Road Trip!
Phoenix Art Museum is one of Road Trip!.

1. Phoenix Art Museum

9.3
1625 N Central Ave (at E McDowell Rd.), フェニックス, AZ
美術館 · 107個のヒントとレビュー

HISTORYHISTORY: The Phoenix Art Museum houses more than 18,000 works of art, including the original Gilbert Stuart portrait of George Washington used on the dollar bill.

国立海軍航空博物館 is one of Road Trip!.

2. 国立海軍航空博物館

9.4
(National Naval Aviation Museum)
1750 Radford Blvd, ペンサコーラ, FL
歴史博物館 · 100個のヒントとレビュー
ウォルト ディズニー コンサートホール is one of Road Trip!.

3. ウォルト ディズニー コンサートホール

9.3
(Walt Disney Concert Hall)
111 S Grand Ave (btwn 1st & 2nd St), ロサンゼルス, CA
コンサートホール · Bunker Hill · 164個のヒントとレビュー
Declaration House is one of Road Trip!.

4. Declaration House

8.0
701 Market St, フィラデルフィア, PA
史跡と保護遺跡 · Center City East · 11個のヒントとレビュー
Castle Clinton National Monument is one of Road Trip!.

5. Castle Clinton National Monument

7.7
Battery Pl, ニューヨーク市, NY
史跡と保護遺跡 · Financial District · 32個のヒントとレビュー

HISTORYHISTORY: Built as a U.S. military fort in 1811 in anticipation of the War of 1812 against the British, Castle Clinton went on to serve a variety of roles.

アメリカ野球殿堂博物館 is one of Road Trip!.

6. アメリカ野球殿堂博物館

9.3
(National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum)
25 Main St (Fair St), クーパーズタウン, NY
博物館 · 82個のヒントとレビュー

HISTORYHISTORY: This is where the game's immortals are enshrined. The heart of the museum is the Hall of Fame gallery. The gallery has a plaque for each of the players who have been elected to the hall.

エリス島 is one of Road Trip!.

7. エリス島

(Ellis Island)
ニューヨーク市, NY
· 89個のヒントとレビュー

HISTORYHISTORY: Opened in 1892, Ellis Island served as a federal immigration station for more than 60 years until it closed in 1954. Millions of newly arrived immigrants passed through the station during that time.

La Brea Tar Pits & Museum is one of Road Trip!.

8. La Brea Tar Pits & Museum

8.3
5801 Wilshire Blvd, ロサンゼルス, CA
史跡と保護遺跡 · Mid-City West · 117個のヒントとレビュー

HISTORYHISTORY: These tar pits hold the fossils of Ice Age animals that became trapped in the asphalt deposits here. The fossils were first described by Wellesley College professor William Denton in 1875.