehaha Falls are located in the heart of the Twin Cities and offer extensive hiking, bike and ski trails that link to Minnehaha Park and the Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge. Canoe, play golf, swim in Snelling Lake or hike on Pike Island where the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers converge. Trails also allow visitors to hike up to the historic Fort Snel-
ling for a view of military life in the 1820s.
With more theatre seats in the 30-some theatre venues in the Twin Cit-ies than New York and a shopping experience all in itself at Mall of America, Bloomington, Minnesota, will not disappoint! Find more in-
formation on the Bloomington Con-vention & Visitors Bureau website at BloomingtonMN.org, where you can also compare hotel rates and availability, explore getaway pack-ages, detailed itineraries, events and popular The Big Ticket 3-day bun-dled attraction pass.
30 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Colorado Byways
will find Trail Ridge Road and Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP), North America’s highest paved through-road. Adjacent to RMNP is the Peak to Peak Scenic Byway, which flows through Estes Park; and north out of Fort Collins is the Cache la Poudre Scenic Byway, which follows the Wild and Scenic Poudre River—one of the only rivers in the nation with this federal designation.
Colorado Springs boasts a growing number of tasting rooms while the Arkansas River towns of Salida and Canon City house some of the state’s oldest wineries and tasting rooms winding in and out of Collegiate Peaks Scenic Byway and the Gold Belt Tour Scenic Byway.
The San Juan Skyway is 236-mile loop—touted as “the most beautiful drive in America”—and the 116-mile Trail of the Ancients will take you all around the Four Corners Wine Trail, which starts in Durango and heads west to Cortez and the Four Corners area.
Colorado’s unparalleled beauty and bounty lures up-and- coming wineries, distilleries and breweries along scenic routes. These are only a taste of what Colorado has to offer!
ABOUT COLORADO Colorado is a four-season destination offering
unparalleled adventure and recreation, a thriving arts scene, rich cultural heritage, flavorful cuisine and renowned ski resorts. Breathtaking landscape boasts natural hot springs, headwaters of seven major rivers, 11 national parks/monuments and 58 mountains that top 14,000 feet. www.Colorado.com.
BY ANNE KLEIN
Breweries and Wineries
From beer to wine, Colorado’s liquid treasures come in a variety of delightful styles; however, most start with pure Colorado water blended with magnificent
homegrown bounty. The Colorado Brewers Guild coined “Colorado, the State of Craft Beer” to pay tribute to Colorado as the “epicenter” of American craft beer. More than 232 licensed breweries in this brewing hotbed are drawn here for the pure first-use water, brewing friendly laws, taprooms, a strong beer culture, in-state barley malting facilities and its tourism-driven economy. Colorado wine country offers un-pretentious, unparalleled natural beauty; friendly locations and local bounty of fruits make the 110-plus producers and their tasting rooms a treat for wine connoisseurs and casual tasters. The 67-plus Colorado craft distillers are growing rapidly with handcrafted rums, vodkas, whiskeys, gins and liqueurs that may incorporate farm-fresh ingredients (like po-tatoes, peaches or honey), sustainable farming methods (like biodynamic farming) and of course, crisp snowmelt water.
Across the state, tasting rooms can be “paired” with tour routes and some of Colorado’s most breath-taking historic and scenic byways. The scenic routes are peppered with wineries, distilleries, breweries and orchards.
The 486-mile Dinosaur Diamond Scenic Byways, the Western Slope, starring Grand Junction and Palisade, feature dry climate and high elevation along with the Colorado River, making this are the heart of Colorado wine county.
Denver to Fort Collins weaves in and out of scenic byways, featuring tasting rooms from urban to majestic mountain backdrops along the way. Outside Denver you
Steamworks, Durango
Oskar Blues Ouraskyway Ska Beer Garden, Durango
FINDINSPIRATIONINSIDE AND OUTDenver is your destination for sensational art, world-class dining, craft breweries, and so much more.
