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===Packard Museum=== | ===Packard Museum=== | ||
− | This | + | This [http://www.americaspackardmuseum.org/ Packard Museum] is "the world's only restored Packard Dealership operating <br> |
as a museum and only factory museum dedicated exclusively to the Packard Motor Company, its products & philosophies". <br> | as a museum and only factory museum dedicated exclusively to the Packard Motor Company, its products & philosophies". <br> | ||
It is in the original building built in 1917 and became a museum in 1992. There are over 50 cars. Car Collector's Magazine <br> describes it in the top 10 museums in car collections and it won the prestigious James J. Brady Award. <br> | It is in the original building built in 1917 and became a museum in 1992. There are over 50 cars. Car Collector's Magazine <br> describes it in the top 10 museums in car collections and it won the prestigious James J. Brady Award. <br> |
The following suggestions are courtesy of Willie Pitzer.
We have a wonderful outdoor venue in a suburb of Dayton in Kettering, Ohio called The Fraze Pavilion,
about 15-20 minutes from the Convention Center.
Tuesday Aug. 4th Joan Baez is playing at 8PM. If you aren't doing Frank Tangredi's play or reading you might want
to get tickets. They are still available. For those too young to remember, or those of us too old to retrieve the memories
from back then, Joan Baez marched on the front lines of the civil rights movement with Martin Luther King Jr. and at
another point stood with Nelson Mandela. I just recently saw her at Pete Seeger's 90th birthday party. She's still going strong,
you old hippies and peace activators. You can pull up the info at Fraze.Tickets available through
Ticketmaster 1-800-745-3000. $20 lawn and terrace seats and $25 for Plaza and Orchestra.
You will also note that the Heroes of Woodstock are there on Sunday Aug. 2nd. However it starts at 6:30
so players might miss some of it getting there. This features Jefferson Starship, John Sebastian from the Lovin' Spoonful,
Big Brother & the Holding Company minus Janis Joplin of course, Country Joe McDonald, and Tom Constanten from the Grateful Dead.
This venue has a large fountain/waterpool outside and is a park as well. Many people, if they can't afford tickets
or the concert is sold out just sit outside and listen. This is permissible. Umbrellas are not allowed. You are not allowed
to bring in your own drinks and they DO check purses and bags. No cameras. You can order box suppers ahead of time and beer,
wine, water and coffee are served as well as hot dogs, ice cream, pizza and pretzels without prior orders.
If you plan to order tickets for the Fraze be sure and ask for the free parking pass.
We have discovered that for some reason Ticketmaster doesn't automatically offer them and they are available!
Dayton has the fifth oldest Cemetery and Arboretum in the US., Woodland, founded in 1841.
On this site there there are many pictures of the ponds, its beauty, section on how to do gravestone rubbings etc.
Those bringing children to Dayton will find this to be quite an historical, learning experience for them. The gateway
and chapel office are on the National Registry for Historical Places. There are 200 acres of over 3,000 magnificent trees,
flowers, birds and grave sites of many famous people.
The Wright Brothers were buried here along with Erma Bombeck, previous syndicated writer and columnist of humor,
Paul Lawrence Dubar, Afro-American poet, many founders of industry in the Dayton area such as Mead, NCR and Huffy from
Huffy bicycles.etc.
You can enter and tour on your own or stop at the office and pick up headphones for a self guided tour
between the hours of 8 A.M.-3 P.M. Unfortunately their formal guided tour is the Wed after our tournament.
They also have a contact person for a car driven tour for the handicapped, inclement weather tours and groups tours.
Contact Debra Mescher 937-228-3221. Some trees were damaged last fall when the landlocked state of Ohio,
most unusually got hit with the tail end of Hurricane Ike and lost electricity for up to 5 weeks for some.
Willis has not been back since storm damage but you can Google it and look at how some of the big trees split.
She spent time doing grave rubbings with her son's Montessori class one year. It really is a lovely area.
There is a civil war area with a cannon etc. It is a rather large area so downloading the map and lot numbers
and where you might be most interested in visiting will help.
There is now a Mausoleum you can walk into and many ponds with ducks and wildlife. It abuts The University of Dayton,
which ironically is where the son Willie took to the cemetery, now works. Those arriving early for registration
could grab a cab or drive to Woodlawn, a short 10 minute drive. Family members who are not playing and enjoy beauty
might want to attend.
