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We all come from somewhere. Whether our parents bravely crossed borders for a better life before we were born, or generations ago our families were deeply entrenched in the southern hemisphere, our bloodlines race with the trade winds across the oceans to connect to another land and another time. Nowadays, more and more travelers are discovering the roots of these bloodlines through heritage travel, which combines the excitement, relaxation and bonding of a vacation with the education of a history lesson. But this is not your regular history lesson, when you slept on your desk in the back of the room during fourth period. When the subject of the lesson is your family, you'll enjoy sitting at the head of this class.
To discover more about heritage travel and how it can enhance your next vacation, talk to a member of the American Society of Travel Agents (ASTA). Some of the most travel-wise people in the world, ASTA members know how to connect the glories of your past with a glorious vacation of your present. The Many Faces of Heritage Tourism Yet heritage travel is not just limited to the discovery of deep ancestral roots. Often it's a journey to the recent past to experience the events that shaped our current surroundings. This form of heritage travel is popular in America, where travelers seek out tangible history icons - battlefields, civil rights protest sites - that were instrumental in the development of the nation.
Not to be left behind, countries around the world are making their heritage sites a priority. Since heritage tourism uses national assets - historic, cultural, and natural resources - that already exist, countries realize the benefit of developing their tourism potential as opposed to creating new attractions. This arrangement works well for the assets themselves, for the prestige associated with national designation elevates these properties as valuable cultural resources, ensuring the restoration and preservation needed for them to be enjoyed for generations to come. The Many Destinations of Heritage Travel In the United States, many minority travelers prefer to stay within the borders to investigate the recent past. African-Americans are rediscovering the scenes - of both triumph and anguish - of their southern heritage by visiting historic sites detailing slave life and civil rights struggles. Aiding these endeavors, many southern states are endorsing African-American heritage sites. Tennessee actively promotes the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, while Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia recently opened the Great Hopes Plantation - a realistic replica of an 18th-century plantation complete with black field slaves and their tiny slave dwellings.
Travel Agents Connect You to Your Past To begin the R&R time early, rest easy and get a travel agent to plan your heritage trip. Armed with a world of knowledge, travel agents know the best ways to get you and your family to the places you want to go, connecting multiple cultural sites into one, wondrous journey, all at a fair price that will make your ancestors proud. (Source: travelsense) |
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