Soak in the rich artistic culture with monthly First Friday Art Walks or take a step back in time at the
newly restored Union Station. The Mile High City’s 2015 calendar is packed with exciting events that
are sure to inspire. Plan your getaway and find great deals at VISITDENVER.COM
CLYFFORD STILL MUSEUMUnique collection of this
Abstract Expressionist
DENVER ARTS WEEKNovember 6-14, 2015
MCA DENVERContemporary art
that inspires
DENVER ART MUSEUMAcclaimed American Indian
and Western art
CHERRY CREEK ARTS FESTIVALCherry Creek North
July 3-5, 2015
BIENNIAL OF THE AMERICASJuly 14-19, 2015
NOW!2015DENVER
32 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Pablo Picasso, Dale Chi-huly, Ansel Adams and Georgia O’Keeffe rep-
resent just a small portion of the artists that have been featured at the Loveland Museum/Gallery. An accred-ited art and history museum
founded in 1938, the Loveland Museum/ Gallery is dedicated to
preserving and sharing the history of the city, while at the same time, bringing world-class art exhibitions to northern Colorado. With a single visit, guests can explore the traveling exhibi-tions featured in the galleries and dis-cover Loveland’s unique history with a series of exhibits, including Mariano Medina’s homestead, the Great West Sugar Factory and Sweetheart City U.S.A. LovelandMuseumGallery.org
Rialto Theater Center Built in 1920 as a silent
movie theater, the beautifully restored Rialto Theater Center has played a starring role in shaping Loveland’s thriving performing arts community. Located in the heart of downtown, the 445-seat theater is listed on
the National Register of Historic Places and offers a variety of
unique events, including concerts with internationally acclaimed musicians, live theater, dance and silent movies accompanied by an orchestra. Newly expanded in 2012, the Rialto Theater Center embodies the perfect balance between the old and new with a modern tapas restaurant, fully equipped conference rooms and dramatic banquet and event facilities overlooking the heart of downtown Loveland. RialtoTheaterCenter.org
Art in Public PlacesThrough vision, hard work and collaboration, Loveland
has created a large and diverse public art collection that creates a sense of place and purpose. The community boasts over 380 individual works of art on public display within scenic sculpture parks, along roadways and adorning city buildings, parks and playgrounds. Artistic expression abounds, creating a rich tapestry that makes Loveland unique among Colorado communities. As the first Colorado municipality to adopt a one-percent-for-the-arts ordinance, Loveland’s Art in Public Places Program serves as a model for communities dedicated to supporting the arts. Private contributions by arts organizations, citizens and artists, have donated over 72 percent of the collection. VisitLovelandCO.com
Art & CultureLoveland, Colorado
Loveland Museum/Gallery
Trigon by Mary Bates Neubauer
Rialto Theater Center
World Class
LOVELAND • COLO-RADO
There’s a reason Loveland, CO was named one of the top 5 small art cities in America…Loveland boasts over 380 individual
works of art on public display within scenic sculpture parks, adorning city
buildings, parks and playgrounds. This culture of sculpture is solidified during the
second weekend in August when Loveland hosts over 400 artists from around the
world for Sculpture Show Weekend. Don’t miss the Annual Sculpture in the Park,
Loveland Sculpture Invitational and Art in the Park. Create your own adventure
and experience all that Loveland has to offer including our brewery and distillery
tours, unique shopping districts, world class recreation, historic downtown,
Rialto Theater Center, Loveland Museum/Gallery and much more. Learn more at
www.VisitLovelandCO.com/cultural and start planning your adventure today!
Share your Loveland adventures! Use #LoveAdventure throughout 2015 for your chance to enter the
Love Adventure Sweepstakes and vacation giveaway.
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VisitLovelandCO.com/cultural • Visitors Center • 970.667.3882 • I-25 at US 34 • Loveland Exit 257DENVER
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YOUR Cultural ADVENTURE BEGINS
Historic Strater Hotel800.247.4431 - www.strater.com
Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad888.687.2461 - www.durangotrain.com
Get your Free Travel Plannerwww.durango.org
866.631.7010
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 35
With endless outdoor activities and a rich arts and culture community,
Colorado Springs and the Pikes Peak region will elevate your next Colorado itinerary. Start your day with a visit to Garden of the Gods Park, named #1 in the U.S.A. and #2 in the world by TripAdvisor®. The towering red rock formations will amaze and inspire.
Stop by the Visitor & Nature Center just outside the park to learn how the formations developed over millions of years. You can explore the park by car, bus, bike, on foot or on horseback. Once acclimated to the altitude, you can take the ultimate hiking challenge on the Manitou Incline. The Incline is a historic rail line first used for hauling maintenance materials and then as a tourist attraction. When it closed and the tracks were removed, the railroad ties became a 1-mile staircase with a 2,000-ft. vertical rise up the pine- forested foothills of Pikes Peak—America’s Mountain.
