Getting on/off a motorcoach; driving about 1 mile, approximately 1/2 hour riding time. Walking up to 2 miles; city streets.
At the Balcony Café on the Mezzanine.
After breakfast, we will have a lecture on "Founding Fathers". Afterwards, we will board our motorcoach for a ride to Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell. The old cracked Bell still proclaims liberty, and Independence Hall echoes the words, "We the People". We’ll explore Franklin's Philadelphia and America's continuing struggle to fulfill the Founders' declaration that "all men are created equal". We will enjoy a ranger-led introduction to Independence Hall and a self-led exploration at Liberty Bell with a park ranger available for questions. Road Scholar has already purchased your ticket for a specified entry time. However, if you arrive a day ahead or stay later and wish to go back to Independence Hall, you will need to acquire a free ticket at the Visitors Center on the day of your visit for a specified time.
This meal has been excluded from the program cost and is on your own to have what you like at the Bourse Food Hall. The Group Leader will be happy to offer suggestions.
We’ll then go to the new Museum of the American Revolution, the first of its kind to trace the steps that lead to our break with the “Mother Country” of England and eventually to revolutionary war. Led by an educator, we will take a virtual journey through the American Revolution, encountering the events, people, and ideals of the founding of the United States through state-of-the-art design and technology. The collection of thousands of objects includes works of art, manuscripts, and printed pieces from the period. One particularly historic item is the original tent that George Washington used as his command center.
We will have dinner at historic City Tavern, enjoying faithful recreations of 18th-century ambience and cuisine. The original was established by a group of prominent Philadelphians. Completed in 1773, it was one of the city’s most elegant buildings and quickly became the favored meeting place of movers and shakers including those who figured prominently in the American Revolution. The building was demolished in 1854. An authentic replica was constructed in 1976 for America’s Bicentennial.
At leisure.