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Dakota Intrepid
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When in the United States, there is an endless list of places to visit and it will depend on your interests, the time you have to spend and how far you wish to travel.
In the state of Arizona, you will find the Grand Canyon. Created by the Colorado River over 6 million years, it is a spectacular gorge stretching 277 miles with widths of between 4 to 18 miles and depths of more than a mile.
California boasts some really interesting places to visit including the infamous Alcatraz Prison, Death Valley National Park, which is the hottest, driest and lowest deserts on earth, The Hearst Castle, J.Paul Getty Museum and the Griffith Observatory, which are both in L.A. Depending on what time of year you plan to visit, Yosemite National Park will offer you something different and a visit to California would not be complete without tour of Warner Brothers Studio in Burbank.
The Mystic Seaport Maritime Museum and the USS Nautilus Submarine Museum makes Connecticut a must stop for those of you interested in the sea and the vessels that traverse under and over the waves.
The Historical Society of Delaware takes up a 500 block of a mall in Wilmington and includes the Delaware History Museum, the Old Town Hall, Willington Square and HSD's research Library.
High on the list of places to visit in the USA would have to be NASA's Kennedy Space Center and for over thirty years tours groups have heard the stories of men in space and indeed on the moon. Castillo de San Marcos and the Florida Museum of Natural History are well worth a look as well.
Popping over to Hawaii you can visit the great beaches and many monuments and sights but the one that immediately come to mind is the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor.
Back on the mainland, the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum and Lincoln's Home at Springfield as well as Frank Lloyd Wright's Home and Studio at Oak Park are the interesting points in Illinois.
Lincoln City, Indiana is home to Abraham Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial and Louisiana boasts the National World War II Museum in New Orleans and Oak Valley Plantation in Vacherie.
In Maine, there is the Maine Maritime Museum and the seashore trolley Museum while in Maryland you can see the Antietam (Civil War) National Battlefield and the Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture.
Massachusetts offers a smorgasbord of places to visit including Historic Salem, famous for the Witch Trials, Plymouth Plantation and the Pilgrim Hall Museum both at Plymouth, Paul Revere House, John F Kennedy Presidential Library, Museum of Fine Arts, USS Constitution Ship Museum and The freedom Trail all at Boston. Do not forget Harvard University and Historic Deerfield as well as the National Heritage Museum at Lexington and Battleship Cove at Fall River.
In Michigan there is the Henry Ford Museum at Dearborn and the Gerald R Ford Museum at Grand Rapids.
Missouri is home to the Harry S Truman Presidential Library.
Nevada has the Hoover Dam.
New Jersey there is the Morristown National historical Park and the Thomas Edison National Historical Site.
Places to visit in New York are the Empire State Building, the world Famous Statue of Liberty, Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum, Ellis Island Immigration Museum, National Baseball Hall of Fame, West Point (US Military Academy) and the American Museum of Natural History.
The home of the Vanderbilt's, Baltimore Estate and the historic Latta Plantation are both situated in North Carolina and South Carolina is home to Fort Sumter.
The United States Air Force Museum is near Dayton, Ohio and in Oregon you can visit the Lewis and Clark National and State Historical Parks.
Steeped in history, is Pennsylvania is home of the Gettysburg Battlefield, National Civil War Museum, Independence Hall, National Constitution Center and the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania.
Mount Rushmore National Park in South Dakota is known the world over and while you're in the area, there is Badlands National Park and Black hills National forest as well.
In Tennessee there is the National Civil Rights Museum and Texas is the home of The Alamo and NASA's Johnson Space Center.
In Virginia, there is the Home of Thomas Jefferson, Monticello, Mount Vernon, the Home of George Washington and Stratford Hall Plantation which was the birthplace of Robert E. Lee.
The name Washington speaks for itself, The White House, Arlington National Cemetery, Smithsonian Museums, Lincoln Memorial, and Memorials of Holocaust, WWII and Vietnam Veterans and Ford's Theatre.
In Wyoming there is the beautiful Yellowstone National Park.