Once you’ve reverted back to your resting heart rate, take in the culture of the region at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center. 2015 is the year of Georgia O’Keefe with an exhibit of 40
Colorado Springs
rarely seen works, June 27–September 23. You can also see the Birds of America: John James Audubon and Kevin Sloan exhibit March–May 2015. Then visit the new Penrose Heritage Museum, located on the grounds of The Broadmoor with free entry, featuring 31 horse-drawn carriages and 13 motorized vehicles.
Open since 1918, The Broadmoor, a Forbes Five-Star, AAA Five-Diamond resort, features Colorado’s only Five-Star, Five-Diamond restaurant, Penrose Room. Displays of western art from the owner’s personal collection grace the resort originally crafted in a style reminiscent of Italian Renaissance design. Enjoy golf, tennis and a host of activities, along with a Forbes Five-Star spa, salon and fitness center.
VisitCOS.com.
Explore, Experience & Enjoy the Pikes Peak – America’s Mountain Region
Garden of the Gods Park Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
Broadmoor overview
and The Broadmoor Resort
www.ChickasawCountry.com
Travel through a truly amazing cultural experience, enhanced by breathtaking outdoor wonders, galleries, museums, luxury hotels, and delicious eateries. It all awaits you in Chickasaw Country!
One World Famous Skyline.Two Great Tours.
Groups Welcome
The Urban Adventure Cruise &
Chicago by Night Cruise
90-Minute River & Lake ToursAvailable May - October • 312.332.1368GroupTours@MercuryCruises.comMercuryCruises.com
The Official Chicago Architecture Foundation
River Cruise aboard Chicago’s First Lady
90-Minute River Architecture Tour
Available April - November • 847.358.1330CruiseChicago.com • GroupTours@architecture.org
The Pasadena Way
40 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Famously creative Portland has a wealth of offerings for art lov-ers, from elite galleries and es-
tablished museums to Do-It-Yourself (DIY) artisan retailers and fascinating splashes of public art everywhere you look. Stop by these must-see destinations for a dose of uniquely Portland culture.
Portland Art Museum: Find out why the oldest museum in the North-west is internationally renowned for exciting art experiences. Tour the world and travel through history in the heart of downtown’s cultural dis-trict, taking in magnificent perma-nent collection galleries (featuring an extensive collection of Native Ameri-can art), six stories of modern art and special exhibitions. Each Sunday features activities for families, and admission is free for children 17 and under.
in 3,500 different sections. Get a cup of coffee at the in-store coffee shop, grab a map to the nine color-coded rooms and lose yourself in the larg-est used and new bookstore on Earth.
Monthly gallery walks: Once a month, Portland’s neighborhoods show off their distinct art offerings
Portland, OregonCulture and Creativity
Portland evening skyline
Powell’s City of Books: From hum-ble storefront beginnings in 1971, Powell’s has grown into a Portland landmark and one of the world’s great bookstores. Covering an entire city block on the border of down-town and the Pearl District, Powell’s contains more than 1.5 million books
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The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 41
during free gallery walks. First Thurs-day, a tradition since 1986, features new exhibits and refreshments at the many galleries and institutions of the Pearl District, Old Town Chinatown and Northwest Portland. The Alberta Arts District celebrates Last Thursday every month, but in the summer it becomes a rollicking street fair with live entertainment and craft vendors. Central Eastside galleries stay open late for Hump Day PDX (on the first Wednesday of the month) and Last Friday, while the shops and galler-ies of North Mississippi Avenue host Second Thursday.
Lan Su Chinese Garden: An oasis in the city, this Ming dynasty-style ur-ban oasis built by artisans from Port-land’s sister city of Suzhou features covered walkways, bridges, pavil-ions and a richly planted landscape framing a picturesque lake. The gar-den’s teahouse serves light snacks and traditional teas, and Lan Su hosts many events, including a two-week Chinese New Year celebration, as well as summer concerts.
Portland Japanese Garden: In the scenic hills above downtown, the Japanese Garden is a haven of tran-quil beauty that’s been proclaimed one of the most authentic Japanese gardens outside of Japan. Encom-passing 5.5 acres (2.2 hectare) and five separate garden styles, the gar-den includes meandering streams, intimate walkways and an unsur-passed view of Mount Hood.
