Build Operate Transfer · canals · Conservation · Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · Friends and Family Travel · Historic District · Historic Towns · hub and spoke transport · intercity transit · Maritime · Maritime Heritage · museums · Rivers · Travel · travel plan · Travel Plan Fees · waterways

Havre de Grace Maryland

rivers canals an historic district museums local artisans and the underground railroad
Havre de Grace is at the mouth of the Susquehanna River and the head of Chesapeake Bay. It is named after the French port city of Le Havre – the Harbor of Grace. During the Revolutionary War, the small hamlet known as Harmer’s Town was visited by General Lafayette who commented that the area reminded him of the French seaport.

America · Atlantic Coast · Cultural Heritage · Maritime Heritage · museums · Rivers · travel plan

Fort Washington Maryland

From the heights of Fort Washington Park, the shores of the Potomac River frame the skyline of the nation’s capital with the Washington Monument jutting toward the sky. Today, the city is a seat of national and international power, backed by an enormous military force with missiles, warships, aircraft and hundreds of thousands of soldiers at its disposal.

America · Atlantic Coast · canals · Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · Friends and Family Travel · Historic District · Historic Towns · intercity transit · Maritime Heritage · museums · Travel · travel plan · waterways

Historic Towns on the Maryland Eastern Shore

Saint Michaels Chestertown Cambridge Salisbury and Oxford
The Eastern Shore of Maryland is comprised of nine counties with a population of nearly 450 thousand. The term Eastern Shore distinguishes a territorial part of the State from the land west of Chesapeake Bay.

Conservation · Cultural Heritage · destination management · Historic Towns · Maritime · Maritime Heritage · Travel · travel plan

Chesapeake Bay and the Eastern Shore

Chesapeake Bay is the largest estuary in the contiguous United States and a very important feature for the ecology and economy of the Middle Atlantic Region More than 150 major rivers and streams flow into the bay’s 64,299-square-mile – 166,534 km2 covering parts of six states

America · Atlantic Coast · canals · Cultural Heritage · Historic Towns · Logistics · Maritime · Maritime Heritage · microtransit · Mobility · museums · Travel · travel plan

Delaware City Chesapeake City and the C&D Canal

The Delaware City Historic District is significant for its architecture, for its beginnings as a planned settlement, and for its importance as a nineteenth century canal-oriented transportation center. The town was envisioned by its backers as a place that would develop into a major shipping and trading point for traffic that passed along this trans-peninsular trade route, and so, its early plans were based on the completion of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal