May 17, 2012
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Washington Revisited

Plan to take some time at the places you’ve zoomed by in the past
The Lincoln Memorial is a traditional stop on middle school trips

Many people traveling to Washington, D.C., for the first time are on some middle school band, chorus, history class, or junior honor society trip. Those junkets — with a need to fill numerous activities into a small educational window — can cram a schedule with monument, artifact, document and gemstone visits in our nation’s capital. But now that I’m older, I went back and appreciated the things that I had to sprint by as a child.

The three times my family and I have been to D.C. certainly involved the mainstays — the Lincoln Memorial, Smithsonian Museums, and the Washington Monument. But we also have found ways to focus on other great attractions. D.C., a very friendly walking city, has wonderful access to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority’s underground transit system (dubbed the “Metro”), which was built by Traylor Bros., an Evansville construction company.

The family journey started from the 834-room Hyatt Regency Washington on Capitol Hill, located on New Jersey Avenue and within walking distance of the Smithsonian and the National Mall. The Hyatt Regency Washington boasts a fantastic location near important government landmarks (the U.S. Capitol, Supreme Court, Library of Congress, and the House and Senate Office Buildings), and even its restaurant, Article One – American Grill, pays tribute to the nation’s history. (Article One of the U.S. Constitution established the framework of Congress.) The restaurant morphs from a casual breakfast and lunch location to a fine dining establishment with an American Grill menu of steaks, seafood, and chef’s specialties with a local focus.

The rooms, furnished in rich caramel and gold hues and dark wood furniture, were upscale and spacious, and the neighborhood was safe enough to visit the sights at night. All of the monuments hold significant importance in our history, but a beautiful way to see them is with a night tour via the Martz Gold Line and Gray Line bus service. Visiting the Jefferson and Lincoln Memorials awash in floodlights gives a different perspective to those and other great buildings.

At the Lincoln Memorial, I stood where Martin Luther King Jr. overlooked the Reflecting Pool to give his famous “I Have A Dream” speech. Even with middle school kids around, there was a quiet reverence observed within the memorial’s walls. That was especially true of those standing at Lincoln’s feet. With hundreds of other folks around, it was remarkable to sit on those steps and look out over the National Mall on a delightful spring afternoon.

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