Museum of Contemporary Craft: One of Portland’s oldest cultural in-stitutions, the Museum of Contempo-rary Craft, houses more than 1,000 craft objects, as well as curated exhi-bitions and a retail craft gallery that carries a rotating selection of finely crafted art and home goods like ce-ramic dishes, hand-blown glassware and turned wood bowls.
Pittock Mansion: High in the West Hills of Portland, Pittock Mansion
soars 1,000 feet (304.8 m) above the city’s skyline. A century-old symbol of Portland’s dramatic transformation from a small lumber town to a bus-tling city, it’s an architectural wonder. With picture-perfect views of rivers, forests, bridges and mountaintops—and 23 storied rooms teeming with treasures—nowhere else offers a more breathtaking view or a more revealing glimpse of Portland’s past.
Portland Saturday Market: Enjoy a distinctive experience at Portland Saturday Market, the nation’s larg-est weekly open-air arts and crafts market. Stroll down row upon row of unique creations made by the people who sell them, and enjoy live music and international snacks. Open Saturdays and Sundays, March–December. TravelPortland.com
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42 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Farm to Table Northfield & Brookfield, VermontExperience Vermont from three unique, yet closely en-twined, destinations. First, tour Green Mountain Girls Farm where you can meet the animals, see the gardens and experience relational farming at its best. Cap off your visit with a piping-hot goat milk latte!
Next, head to Fat Toad Farm and get to know the 54 goats that produce the milk, which is crafted into the oh-so-delicious caramel sauces the farm is known for. Get a glimpse of all aspects of the caramel production, including a stop at the caramel tasting room and farm store where you will enjoy a special caramel treat made especially for you.
Finish your Green Mountain day around a table at Ariel’s Restaurant, where a steadfast commitment to using Vermont’s best ingredients creates fine and imaginative food in an unmatched atmosphere.
Savannah Cooks Savannah, GeorgiaLet Chef Joe Randall’s Cooking School put a little South
in your mouth, and joy back into your kitchen. Chef Joe preaches the gospel of authentic Southern cuisine as he demonstrates basic sou the rn cook ing techniques and serves you the mouth-watering dishes he prepares.
Then take a trolley tour to learn about Paula Deen’s “rags to riches” story, stop by her famous restaurant, Lady and
Sons, and receive a VIP Pass for dinner or lunch at Uncle Bubba’s Oyster House. If you want to learn about the local cuisine, this is the tour for you!
Plantation Rendezvous New Orleans, LouisianaTravel back in time down Louisiana’s Great River Road
for your rendezvous with two great southern plantations: the Oak Alley Plantation and Laura Plantation. Located on the Mississippi River between the historic cities of New Orleans and Baton Rouge, discover what it was like to live on a 19th-century plantation in the river region.
Tour the Oak Alley Plantation, a classic antebellum home, called the “Grand Dame of the Great River Road.” Then visit Laura Plantation, a historic sugar plantation built in 1805. Allow plenty of time to tour the manor house, formal and kitchen gardens and slave quarters.
Cultural Traveler
Pasadena’s Culinary & History Sampler Pasadena, California
Learn about Pasadena’s extensive culinary offerings, colorful history, architectural gems and compelling charm. Explore the ethnically diverse cafés, restaurants and gourmet shops on colorful side streets and charming hidden courtyards on a walking tour of Old Pasadena with Melting Pot Food. Tastings range from authentic Mexican tortas to traditional Peruvian dishes, Italian gelato and exquisite chocolates.
General Store, Hackberry, Arizona
The
ToursExceptional Experiences
Coast to CoastTheCulturalTraveler.com
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 43
Monterey Bay Aquarium & Gilroy Premium Outlets Monterey, Felton & Gilroy, California
The perfect family getaway! Your California coastal adventure includes a visit to the Monterey Bay Aquarium, a historic Roaring Camp Train Ride through majestic redwoods and a shopping spree at Gilroy Premium Outlets®.
Explore the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s 200 amazing marine life exhibits. No-lines bonus with this package—you use the special group entrance.
Enjoy California’s towering redwood trees as you ride the steam train to Bear Mountain or the beach train down the scenic San Lorenzo River.
