10457 Best Sights in USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in USA - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Geronimo Springs Museum

At the distinctively homespun Geronimo Springs Museum, you can visit a room dedicated to Ralph Edwards' career and his very personal connection to the town that renamed itself after his quiz show, and you can view the giant skull of a woolly mammoth that was excavated in the nearby Gila National Forest. There's also a pictorial history of the dental chair, an essential display on cowboy hats and the personalities that wear them, and a pretty darn good collection of early Mimbres, Tularosa, Alma, and Hohokam pottery. Also check out the excellent bookshop with regional titles. The county visitor center is next door.

Geronimo Trail Scenic Byway

One of the most visually dramatic ways to reach Silver City is via NM 152, which forms the southern prong of the backward-C-shaped Geronimo Trail Scenic Byway (the northern prong is NM 52, leading into Winston and Chloride). As you're heading south down I–25 from Albuquerque and Truth or Consequences, take exit 63, and follow NM 152 west. It's about an 80-mi drive to Silver City, and you should allow two to four hours, depending on how much you stop to look around—and weather conditions.

This twisting byway provides an exciting link to the Wild West. The remote drive (there are no gas stations) follows part of the route taken by the Kingston Lake Valley Stage Line, which operated when this region was terrorized by Apache leaders like Geronimo and outlaw bands led by the likes of Butch Cassidy. Heading west on NM 152, after about 25 miles you'll come to the mining-era boomtown, Hillsboro, where gold was discovered as well as silver (about $6 million worth of the two ores was extracted). The town, slowly coming back to life with the artists and retirees who've moved in, has a small museum, some shops, restaurants, and galleries.

From Hillsboro, you might consider a brief detour south down NM 27, known as the Lake Valley Back Country Byway. A landmark, west of NM 27, is Cooke's Peak, where the first wagon road through the Southwest to California was opened in 1846. Not much is going on these days in the old silver mining town of Lake Valley—the last residents departed in the mid-1990s—but it once was home to 4,000 people. The mine produced 2.5 million ounces of pure silver and gave up one nugget weighing several hundred pounds. Visit the schoolhouse (which later served as a saloon), walk around the chapel, the railroad depot, and some of the few remaining old homes.

Gettysburg Heritage Center

This museum presents the story of the Civil War era and the Battle of Gettysburg through artifacts, a 20-minute film, 3D videos and photos, and interactive displays. At the front desk, you can book battlefield tours (for a fee) by Victorian carriage, horseback, electric bike, or foot. Costumed guides lead 90-minute walking tours of the town (also for a fee).

Recommended Fodor's Video

Gettysburg National Cemetery

Also known as Soldiers' National Cemetery, this is the final resting place for more than 3,500 Union soldiers who died on the battlefield. Dedicated by President Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg Address, the cemetery is also where some 3,000 veterans of subsequent conflicts were laid to rest. A stroll through the beautiful grounds past row after row of white grave markers is a sobering reminder of the cost of war. 

Geyser Hill Loop

Old Faithful

Along the easy 1.3-mile Geyser Hill Loop boardwalk, accessed from the Old Faithful Boardwalk, you'll see active thermal features such as violent Giantess Geyser. Erupting only a few times each year (but sometimes going quiet for several years), Giantess spouts from 100 to 250 feet in the air for five to eight minutes once or twice hourly for a few to as long as 48 hours. Nearby Doublet Pool's two adjacent springs have complex ledges and deep blue waters that are highly photogenic. Starting as a gentle pool, Anemone Geyser overflows, bubbles, and finally erupts 10 feet or more, every three to eight minutes. The loop boardwalk brings you close to the action, making it especially fun for kids.

Yellowstone National Park, WY, USA

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Ghirardelli Square

Fisherman's Wharf

Most of the redbrick buildings in this complex were once part of the Ghirardelli factory, which the prominent chocolate company purchased in 1893. Tourists visit to pick up the famous chocolate and indulge in ice cream sundaes at this dessert paradise, though you can purchase the chocolates all over town and save yourself a trip to what is essentially a glamorized mall food court (Ghirardelli's factory is now in the East Bay). But it's still a must-visit destination for chocolate lovers. Placards throughout the square describe the factory's history, and the giant Ghirardelli sign above the square, erected in 1923, remains one of the city's visual icons.

Once you're tired of chocolate, there are a few notable restaurants within the square. Palette Tea House serves some of the city's most artistic dim sum, Square Pie Guys has the Bay Area's gold standard for Detroit-style square pizza, Barrio offers enjoyable tacos and margaritas, excellent wines are poured by Cultivar Wines at their tasting room/wine bar, and there's a great beer garden setting at the San Francisco Brewing Co.

Ghost Town Museum

You can see and hear a real player piano and a nickelodeon at this indoor "town," a permanent example of Colorado’s Wild West towns complete with a stable, general store, saloon, and smithy. There's also gold panning in the summer.

Ghostbusters Firehouse

TriBeCa

You may spot famous film and television locations around the city, but no firehouse is quite as eye-catching as the one whose exterior was made famous by the 1984 blockbuster Ghostbusters. (Its interiors were filmed in a studio.) The 1903 building is still the active home of FDNY Hook & Ladder Company 8, which ran with the ghost-busting theme for its logo—you’ll find the movie’s iconic ghost and red-circle strikethrough combined with the FDNY badge painted on the pavement out front. Movie buffs can buy a T-shirt with the logo, too, at  www.fdnyshop.com.

14 N. Moore St., New York, NY, 10013, USA

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Giacobbe-Fritz

East Side and Canyon Road

Stop inside this late-1890s adobe building to admire a truly diverse collection of paintings, drawings, and sculpture, much of it with a regional and traditional approach, and some of it downright whimsical. The owners also operate the excellent GF Contemporary, across the street, which focuses more on modern and abstract works.

