Saturday, July 4, 2015

UNITED STATES: INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE AND A FEW FACTS

United States of America is the longest functioning democracy in the world. July 4, 1776 represents
 the Declaration of Independence and the birth of the United States of America as an independent
nation. According to the Declaration of Independence, "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness"
are the "unalienable rights" of the people of the country. Independence day, commonly known as
fourth of July is a federal holiday celebrated with fireworks, parades, barbecues, carnivals, fairs,
 games, picnics, concerts reunions, speeches and ceremonies.

United States is the fourth largest country by area and third largest by population. The country
has an extremely diverse geography and climatic condition. The term "United States", when used in
the geographical sense, means the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guam, and
 the U.S. Virgin Islands. Forty-eight of the states are situated in the single region between Canada and
Mexico known as Contiguous United States or the Lower 48. Alaska is situated in the northwestern
end of North America and the State of Hawaii is an archipelago in the Pacific Ocean.

America is a land of immigrants and still receives more immigrants than any other country in the
world. Millions of immigrants came to the United States through Ellis Island, known as the historical
 gateway of immigrants. Located in Upper New York Bay, Ellis Island served as the nation's busiest
 immigrant inspection station from 1892 until 1954. Almost half of the ancestors of the present day
Americans  came through this island .

The oldest DNA evidence of human habitation in North America, dated back to 14,300 years ago,
was found in the Paisley Caves in south-central Oregon . Dated back to 3500 BC, the multiple mound
 complex of Watson Brake, situated in the state of Louisiana is the oldest archaeological site in the
 United States. As early as 6500 BCE, people in the Lower Mississippi Valley at the Monte Sano site
 built complex earthwork mounds to express their religious ceremonies and cosmology.

At the beginning of 10th century AD, Vikings, the Germanic Norse seafarers from Scandinavian
countries explored and settled areas of the North Atlantic including the northeastern fringes of North
America. Leif Erikson a Viking explorer is believed to be the first recorded Nordic person to have
visited North America. Leif Erikson Day is an annual American observance occurs on October 9.

Colonization or the period of exploration sponsored by major European nations started when Queen
 Isabella 1 of Spain financed the expedition of Christopher Columbus to discover India, famed for its
  riches of gold, pearls and spices. In 1492, Columbus landed in a New World which he believed to
 be India and called the native people of the newly discovered land as "Indians", a name still used to
 refer the natives in United States.

The Americas, or America, also known as the New World, is the combined continental landmasses of
 North America and South America in the Western Hemisphere. America, derived its name from
Amerigo Vespucci an Italian explorer and cartographer who proved that the land found by Columbus
 was not India . In 1507, the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller produced a world map on
which he named the lands of the Western Hemisphere "America".

Christopher Columbus discovery led to the first lasting European contact with the America .It
inaugurated a period of European exploration, conquest, and colonization that lasted for several
centuries. Spain was the first European power to settle and colonize a major portion of North
America. Though colonization of the continent started from 1492 onwards, Spain and Portugal were
 the only significant colonial powers till 1600. In the following century, along with the
Dutch, England and France succeeded in establishing permanent colonies in the land.

Queen Elizabeth of England  intended  to establish a colony in North America to loot the riches from
 the New World. Britain made several attempts to colonize America which were all failures including
 the  Lost  colony of Roanoke. The  Jamestown settlement in the Colony of Virginia was the first
successful  permanent English  settlement in the Americas. From 1616 to1699,Jamestown served
 as the capital of the colony for a period of 83 years. Virginia Dare a prominent figure in American
 myth and folklore, was originally the first child born  in the New World to English parents.

From 1754 to 1763, England and France fought a war over their land in America called the Seven
Years' War or the French and Indian War. English won this war and made their thirteen colonies in
 America. This thirteen colonies were Delaware, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia,
Maryland ,Connecticut, Massachusetts, North Carolina, South Carolina, New Hampshire, New York,
 and Rhode Island.