Then shop the Gilroy Premium Outlets®, the largest collection of designer and name brand outlets in
Faneuil Hall Marketplace Boston, Massachusetts
Located in the historic heart of Boston, Faneuil Hall Marketplace beckons visitors to walk through history and experience what has become New England’s #1 destination. This magical place in the center of Boston is like no other! It is as alive today as it was in 1742 when our nation’s fathers proclaimed it “The Cradle of Liberty.” Enjoy world-renowned street performers. Browse and shop over 75 locally loved shops and specialty pushcarts. Smell and taste wonderfully diverse ethnic foods in the Quincy Market Colonnade—the largest international food hall in New England.
Then discover the area’s significant architecture, including those designed by noted architects Frank Lloyd Wright and Greene & Greene aboard the Pasadena Tour Company’s private coach. See grand estates, movie locations,
cultural landmarks and signi f icant architecture, and hear the stories of famous residents such a s the Huntingtons, Julia Child and George S. Patton.
The Big Ticket Bloomington, Minnesota
THE BIG TICKET™ is the official Twin Cities three-day bundled attraction pass that gives visitors 30 percent savings on top Twin Cities attractions with added Bloomington and Mall of America discounts and values. Once your ticket has been scanned at the first attraction, you can visit each attraction one time within three days. The Big Ticket is valid at six attractions: Nickelodeon Universe® at Mall of America, SEA LIFE Minnesota®, Aquarium at Mall of America, Water Park of America, Minnesota Zoo, Great Clips® IMAX® Theatre at the Minnesota Zoo and the Science Museum of Minnesota.
Gettysburg Monument
Oak Alley
Multnomah Falls
Northern California with 145 stores offering 25 to 65 percent off.
Key to the City Alexandria, Virginia
The best way to unlock Alexandria’s rich history is with “The Key to the City,” a pass which grants visitors access into nine historic sites. From the nation’s first president to Alexandria’s co-founders, the Civil War to civil rights, walk amongst original 18th-century buildings, peruse ephemera once sacred to key historical characters and dive into a unique history remarkably preserved by a city dedicated to its past. Visit Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, Carlyle House Historic Park, Alexandria Black History Museum, Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site, Friendship Firehouse Museum, Lee-Fendall House Museum & Garden, The Lyceum, Alexandria’s History Museum and the Alexandria Archeology Museum.
44 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
When football fans from across the country de-scend on Houston for
Super Bowl 2017, they will see a transformed Convention District.
This 10-day event will provide the city the opportunity to secure a place in the hearts of visitors for years to come. In preparation, Hous-ton’s Convention District is undergo-ing a major transformation.
Houston First Corporation began construction on several fronts in the fall of 2014. A section of Avenida de las Americas, which stretches across the front of the George R. Brown Convention Center (GRB), will be transformed into a walkable, pe-
Within walking distance will be the Nau Center for Texas Cultural Heritage, scheduled to open in the fall of 2016. The Nau Center will serve as a regional gateway for tour-ism with a 21st-century museum, showcasing the people, places and events of the region’s rich history.
The Nau Center will tell the sto-ry of the 29 counties that comprise Southeast Texas through interactive exhibits that immerse students, edu-cators, residents and visitors in the region’s history and culture. The Nau Center will be located between the GRB and Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros, in the heart of the Convention District.
Visitors will also have the op-portunity to stay in the brand new 1,000-room Marriott Marquis ho-tel, located catty-corner from the
Houston Transforms
Lively Entertainment and Retail Destination for 2017 Super Bowl
destrian-friendly destination—a hot spot for shopping, dining and en-tertainment. Houston First is a local government corporation created by the City of Houston to manage the GRB, three performing arts theaters and other city-owned assets.
Once complete, Avenida will be narrowed, with retail shops and res-taurants added to the GRB’s ground floor. The GRB also will undergo extensive updates, including a dra-matic new glass façade on the center bays and an inviting new central en-trance. Scheduled for completion by March 2016, the project is designed by WHR Architects and managed by Griffin Partners.
Convention Center District
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 45
GRB’s north end and just north of Discovery Green, the 12-acre park immediately west of the GRB. RIDA Development has begun construction on the hotel, which will include retail components on the ground floor and 60,000 square feet of amenity deck space overlooking Discovery Green.
Upon its scheduled opening in September 2016, the Marriott Mar-quis will become the second con-nected convention headquarters hotel in the Convention District— bookended by the Hilton Americas-Houston, just south of the park and connected to the GRB’s south side.