This is another National Historic Landmark, built in 1914, that players or family can visit. During the 2007 Player's
Championship, negotiations were still underway with the posh suburb of Oakwood, as to how to open the home but satisfy the
community so there would be no additional traffic, parking near the home etc. The historical organization agreed
to sell the tickets and take tourists by van from Carillon Park across from the Marriott where many of you are staying.
The van will drive by many lovely large homes in the Oakwood area on the way to Hawthorne Hill. They will give you the
history of the NCR park which is also reopening this summer and the NCR's Sugar Camp that originally was a tent camp in 1884
that the founder of NCR (National Cash Registry), John Patterson, used to cover up some work that the women of war times
were doing that was actually part of the code breaking that NCR is known for. These developed into 60 cabins that NCR
used for training housing.
You now have the opportunity for just $12 to see the home where Orville, Katherine and their father lived and what was
supposed to be Wilbur's home but he was deceased before the completion of the home. He died in 1912 of Typhoid Fever at
age 45. The Dayton flood of 1913 delayed the finishing of this home.
Willie took this tour recently. NCR bought and used it for many years and the kitchen is the only area you don't get
to tour since it was totally modernized for the convenience of NCR to house guests.
In the rest of the house they have large photos of the original rooms to compare to today and one room, the den, is
set up with Wilbur's original chair that he created like a lazy boy to offset an injury he had incurred. Many pieces
of furniture, are the original and overall it is gorgeous! If you get a guide as dedicated and full of knowledge as she did,
you will feel the life style and dynamics of the Wright family, including the number of weddings held there, the famous
people such as Howard Hughes who have stayed there and more. The Wright brothers, as you may know, had many inventions
and the central vacuuming was one. The tour guide had a funny story to share about the maid and the vacuum.
Ordinarily this tour only occurs on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Reservations are required. 937-293-2841. This fits if
you are a family member not playing SCRABBLE. Go ahead and make your own reservations. Soon! The van only holds 10.
Also for $15 your tour can include Carillon Park as well, a museum in itself.
However, the timing doesn't work for the SCRABBLE players. With prior notice and reservations they will make exceptions.
I am willing to make arrangements for a group to go if there is enough interest. Please contact Willie privately at
wswankpitzer@woh.rr.com and she will see if we can pretty much fill a van.
While waiting for the van, the inside of the admissions office has 2 different films going about the flood of Dayton,
history of aviation etc.
Please contact Willie as soon as possible if you want to tour after playing hours, the day of registration or after
play on Wednesday or if your flight leaves on Thursday or you are just staying in the Dayton area.
It is well worth the money.
It's worth just sitting and watching those. Also the cafe that anyone can go to by just entering the park (no fee)
is called "CULPS" has the original recipes of a restaurant that used to be in downtown Dayton in the 1930's and 40's.
They have a long mural on the wall showing a scene of the original restaurant from back in WWII and is modeled
with a counter and stools etc. besides tables. You can also eat on a patio. Food is reasonably priced. They have soups,
sandwiches and salads, hamburgers etc. The desserts are the original recipes. The menu itself is another historical lesson.
Open 7 days a week 11-3 PM.
The Sunwatch Indian Village/Archaelogical Park is the actual archaelogical site of the
prehistoric Fort Ancient 800 years ago. Located at 230 West River Rd, Dayton it is located past UD's Arena and across
the river from the Marriott.
There is an on-site interpretive center with films and replicas of houses and the stockade. It has been nominated as
a National Historic Landmark as well. You get to see many items they have found in their digs such as shells used
as tools and bowls, etc.
Closed Mondays. Open 9-5 Tuesday through Sat and 12-5 on Sunday. It's a bargain with Adults $5, Senior citizens 60 and up
just $3.00. Children $3.00 ages 5 and under free.
Pull up their site and print a 2 for 1 coupon.
Very educational if you bring your children. Willie attended this years ago when her children were younger. Well worth the visit!
Located at 1301 E. Siebenthaler Ave. in Dayton. [http://www.metroparks.org/Parks/WegerzynGarden/Home.aspx/ Wegerzyn's
Garden Center & Children's Discovery Garden].
Free admission and free parking at a beautiful garden which is now part
of the Five Metro Parks. They have added a great Children's Discovery Garden. Willie took her 4 year old granddaughter
before the water portion opened. This is a hands on garden where children get to water plants, play in sandboxes,
walk through a cave, play musical instruments at the corners of a hedge maze, pond with koi and other fish, playhouse
and water play.