After this war, the colonists began to think that they were not getting their "rights as freeborn
Englishman. Britain started imposing new taxes on the colonies and made it pay for the war. The
major taxes imposed by British included the Sugar Act (1764), Stamp Act (1765), Townshend Duties
(1767), and Tea Act (1773). Americans called this "No taxation without representation", meaning that
 the colonists should not have to pay taxes unless they had votes in the British Parliament .

In 1770, colonists in Boston known as the Sons of Liberty got in a fight with the British soldiers. In
this  struggle five colonists were shot killed by the British army, widely known as the Boston
 Massacre. After the Tea Act, in 1773 the Sons of Liberty dumped hundreds of boxes of tea in a
 river  , famously known as Boston Tea Party .After this event, delegates from thirteen colonies
 formed a group known as continental congress. Important delegates included were Benjamin
Franklin, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, John Hancock, Roger Sherman and John Jay.

George Washington was the Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army during the American
Revolutionary War. American victory at Yorktown, Virginia in 1781, led by George Washington
made Britain to decide to stop fighting and give up the colonies. Thirteen American Colonies rejected
 the British monarchy and aristocracy, and fought to overthrew the authority of Britain with the help
 of France, Spain, Vermont, Netherlands, and the French allied Sultanate of Mysore.

The American Revolution was a political upheaval that took place between 1765 and 1783 against
the British rule. On July 4, 1776, people from 13 colonies agreed to the United States Declaration of
Independence and claimed themselves as free and independent states, and were not part of England
 any more. The Battle of Saratoga is considered as the turning point of the American Revolution. The
 victory of this battle against Britain made France and Spain joining the war on the side of the Americans.

On 3rd September 1783,The Treaty of Paris was signed in Paris by representatives of King George III
 of Britain and representatives of the United States of America which ended the American
evolutionary War. The significant result of the revolution was the creation of a democratically-
elected representative government responsible to the will of the people . The treaty also defined the
territories and enlarged the boundaries of United States. The Jay Treaty of 1795, solved many
issues left over from the Revolution, and opened ten years of peaceful trade between Britain and United States.

Articles of Confederation is the  first governing document  or the first written constitution of
the United States of America. The Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation on
November 15, 1777. However, ratification of the Articles of Confederation by all thirteen states did
 not occur until March 1, 1781.The final form consist of a preamble and thirteen articles.. The
article  of confederation was weak as it left most of the  powers in the hands of the states .

The Articles of Confederation did little to enhance the United States' ability to defend its
sovereignty as an independent nation. A new Constitution was written and signed in 1787 , which
replaced the Article of Confederation. This constitution stands as the supreme law of the country.
It provide a strong  framework for Federal Government and  its relationship to the States and its
citizens. The United States Constitution is the shortest written constitution in the world.

Largely to the efforts of James Madison, The Bill of Rights or the first ten amendments  were added
 to the Constitution in December 1791. It was the result of fears raised by the  Anti-Federalists during
 the ratification of the Constitution that the Constitution did not provide sufficient protection against
 abuses of power by the federal government. Bill of Rights ensure freedoms of speech and religion,
the right to bear arms, the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and  protect
individual rights against government intrusion.

After independence United States has expanded its territory through major acquisitions and
purchases. The important among them are the purchase of Florida, Puerto Rico, Guam, Philippines
and Cuba from Spain, of which Philippines and Cuba became independent nations. Another major
purchase was the purchase of Alaska from Russia. The US also annexed the territories of Oregon,
 Texas,  Hawaii  and Mexico.

When Thomas Jefferson became president he  doubled the size of the US  in 1803 ,with the
purchase of  Louisiana Territory from France. The Louisiana territory comprised of 828,000 square
miles and included  land from fifteen present U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. The territory
contained land that now forms Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska, and
 areas of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, New Mexico, Texas, Montana, Wyoming,
Colorado and Louisiana including the city of New Orleans, west of the Mississippi River.