Also, beginning in 2016, the Greater Houston Partnership and HFC will share headquarters in a new 10-story office building with an attached 1,900-space parking ga-rage, nestled between the GRB and the Nau Center. The sleek structure will have a glass façade and retail
space on the ground floor. HFC is currently seeking a developer to build a mid-sized hotel atop the building, which has been designed to accommodate approximately 400
rooms on 15 floors above the park-ing garage.
For additional information, visit HoustonFirst.com and HoustonConventionCtr.com.
46 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
Some of Nevada’s best-kept secrets are in the wide open, waiting to be stumbled upon,
discovered and shared. Our history and culture runs deep in our veins, even while it lies in plain view on the surface.
Where the ancestral Puebloans, Nevada’s first inhabitants, made their homes and hunted their food now lies the Lost City Museum, dedicated to the indigenous peoples of the Southwest. Travelers to southern Nevada need only venture an hour east of Las Vegas to walk in the footsteps of these Puebloans and learn about their lives, culture and contributions to the modern world.
The Lost City Museum was built in 1935 by the National Park Service to exhibit artifacts excavated from Pueblo Grande de Nevada, which was soon to be flooded by Lake Mead and the newly constructed Hoover Dam. While the museum tells the story of our American Indian ancestors, its very existence is a testament to the forced migration of people, water and land as immigrants moved farther West.
The nearby Valley of Fire State
Walking in the footsteps
Nevada’s Native PeopleU.S. Highway 93, Las Vegas to Ely
Park bears further witness to the lives of these people. Petroglyphs carved deep into the fiery sandstone reveal messages the meanings of which we can only ponder. Primitive carvings of bighorn sheep, rivers, swirls and shapes decorate the walls of the valley, urging visitors to guess what they may have meant 3,000 years ago and could mean today.
Several millennia have passed, but the terrain that was once used to hunt food, hold ceremonies and
Valley of Fire State Park
Lost City MuseumCathedral Gorge State Park
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 47
provide shelter has only sharpened its focus with a black “desert patina” that preserves the ancient sandstone. Walking through the park is like reaching through time and joining hands with our ancestors, scaling the same rocks, seeking the same shelter from the same searing summer sun and rejoicing in the same beauty of the Valley of Fire.
Continuing north from Moapa—even the town’s name is taken from the native peoples—the Moapa Band of Paiutes, a treasure trove of ancient Indian rock art, can be found in the rocky hills along U.S. Highway 93. With some sturdy walking shoes and a pair of sharp eyes, one can discover petroglyphs in the area of the Pahranagat National Wildlife Refuge. These petroglyphs are immensely important to the history of Nevada and should be viewed with care and reverence.
As visitors venture northward on
Highway 93, they’ll see the terrain change as the elevation changes. Sandy plateaus covered in sagebrush and creosote give way to rolling hills punctuated with Joshua trees and yuccas. The yuccas become pinion pine and juniper trees as, at last, the lonely traveler reaches the scenic stretch of Highway 93 that is home to Cathedral Gorge State Park.
Only two-and-a-half hours from Las Vegas, Cathedral Gorge feels like a universe away from the neon glitz and liquid motion of the city. Volcanic ash settled hundreds of feet thick and then through the wonder of millions of years of erosion and tectonics, great spires, bluffs and slot canyons were carved into the clay. Cathedral Gorge became home to the ancestral Puebloans, Southern Paiutes and Fremont Indians. In 1935, it became one of Nevada’s first state parks, awing visitors from around the world.
Nevada’s native history fades as
one continues northward and the more recent mining history comes into the spotlight. Pioche, once known as the “deadliest town in the West,” is a shadow of its boomtown days only a century ago. Oh, but if the walls of the Overland Saloon could talk! The Million Dollar Courthouse, with its gallows and jail cell, could tell the stories of outlaws and gunslingers and millionaire miners.
A final stop in Ely, a mere four hours from Las Vegas, caps this trek through Nevada’s native history. Landmarks with Shoshone names surround this ever-growing rural town. Mines dot the landscape, and railroad tracks cut through the hillsides. Time marches on, and industries flourish and fade. Modern life pulses in the hotel marquees and headlight-strewn highways. This is the living, breathing definition of why Nevada is A World Within: A State Apart.