Greater Mt. Nebo Missionary Baptist Church's Afro-American Museum and Social Assembly Hall. This has taken 3 years and
has been a dream of the Rev. Walter Dunson, Sr. It is built in a pyramid shape that replicates an African hut. It is
adjacent to the church at 150 Colgate Ave. in Dayton. Covered are histories of James H. McGee, the first Black and
longest-serving mayor of Dayton. Tyree Bloomfield the city's first Black police, and Don Crawford Dayton's first
African-American commissioner. The theme is to provide information on the advancement made in Dayton to narrowing the
racial divide. Pastor Dunson founded his church 54 years ago. He has been active in the civil rights movements.
Visiting the museum is FREE but by appointment only. Call Theresa Blake at 937-835-507 or 603-1732.
Fun in the water at Splash Moraine is a suburb of Dayton and is located
off I-75. Some even list it as a Dayton address. 3800 Main St. Moraine.
Rent a tube and float the lazy river or ride the two 25' tube slides. 20,000 square-foot wave pool, kiddie area
with water spouts and dry areas for sand volleyball, tether ball and basketball.
Very reasonably priced. Youth $7.50 Adults $9 and over 60 $8. Hours 11 AM to 8 PM daily!!!!!
These sculptures have returned to Dayton! For those of you that attended the 2007 Player's Championship, you may remember
the life-sized statues throughout the city that looked so real you really thought a man was standing waiting for the bus
while reading a newspaper, walking a dog, window-washing, etc.
Different ones have returned to the city. One near 5th & 3rd Dayton Dragons Baseball field is a man fishing in one of the
canal areas, fishing pole, creel fish and all, another is 2 people in tennis outfits with their tennis rackets near the
Downtown Dayton Library. You can view a few at http://www.sewardjohnson.com/site/index.html (click on "View the Collections"
and then on "Man on the Street", "Icons" and "Beyond the frame").
Maps for their locations are available at Courthouse square where there is an extra statue that is more than life-sized
and at Riverscape. Worth asking at the Convention Center I bet they could come up with locations as well.
This Packard Museum is "the world's only restored Packard Dealership operating
as a museum and only factory museum dedicated exclusively to the Packard Motor Company, its products & philosophies".
It is in the original building built in 1917 and became a museum in 1992. There are over 50 cars. Car Collector's Magazine
describes it in the top 10 museums in car collections and it won the prestigious James J. Brady Award.
Open Mon-Friday 12-5 P.M. and Sat & Sunday 1-5 P.M. Address is 420 S. Ludlow St., a brisk walk from the convention center.
Every night (weather permitting) that our SCRABBLE family will be here, there will be [laser shows] featuring laser images
choreographed to music from oldies to classical and rock-n-roll at Riverscape, 111 E, Monument Ave. This is displayed
with spraying & lit fountains. Walkable from the Convention Center but not for those not in shape or having health issues.
Take a cab. They start at 10 P.M. and only last 15 minutes Thursday and Friday nights and 9:30 - 9:45 Saturday-Wednesday.
There is a second showing if the Dayton Dragons are playing a homegame that night. They definitely are playing Tuesday
and 15 of you have a chance to get tickets to the game in the City of Dayton suite via Lois Greene as previously posted.
This is a great opportunity to see the Cincinnati Reds summer league, The Dayton Dragons. Their schedule shows home games
all the time scrabble players are here, thus 2 opportunities per night to see the laser show. Sadly you are missing a
great concert at the field by Bob Dylan, John Mellencamp and Willie Nelson July 10th. I am so bummed that I will be at
a wedding in Vermont or I'd be going! I can remember a New York City friend commenting that I seem to have so many
opportunities for concerts in the area and it is true! Fraze Pavillion, Schuster Center downtown Dayton, college arenas
and nearby cities, Cincy, Springfield and Columbus. Back to Riverscape which abuts 5/3rd Field.
There are some riverside benches and seats as well as grassed banks, walls and steps to sit on during the laser show.
There are also spraying fountains and sculptures, flowers etc at the Riverscape Plaza itself. Little snack stand. They hold
festivals & concerts there throughout the summer and fall and it turns into a skating rink in the winter. There are paddle
boats to rent and paddle the river.
Thursday, July 30, it is a big-band orchestra night 7:30-9:30 with the Eddie Brookshire Orchestra.
Saturday, August 1, from 7:30-9:30 P.M. is [24Seven], a local group who
perform a mixture of oldies, country and rock.
These events are all FREE!