Another major crisis faced by United States was the civil war fought between 1861 to 1865 . The
 American Civil War had its origin in the issue of slavery. Chattel slavery, also called traditional
slavery, was practiced in the country , were people are treated as the chattel (personal property) of an
 owner and are bought and sold as if they were commodities. After the American revolution, northern
 States abolished slavery (known as free states) while the southern states continued it (known as slave
 states). Among the 34 states as of January 1861, seven Southern slave states individually declared
their secession from the United States and formed the "Confederacy".

After four years of combat between the Union and the Confederate states, Confederacy was
collapsed which determined the survival of the Union .The result of the war include the abolition of
slavery, preservation of territorial integrity, dissolution of the confederacy, beginning of
reconstruction era and the processes of restoring national unity. The country also has a meteoritic rise
 in global importance since its independence and civil war.

The national flag of the United States consist of thirteen stripes, which represents the thirteen
 colonies, that declared independence from the Britain  and became the first states in the country.
 The blue rectangle in the canton referred to specifically as the "union" and bear 50 small white five
pointed  stars representing the  fifty states of the country.  Nicknames for the flag include the "Stars
and Stripes", "Old Glory" and "The Star-Spangled Banner". June 14 of each year is  celebrated as the
 flag day which commemorates the adoption of the flag of the United States in 1777.

The Six National symbols of United States are the Liberty Bell, the U.S. flag, the Bald eagle, the
 National Anthem, Uncle Sam, and the Statue of Liberty. Though American English is the
defacto national language of United States, there is no official language declared at the federal level.
 After English,Spanish is the most widely spoken language in the country.

Republicanism is the guiding philosophy of United States which represent more than a
particular  form of government. It is a way of life, a core ideology and a major part of American civic
 thought since its formation . It is an uncompromising commitment to liberty and stresses unalienable
 rights as  central values ,vilifies corruption and a total rejection of  aristocracy and inherited political
 power . It make the people as a whole sovereign and emphasize the civic duties of citizens.



 
 


 





Event: Independence Day Parade
Venue: Constitutional Avenue,Washington DC
Camera Used: Canon Power Shot A490 

Saturday, June 13, 2015

NAVY PIER CHICAGO

 
Located on the Chicago shoreline on lake Michigan, Navy pier is a 3300 ft long  pier ( raised
structure), including bridge and building supports and walkways, supported by widely spread piles
 or pillars. Opened in 1916, this famous landmark of Chicago, consist of 50-acre playground of
entertainment, museums, activities, restaurants, and shops  and is a perfect place for family fun.
 Daniel Burnham, the most famous Chicago city planner created the "Master Plan of Chicago" in
1909, which originally envisioned five piers .Only one was built however, and that one was placed at
 the mouth of the Chicago River. Construction began in 1914 under the direction of the nationally
 known architect Charles Sumner Frost. Completed in 1916, construction of the Pier costs $4.5 million.