And for the young and the young at heart, one of the most popular places to visit is, of course, Disneyland.
David Dutton helps people find the coolest places to visit in the world. If you are planning a trip then check out www.CoolestPlacesToVisit.com
Dodge; An American Tradition
Dodge was founded in 1914 and is based out of Auburn Hills, Michigan. Dodge manufactures trucks, commercial vehicles, passenger vehicles, muscle cars, SUVs, pick up trucks and sports cars. Dodge is manufactured in over 60 countries worldwide. The company was originally founded in 1900 by the Dodge brothers as the Dodge Brothers Company to supply parts to the growing automotive industry in Michigan. Dodge did not begin manufacturing their own vehicles until 1914. Dodge became a part of the Chrysler Corporation in 1928, was part of the DaimlerChrysler merger from 1998-2007 and is now part of the new Chrysler LLC.
Horace and John Dodge were the brothers responsible for the founding of the Dodge Company in 1900. Their business produced chassis and engines for the growing automotive market in the Michigan area before they released their first vehicle in 1914. Their first model was the Dodge Model 30, somewhat of a takeoff from the Ford Model T. Dodge, like many other vehicle manufacturers within the country, produced models for military use. The first time that Dodge's vehicles were used by the United States military was when the United States sent troops into Mexico on the Mexican Expedition which was in search of Pancho Villa.
Dodge, prior to the war years in the United States, produced many luxury liner models such as the D11 4-door sedan. In the 1950s and 1960s Dodge began producing more and more coupes and sedans. A couple of their models were the Dodge Coronet 440 sedan of 1966 and the 1977 Dodge Diplomat sedan. Once Dodge became part of the DaimlerChrysler merger in 1998, their design and success took off at an even higher level.
Once the merger took place the company began reworking the designs of many of its successful models to make them more attractive to the customer. Those models that Dodge redesigned were the Intrepid, the Stratus and the Neon.
Aside from their passenger vehicles, Dodge has become widely popular with their pick up trucks, SUVs, commercial vehicles and vans. Their pick up trucks have become the backbone of the company and are most known for their durable pick ups. Dodge's first civilian pick up truck was the Power Wagon, which was released shortly after the conclusion of World War II. The Dodge Dakota and the Dodge Ram are two of their most popular pick up trucks on the market today.
Throughout their history, Dodge has gone through a handful of name changes, which means they have also gone through a handful of logo changes. Their first logo was a circular emblem with the letters D and B intertwined for Dodge Brothers. The logo Dodge used until the mid 1990s was the pent-a-star, which is a pentagon with its five points and a star in the middle. Their current logo is the Dodge Ram head. It appears on all of their models except for the Dodge Viper. The ram head is also part of the company's slogan which is, "Grab life by the horns."
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Automobile Shipping for Collectors
The Dodge symbol....?
I know the symbol is a Ram and it is meant that you are supposed to dodge the ram,(do you get the meaning of the name and symbol?), but the only Dodge cars that it actually goes with is the Ram pickup, Charger and the Challenger. Like the Ram of course goes with it because the symbol is a Ram, the Charger goes with it because the ram will always be charging you, and Challenger goes with it because the ram will be challenging you.
So cant they use another symbol for cars like the, Intrepid, Dakota, Avenger, Nitro, and other cars that they make?
Do you get what I mean?
The name started as red ram v8 in 1953 when dodge got its first hime engine. And the ram head was on the 1955 Dodge 500 hood.
When the new trucks game out in 1994 it was decided to apply the ram trade mark to all dodge vehicles. Up until Dalmer screwed Chrysler over there was a thumb size pentastar at curb height on the right front finder just behind the wheel well.
S. Dakota's 'lost' hero of WWII gets fresh lift
Every night before she goes to bed, Eva Harris takes out the old letters, unfolds the worn pages and is visited again by her Navy hero husband. His voice reaches out across 65 years - from North Africa, the South Pacific and other World War II venues. Harris tells his bride where he's at, what he's doing, and how much he loves her. "I still dream about him," Eva Harris, 89, says from her Lorton ...
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