This 33 acre park has just reopened. It is near those of you staying at the Marriot between South Main Street and
Patterson Blvd. Although it no longer has what was one of the largest pools in this area if not a larger region, it still
has a mile and half lagoon. You can rent canoes for $5 an hour. There is a minature golf course, concession stands, picnic
shelters, giant chess boards etc.. Pick up tickets at Carillon Historical Park by the Carillon Bells across from the Marriot.
Park admission includes the NCR park but also the admission to see all of the historical Carillon Park. The Carillon park
holds the largest Carillon's(bells) in Ohio. The 65 acre park itself along the Great Miami RIver houses 20 exhibits. One is
Dayton's oldest standing building Newcom's tavern, a working printing press shop, a plush, original parlor car (Train)of 1903
that certain Presidents rode on and I can't recall which. Antique automobiles, The Wright Flyer III. Every Sunday a Carilloneur
plays the bells. A really special sunrise service occurs on Easter Sunday. Sorry you missed it. The NCR Park is only open
Friday Saturdays and Sunday 10 AM to 8PM. The Carillon Park you can enter free to see the bells and if you want to eat at the
Culp Cafe which I borught up before with a mural wall of its time in downtown Dayton and similar recipes. The museum itself
is open Mon-Sat. 9:30-5 and Sunday 12-5PM. Just stepping inside the Kettering Education Center where the tickets are sold has
some interesting films of the flood of 1913 etc. There is also a museum store. None of this costs. You pay only once you
decide to see the museum itself, use the old NCR Park or visit Hawthorne Hill, the Wright Brother's home. If you are just
delaying making plans for when you or you and your family are here be sure and let me know as soon as possible in order
for me to have time to make the arrangements.
At the same time as our National Scrabble Tournament, Thursday July 30th -Sun. Aug 2, 9 AM-6 PM the USA wakeboard Championship
is being held at Eastwood Lake, part of the Eastwood Metroparks area 1401 Harshman Road Dayton. The first rounds of the NCAA
basketball games at the UD Arena with ESPN coverage, National Scrabble Tournaments, USA National Wakeboard Championship,
Pro Golf tournaments on the NCR Golf Course, and many other happenings. Bell ringers, gymnastics, Color Guard / Flag twirler
compettions, drum and bugle Corps competitions etc. Dayton isn't as dead as you all want to make it!
The [U.S. Air Force Museum] is one of the most popular attractions in Dayton.
The Peace Treaty to end the long Bosnia War was negotiated at Wright Patterson Air Force Base in November 1995 under the
administration of Bill Clinton. Final signing actually happened in Paris.
You now have the opportunity to see 9 different Presidential Planes by going to the Museum and showing "a valid ID"
and then being shuttled to the Air Force Base itself. This is FREE. The museum is free! Parking is free! Last time
some of the hotels were willing to shuttle our guests out there, so those of you who might have already gone to the
museum have new opportunities. The staff warned Willie that the shuttle fills fast!
You can actually go into some of the planes.
The Museum itself is the "World's Largest and Oldest Military Aviation Museum". If you think planes and the 400 aerospace
vehicles, including a space capsule rescued out of the ocean after landing, that are on exhibit aren't your cup of tea,
there are other interesting exhibits. The Bob Hope exhibit with his USO Tours information, his golf history and of
course his show is now a permanent exhibit at the museum.
The Holocaust exhibit is also now permanent. Although only a small portion of this large museum, it is very moving
to see an accordion that a young boy at the time hid in his attic before his family was taken away. He was able to
retrieve at a later point with other donated items to the museum.
The Wright Brothers' wind tunnel from 1901 is on exhibit. An atomic bomb has been restored and returned to the museum
from Albuquerque. This June 6th was the 65th anniversary of D-Day. A trip to this museum can give you so much history on
women's roles in the war.
Open 7 days a week 9-5. The Imax theatre is open later. Shows for the I-Max are "Space Station" at 11 & 3 P.M. "Fighter Pilot"
at 12, 2, & 4, "Magic of Flight" at 10 & 1, "Coral Reef Adventure" at 5 & 7, "Mystery of the Nile" at 6 P.M.
Prices are $6.50, seniors 60+ $6.00, student $4.75, children 3-7 $3.50, and children under 3 free. Remember this is I-Max only.
Museum inside and outside is free. There are many planes and interesting craft outside as well, The Hanoi Taxi used during
the Viet Nam War, for one. This can be an all-day tour. It is located in 3 large hangars.
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