Lake Michigan is one of the five Great Lakes of North America and the only one located entirely
 within the United States. The Pier was originally designed as a shipping and recreational facility.
When the U.S. entered the  World War I, the Pier housed several regiments of soldiers, Red
Cross and Home Defense units as  well as a barracks for recruits.
In 1927 the Municipal Pier was officially named Navy Pier in honor of the Naval personnel that
served there during WWI. The Navy operated various training programs at Navy Pier throughout the
 war. Those enrolled often became aviation machinist's mate, metal smiths and diesel engine
 technicians. By the time training ceased in July 1946, some sixty thousand people—including sailors
 from Great Britain, Canada, Brazil and Peru—were trained at Navy Pier.
The Navy moves out and the University of Illinois takes up residence, transforming the facility into a
 two-year undergraduate branch campus that remains in existence until 1965. The Navy's main mess
 hall becomes a giant library and was considered as  "the largest reading room" in Illinois.
 The Pier was widened by 100 feet with the construction of the South Dock. At its peak in 1964,
Navy Pier handled 250 overseas vessels annually and was one of the greatest inland ports in the
world.  By 1989, the Authorities moved swiftly to redesign Navy Pier into one of the country's
most unique exposition and recreation facilities.
On May 1, 1893, the gates opened at the World’s Columbian Exposition, also known as the Chicago
 World’s Fair. The fair, ostensibly meant to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus
 first voyage to the New World. The main attraction at the exhibit was a full scale replica of the
Battleship Indiana and a model for the  soon to be finished  Massachusetts and Oregon and it was to
 be named the U.S.S. Illinois “docked” at  the pier which was truly unique. The model was 348 feet
 long and 69 feet 5 inches wide. After the fair, the South  Park Commissioners planned to widen the
northern inlet to the lagoon and stated that the pier and  ship had to be removed by May 1, 1896.
At some point the large brass bell that adorned the great brick battleship Illinois came into the
possession of Benjamin P. Cheney Jr and later it found place at Navy Pier. On one side of the Bell it
is inscribed as “U.S.S. ILLINOIS 1893”  On the other is the inscription, “Presented to the U.S.
Battleship ‘ILLINOIS’ by Julia Arthur Cheney and Benjamin P. Cheney ‘To Thine Own Self Be True,
 And It Must Follow As The Night The Day – Thou Canst Not Then Be False To Any Man’”.
An eight ton anchor from the warship named after the city of Chicago is displayed at the Navy pier.
The first USS Chicago was a part of the great White fleet and saw service  from 1889-1928. The
second USS Chicago  was commissioned in 1931 which was attacked by enemies in Guadalcanal
area and the third   USS Chicago was commissioned in 1945 as a heavy cruiser. After world war II it
 was converted to a guided missile cruiser and participated in Vietnam war. She was 671 ft long and
 71 foot  beam and displaced 177700 tons. It was decommissioned in 1980. The anchor is dedicated
as a  memorial to each ship named Chicago and to thousands of men and women who served their
 nation in maritime service.
Chicago Shakespeare Theater at Navy Pier is a non-profit, professional theater company.  The first
 performance at CST was Eric Idle reading from his novel, The Road to Mars.Modeled after London's
 Swan Theatre, it features an intimate 510-seat  courtyard-style  theater with unequaled views of the
 lakefront, an English-style pub, a studio theater, a bookstore, a  Teacher's Resource Center and an
English Garden . A second theater, the 200-seat black box "Upstairs" space, is devoted to smaller but
 still-popular productions .CST has  more than  six hundred annual performances and performed 48
 weeks of the year include its critically acclaimed  Shakespeare series.
Outdoor attractions include a permanent 150-foot-high Ferris wheel, a musical carousel, an old-
fashioned swing ride and an 18-hole miniature golf course. The Ferris wheel ride gives a nice view of
 great city and lake Michigan. It consist of 40 gondolas, each seating up to 6 passengers. Its 40
spokes, spanning a diameter of 140 feet (42.7 m), are illuminated in the evenings. The world record
for the longest Ferris  wheel ride was set by Clinton Shepherd, the park operations manager, who
 spent 48 hours, 8 minutes  and 25 seconds riding the Pier's wheel over the weekend of May 18–19,
2013.It was modeled after  the first Ferris wheel built for the 1893 World Columbian Exposition.
Dock Street runs the length of the Pier’s South Dock and is reserved for pedestrians, bicyclists and
 joggers Near the Ferris Wheel is a 44ft high musical carousel with 36 hand-painted animals. Other
attractions are an eighteen-hole miniature golf course, a funhouse maze, a beer garden, a 40ft high
 wave swinger and an IMAX Theater. In season, four performance areas feature entertainment
ranging from jugglers, mimes and stilt walkers to comedians, singers and musicians.
 NPI’s mission to be a world-class public place that celebrates and showcases the vitality of Chicago
 and provides for the enjoyment of Chicago-area residents and visitors year-round.
 Navy Pier hosts Chicago Fest, drawing millions of visitors with music, food and entertainment.
  Major restaurants include Giordano’s, Bubba Gump Shrimp Co., Harry Caray’s Tavern ,Jimmy
Buffett’s Margaritaville Bar & Grill and Riva Crab House. Big City Chicken, Big Bowl Chinese
Express, Frankie’s Pizza by the Slice, Billy Goat Tavern, Haagen-Dazs®, America’s Dog, Auntie
Anne’s, Completely Nuts, Garrett Popcorn Shops, Greek Delight, Jamba Juice, McDonald’s Navy
 Pier, Ryba’s Fudge Shop, Starbucks and the Mexican Twisted Lizard.
 Crystal Gardens, a one-acre indoor glass atrium is a beautiful botanical garden. This six‐story
 glass atrium with a 50-foot arched ceiling holds over 80 live palm trees, lush foliage, hanging
twinkle lights and dancing leapfrog fountains. The Crystal Gardens, offering beautiful views of the
lakefront, Chicago skyline and Navy Pier Ferris Wheel, is located just steps from the main entrance
from Navy Pier on the second level can host up to 100 to 1500 guest.
Navy Pier is also a starting point for many boat trips with ample choice: .Sight Seeing cruises,
 Dining Cruises and Private Charters are also available at Navy Pier. Seadog Cruises offers Lake and
 River Architectural Tours, Extreme Thrill Rides, Lakefront Speedboat Rides, Fireworks Cruises and
 Private Group Events. Chicago’s very own Tall Ship Windy is a  majestic 148-foot schooner
 modeled after a traditional Great Lakes trading ship and boasts all the character and charm of the
Golden Age of Sail .Shore Line Sightseeing is a family-owned and operated sight  seeing cruise.
Odyssey, Spirit of Chicago and Mystic Blue serve as dining cruises. Private Charters  include
Chicago Elite Private Yacht and Shoreline Charters are also available.
The Navy Pier used to be home to two museums: the Children's museum  and the Smith museum of
Stained Glass Windows, which opened in 2000.The Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows
 debuts at Navy Pier. It is the first museum in the United States dedicated solely to stained glass windows  .
Children’s Museum is three floors of fun for kids (ages 10 and under) and their families is a place
where families and caregivers with infants and children are encouraged to create, explore, and
discover together through play. The museum features three vibrant floors of exhibits and activities
that provide sensory experiences and engaging educational content focusing on literacy, science,
math, visual and performing arts, and health. 
This fifty acres of parks and gardens (20 hectares) it attracts more than eight million visitors each
year. Navy Pier is such a tourist hot spot due to its plethora of entertainment options. This legendary
 destination has something for everyone and can be enjoyed night or day. This is a top visited  leisure
destination in the United States. ,
 