TravelNevada.com
Valley of Fire State Park Valley of Fire State Park
48 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
TRAVEL PLANNERCALIFORNIA
Los Angeles, CA310-440-7300Shop.Getty.edu
See page 5
Pasadena, CA800-307-7977
VisitPasadena.comSee page 39
Santa Monica, CA800-544-5319
SantaMonica.comSee page 37
Stockton, CA877-778-6258
VisitStockton.orgSee page 38
COLORADO
Colorado Springs, CO719-685-7635VisitCOS.comSee page 35
Denver, CO800-233-6837
VisitDenver.comSee page 31
Durango, CO970-247-3500Durango.orgSee page 34
Loveland, CO970-667-3882
VisitLovelandCO.comSee pages 32–33
FLORIDA
St. Augustine, FL904-808-7330
HistoricCoastCulture.comSee pages 10–11
Miami, FL800-933-8448
MiamiandBeaches.comSee page 13
GEORGIA
Savannah, GA877-SAVANNAH
VisitSavannah.comSee pages 14–15
INDIANA
Indianapolis, IN317-923-1331
IMAMuseum.orgSee page 24–25
ILLINOIS
Chicago, IL847-358-1330
CruiseChicago.comSee page 37
Chicago, IL312-332-1368
MercuryCruises.comSee page 37
Chicago, IL847-763-0011
VisitChicagoNorthShore.comSee pages 22–23
TRAVEL PLANNER
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 49
LOUISIANA
866-204-7782VisitNOPC.com
See page 3
MICHIGAN
Dearborn, MI800-835-5237
TheHenryFord.orgSee page 27
MINNESOTA
Bloomington, MN800-346-4289
BloomingtonMN.orgSee pages 28–29
NEVADA
800-NEVADA8TravelNevada.comSee pages 46–47
NEW YORK
Rochester, NY800-677-7282
VisitRochester.comSee page 52
NORTH CAROLINA
800-VISITNCVisitNC.com
See pages 18–19
OREGON
Portland, OR877-678-5263
TravelPortland.comSee pages 40–41
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City, OK800-593-3356
ChickasawCountry.comSee page 36
SOUTH CAROLINA
Hilton Head Island, SC800-523-3373
HiltonHeadIsland.orgSee pages 16–17
TEXAS
Houston, TX713-853-8029NauCenter.org
See pages 44–45
In Partnership With
Houston, TX713-853-8000
HoustonFirst.comSee pages 44–45
VERMONT
800-VERMONTVermontVacation.com
See pages 6–7
WASHINGTON DC
Washington, D.C.202-371-2830
AmericansForTheArts.orgSee page 2
TRAVEL PLANNER
50 | The Cultural Traveler 2015
The Cultural Traveler guide is published annually by the U.S. Cultural & Heritage Tourism Marketing Council LLC and Shop America Alliance LLC.
Co-Publishers/Editors: Sheila Armstrong, CulturalTraveler@aol.com,
843-341-6392Rosemary McCormick, ShopAmericaTours@aol.com,
707-224-3795Contributing Writer: Anne KleinAccount Executives: Liz Birdsall, liz@tbgroup.us
Design and Production: Skies America Publishing Company
Sheri Cunningham–Senior Vice PresidentMichelle Fandrey–Art DirectorSamantha Edington–Editor Cindy Pike–Production Manager
© 2015 All rights reserved
Cover Photos: Clockwise from top left: Vermont’s Covered Bridges, pages 6–7; America’s Byways Route 66, pages 8–9; Savannah’s Chef Joseph Randall, The Cultural Traveler Tours, pages 42–43; Nevada’s Valley of Fire State Park, pages 46–47; Indianapolis Museum of Art’s Love Sculpture, pages 24–25; Youngberg Hill Winery and Inn Bed & Breakfast, page 21.
Atlanta Convention & Visitors BureauAtlanta.net
Bloomington Convention & Visitors Bureau
BloomingtonMN.org
Chicago North Shore Convention & Visitors Bureau
CNSCVB.com
City of Loveland, CO Economic Development
VisitLovelandCO.com Hilton Head Island/Bluffton Visitor &
Conference Bureau HiltonHeadIsland.org
Historic Shopping & Dining Attractions
HistoricShoppingAndDining.com
Houston First & The Nau CenterHoustonFirst.com, NauCenter.org
Indianapolis Museum of ArtIMAMuseum.org
Louisiana Tax Free ShoppingLouisianaTaxFree.com Nevada Commission on TourismTravelNevada.com
New Orleans Convention & Visitors Bureau
NewOrleansCVB.com
St. Johns Cultural CouncilStJohnsCulture.com
The Henry FordTheHenryFord.org
Travel PortlandTravelPortland.com
Vermont Department of Tourism & Marketing
VermontVacation.com
Visit AlexandriaVisitAlexandriaVA.com
Visit Laguna Beach VisitLagunaBeach.com
Visit North CarolinaVisitNC.com
Visit Sarasota VisitSarasota.com
Visit SavannahVisitSavannah.com
U.S. Cultural & Heritage TourismMarketing Council PartnersMarketing U.S. Cultural & Heritage Travel Experiences Worldwide
The Cultural Traveler 2015 | 51
Awe-Inspiring To learn more about Atlanta’s awe-inspiring cultural and heritage experiences, visit Atlanta.net.
Georgia Aquarium Be amazed and entertained at the world’s largest aquarium.
Atlanta History Center Visit the 1928 gracious Swan House and the Smith Family Farm, special features at the center.
Atlanta Cyclorama and Civil War Museum Experience the sweeping panorama of the Battle of Atlanta and learn about the Civil War’s history.
Zoo Atlanta See Atlanta’s pride and joy—the only panda twins born in the U.S.—Mei Lun and Mei Huan.
World of Coca-Cola Tour Tour the multi-sensory, 4-D theater and sample 60 different beverages from around the world.
CNN Studio Tour Go behind the scenes to see how this first global news network produces its shows.
Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum Experience “A Day in the Life of the President” and take a virtual trip with the Carters to fight disease and promote democracy around the world.
The Margaret Mitchell House See the actual writing desk where Gone With the Wind was written.
High Museum of Art Explore the museum’s celebrated collection of more than 14,000 works of art.
Atlanta Botanical Garden Take the 600-foot Kendeda Canopy Walk for a beautiful aerial view of the garden.
Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site Be inspired by the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the “International Civil Rights Walk of Fame.”
Arts & Culture in Atlanta, Georgia
® N
YSD
ED,u
sed
w/p
erm
issi
on
.
1.800.677.7282
• FINGER LAKES • ERIE CANAL CORRIDOR • GENESEE VALLEY • SEAWAY TRAIL
HistoryArt
Dance
MuseumsTheatre
Music
● Ganondagan State Historic Site ● Downstairs Cabaret Theatre ● International Museum of Photography and Film
at George Eastman House ● Charlotte-Genesee Lighthouse ● Historical Society & Museum ● WXXI Public
Broadcasting Council ● Genesee Country Village & Museum ● The Little Theater Film Society ● Geva Theatre
Center ● Rochester Museum & Science Center and Strasenburgh Planetarium ● Sonnenberg Gardens and Mansion
● Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor ● Tinker Homestead ● Xerox Rochester International Jazz Festival
● Memorial Art Gallery of the U of R ● Seneca Park Zoo ● Corning Museum of Glass ● Rochester Philharmonic
Orchestra ● National Museum of Play at The Strong ● Artisan Works ● National Susan B. Anthony Museum &
House ● Frederick Douglass and Underground Railroad Heritage Sites ● Hill Cumorah ● Mount Hope Cemetery
● Eastman School of Music ● Blackfriars Theatre ● Rochester Arts and Cultural Council ● Garth Fagan Dance
● Corn Hill Navigation Foundation ● Landmark Society of Western New York ● ArtWalk Rochester ● Granger
Homestead & Carriage Museum ● Rochester Broadway Theatre League ● ImageOut: Rochester LGBT Film &
Video Festival ● Glenn Curtiss Museum ● Hochstein School of Music & Dance ● Rochester City Ballet ● Women’s
Rights National Historical Park ● Nazareth College Arts Center ● AKWAABA-The Heritage Associates ● LeRoy
Historical Society/Jell-O Gallery ● Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum ● Auburn’s Historical & Cultural
Sites Commission-Harriet Tubman House ● National Women’s Hall of Fame ● Rockwell Museum of Western Art
● JCC CenterStage ● 1812 Bicentennial Peace Garden ● Cobblestone Museum ● Greentopia ● Roberts Cultural
Life Center ● Rochester Gay Men’s Chorus ● MuCC ● Sodus Bay Lighthouse Museum ● Rochester Oratorio Society
● Theatre ROCS ● First Niagara Rochester Fringe Festival ● Antique Wireless Museum ● Finger Lakes Museum
CulturalAbundance
.com
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