 
 
 
Location: Navy Pier Chicago, Illinois.
Camera Used: Canon T5  
 

Sunday, May 3, 2015

GATEWAY ARCH, ST LOUIS, MISSOURI

Standing as the gate way to the west, overlooking Mississippi river, the Gateway Arch is the
 proud symbol of St.Louis, Missouri. This tallest arch in the world commemorate the  national
 expansion of United States to west. It stand as a dedication to Thomas Jefferson for his Louisiana
purchase, his aides Livingston and  Monroe, the great explorers, Lewis and Clark, and hardy hunters,
 trappers,  pioneers and frontiersmen who contributed to the territorial expansion and development of United States.
This clad in stainless steel is built in the form of catenary arch. The catenary arch is the most stable of
 all arches since the thrust passes down through the legs and is absorbed in the foundations, whereas
 in other arches, the pressure tends to force the legs apart .Catenary is a curve of chain or cable which
 assumes under its own weight when supported only on both ends and acted upon by a uniform
gravitational force and have equilibrium at every point.
The Arch was designed by Finnish -American architect Eero Saarinen who took first prize in the
 1948 competition for designing a monument for Jefferson National Expansion Memorial.  German-
American  structural engineer Hannskarl Bandel modified the arch design by replacing some of the
 constant-sized links with variable links, thus changing the weight, distribution of the weight, and the
 shape and gave the arch a soaring effect which the architect envisioned.

The Gateway arch is the centerpiece of attraction among  Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
park. This towering monument become an internationally famous symbol of St. Louis. Construction
of the arch began in February 12, 1963 and  completed on October 28, 1965. The north tram was
 opened to the public in 1967  while the south tram in 1968.The arch's visitor center was opened in
 1967. The arch is 630 ft tall and maintain a distance of 630 ft between its two legs in the ground level. 
  
  The cross-sections of the arch's legs are equilateral triangles, narrowing from 54 feet (16 m) per side
 at the bases to 17 feet (5.2 m) per side at the top. Each wall consists of a stainless steel skin covering
 a sandwich of two carbon-steel walls with reinforced concrete in the middle from ground level to
300 feet (91 m), with carbon steel to the peak. The arch is hollow to accommodate a unique tram
 system that takes visitors to an observation deck at the top.

The windows of the observation deck are located around the apex of the arch. There are 16 windows
 of size6 x 27" on each side of the observation deck. Over 500 tons of pressure was used to jack the
 legs of the Arch apart for the last four-foot piece to be inserted at the top. A larger window would
not withstand that pressure which is the main reason for smaller windows on the observation desk.

The underground visitor center for the arch is located directly below the arch, between its legs.
Access to the visitor center is provided through ramps adjacent to each leg of the arch. The Arch
is  designed to sway as much as 18 inches, and can withstand an earthquake, however under normal
 conditions the Arch does not sway. It takes a 50-mile an hour wind to move the top 1.5 inches each side of center.
  
The arch can be accessed by 1076 emergency steps, an elevator and two trams.Each tram is a chain of
eight egg-shaped, five-seat compartments with a total capacity of 40 passengers at a time. Both trams
 together took 80 passengers at a time to the top of the arch at every 10 minutes. The trip to top took
 about 4 minutes while bottom trip only took 3 minutes. The cars swing like Ferris-wheel cars(like
that of giant wheel ) as they ascend and descend the arch.
Approximate time to complete the trip is around 45 minutes.  On a clear day the view at the top can
extend up to thirty miles in either direction, however, St. Louis can be a very hazy city which reduces
 visibility at the top. On cool, damp mornings a dense fog can create zero visibility at the top. The
viewing area at the top can hold up to 160 people.
 
  The windows offer views 48 km to the east across the Mississippi River and southern Illinois  with
its prominent  Mississippian culture mounds at Cahokia Mounds, and to the west over the city of
St. Louis and St. Louis County beyond. The Busch Stadium III completed  in 2006 and home of
MLB’s St. Louis Cardinals can be seen in the south west through the windows.
 
 The Mississippi River flows directly below the east windows of the Arch at a normal top water speed
 of 3 miles an hour at a depth of about 12-15 feet. The Missouri River meets the Mississippi about 15
 miles to the north of the Arch.The Mississippi and Missouri Rivers combine to form the longest river
 system in the USA and North America. It is also the fourth longest river in the world
A museum and two theatres are seen at the base of the arch. Every 45 minutes Tucker Theater shows
  a 28 minute film called" Monument to the dream" about the construction and meaning of the
Gateway Arch . Odyssey theater with ULTRA 70 wide screen projection system with a four-story-
high screen and THX sound shows a film chronicling the expedition by Lewis and Clark to
document the western territories of the United States after the purchase of Louisiana territory by United States.
The Louisiana Purchase  was the acquisition of the Louisiana territory (828,000 square miles) by
the  United States from France in 1803. Louisiana Territory stretched from the Mississippi River in
the east to the Rocky Mountains in the west and from the Gulf of Mexico in the south to the
Canadian   border in the north. Part or all of 15 states were eventually created from the land deal,
which is considered one of the most important achievements of Thomas Jefferson’s presidency.
 Commissioned by Thomas Jefferson, Lewis and Clark expedition team consist of a select group of
U.S. Army volunteers under the command of Captain Meriwether Lewis and Second Lieutenant
William Clark.The Lewis and Clark Expedition  is illustrated in video, art work and excerpts from
Lewis' diary of that journey of exploration to the Pacific Ocean. It is a story of many individuals and
 groups, military men and scientists, a president, slaves, boatmen and  American Indians.  Known as
the Corps of Discovery, they traveled over 3700 miles between May  of 1804 and September of 1806.
 Their journey followed the courses of the Missouri and Columbia rivers and crossing of the Rocky
and Bitteroot Mountains and seeing the Pacific ocean.
 The museum of  Westward Expansion  located beneath the Gateway Arch unfolds the history of
pioneers who shaped the history of  west of United states. It reveals the incredible journey by Lewis
 and Clark. It also displays the life of mountain men lived in the 1800s and  the history of Native
Americans. The voices of  animatronic figures explains the history and bring past to life. The artifacts
 exhibited here also include a covered wagon and stage coach, rare Indian peace medals, weapons,
 war bonnets and things used by native Indians.
A tipi or  teepee which is a conical tent, traditionally made of animal skins, and wooden poles used
by the nomadic tribes/band governments of the Great Plains and Canadian Prairies in North America
 is displayed in the museum along with some of the rarest artifacts from the day of Lewis and Clark.
It exhibit  the history of  American Indian tribes who had called these places home for centuries
 which was unknown to Euro-Americans before the Lewis- Clark expedition.
The museum along with the extensive collection of artifacts, also exhibit  big as life mounted animals
 like Long horn sheer, a grizzly bear standing on a rock , horse and a large buffalo.The indigenous
 peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian inhabitants of the Americas or the early migrants
 from Eurasia via Beringia took place at least 13,500 -40,000 years ago. Most were hunter-gatherers
 or herders, but some, such as the Mound builders, formed prolific agricultural societies.
The Museum Shop carries a wide selection of books, videos, apparel and educational toys, including
 a large selection of products related to St. Louis history, African-American history, and the Dred
Scott case .The Jefferson National Expansion Memorial consists of the Gateway Arch, the Museum
 of Westward Expansion, and St. Louis'  Old Courthouse. 
The Old Courthouse situated next to arch was a gathering place for  pioneers going west. It was also
the site of several important nineteenth century trials which helped fuel major changes to the
American way of life. This is the place where an enslaved husband and wife, Dred and Harriet Scott,
 unsuccessfully and  famously sued for his freedom is a first rate  historical treasure which ignited
the American Civil  war and later abolition of slavery. The Courthouse is also the site where Virginia
Minor who was an   American women's suffrage activist sued for  woman’s right to vote in 1872.

The entire Memorial is about 91 acres. This includes the Gateway Arch and grounds (about 62acres) ,
 plus another 30 acres or so encompassing the Old Courthouse, Luther Ely Smith Square and a good
bit of the surrounding streets (managed as easements)  and was designated a National Historic  Landmark in 1987.

Trolley tours and carriage tours as well as elegant Cindrella carriage tours can be hired  to have a ride
 in the down town. Golf cart tours are also available which are dependable on weather condition.

 The Arch represents one of the largest optical illusions ever created. While it appears to be much
taller than it is wide, the two distances are exactly the same at 630 feet. St Louis Zoo, Busch stadium,
 St Louis Botanical garden  and the world heritage site of Cahokia  mounds carrying the stories of
Mississippian culture about 1000 years ago is located very close to the gateway arch.
 

 
 
Location: : 100 Washington Ave, St. Louis, MO 63102, United States
 
Camera Used: Canon T5
                        Apple iphone