Giant Forest Museum

Well-imagined and interactive displays at this worthwhile stop provide the basics about sequoias, of which there are 2,161 with diameters exceeding 10 feet in the approximately 2,000-acre Giant Forest.

Sequoia National Park, CA, 93262, USA
559-565–4436
Sight Details
Free
Shuttle: Giant Forest or Moro Rock–Crescent Meadow

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Giant Logs Interpretive Loop Trail

A short walk leads you past the park's largest log, known as Old Faithful. It's considered the largest because of its diameter (9 feet 9 inches), as well as how tall it once was.

Main park road, Petrified Forest National Park, AZ, 86028, USA

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Giant Logs Trail

At 0.4 mile, Giant Logs is the park's shortest trail. The loop leads you to Old Faithful, the park's largest petrified log—9 feet, 9 inches at its base, weighing an estimated 44 tons. Easy.

Petrified Forest National Park, AZ, 86028, USA

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Giant Springs State Park

The freshwater springs here feed a state fish hatchery that covers 400 acres of parkland. According to residents, the waters that flow from the springs form the shortest river in the world, the 200-foot-long Roe River (Oregonians hold that their D River is shorter, but most independent record keepers side with Montana on the issue). In addition to the hatchery, a visitor center, picnic grounds, a river drive, hiking and biking trails, and a playground are all on-site, and you can walk up the hill to Fish, Wildlife & Parks' regional headquarters, filled with educational displays featuring life-size mounts of area wildlife. You can also fish, attend educational programs, and take tours. Kids will enjoy feeding the hatchery's fish.

Giant's Stairs

Near the tip of Bailey Island, a short side road takes you to a parking area and access to a mostly flat, graveled path along the ocean's edge to an intriguing cut in the rocky shoreline. The southern terminus of the trail leads across some rocky ledges. There is additional parking at that end. Known as an intrusive volcanic dike, the vertical rift looks like a staircase built for giants. The views are as compelling as the geology.

Gibbon Falls

The water of this 84-foot fall on the Gibbon River rushes over the caldera rim. Driving east from Madison to Norris, you can see it on your right, but the angle is even better from the paved trail adjacent to the canyon's edge.

Yellowstone National Park, WY, USA

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Gibbon Meadows

You may see elk or buffalo along the Gibbon River from one of the several tables at this picturesque spot, which has a wheelchair-accessible pit toilet.

Grand Loop Rd., Yellowstone National Park, WY, 82190, USA

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Gibson House Museum

Back Bay

Through the foresight of an eccentric bon vivant, this house provides an authentic glimpse into daily life in Boston's Victorian era. One of the first Back Bay residences (1859), the Gibson House is relatively modest in comparison with some of the grand mansions built during the decades that followed; yet its furnishings, from its 1795 Willard clock to the raised and gilded wallpaper to the multipiece faux-bamboo bedroom set, seem sumptuous to modern eyes. Unlike other Back Bay houses, the Gibson family home has been preserved with all its Victorian fixtures and furniture intact. The house served as an interior for the 1984 Merchant Ivory film The Bostonians, as well as the 2019 movie Little Women The museum is only open to the public by hourly guided tours Thursday 3 pm to 5 pm, and Friday and Saturday 1 pm to 3 pm with suggested advance ticket purchase.

137 Beacon St., Boston, MA, 02116, USA
617-267–6338
Sight Details
$15
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Gibson Park

This park, named for the insightful founder of Great Falls, is the crown jewel of the city's park system. The most popular features are the duck pond and extensive flower gardens. There are also jogging paths, outdoor exercise equipment, basketball courts, horseshoe pits, restrooms, a playground, a band shell, and prime picnicking spots. Riverside Railyard Skate Park, reputed to be one of the best in the Northwest and one of the largest in the country, connects to Gibson Park via the walking path leading underneath the railroad overpass. The restored log cabin of Vinegar Jones, reportedly Great Falls' first permanent resident, is also on display in the park near the gardens.

Park Dr. N and 1st Ave. N, Great Falls, MT, 59403, USA
406-771–1265
Sight Details
Free

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Gibson-Mack-Holt House

One of Bay Shore's oldest houses and home to the historical society, this restored 1820s tradesman's house is authentically furnished and has on its property a Victorian herb garden, a chicken coop, and a two-seater outhouse. The research library in the basement contains antique postcards, old newspapers, maps, and books about the Bay Shore/Brightwaters area. Temporary exhibits display memorabilia and artifacts related to topics ranging from the world wars to crafts and sports.

Gila National Forest

The Gila, as it's called, covers 3.3 million acres—that's 65 mi by 100 mi—and was the first land in the nation to be set aside as a protected "wilderness" by the U.S. Forest Service back in 1924. The area is vast and continues to feel like a great, relatively undiscovered treasure. You are unlikely to come across any crowds, even in peak summer months. Whether you're backpacking or doing day hikes, you have 1,500 mi of incredibly diverse trails to explore. Open camping is permitted throughout the forest, although there are 18 developed campgrounds (all with toilets and seven with potable water). The Gila is an outdoors-lover's paradise: with seemingly endless trails to explore on mountain bikes, white-water rafting (the season usually starts in April), and fishing in rivers, lakes (three of them), and streams. Thirty percent of the forest is closed to vehicular traffic entirely, but the rest is open for touring. The Trail of the Mountain Spirits Scenic Byway (also referred to as the Inner Loop Scenic Drive) snakes through 75 miles of some of the most gorgeous and scenic forest in the wilderness. The roads are paved but the sharp, narrow, and steep turns make it inadvisable for large RVs. From Silver City, take NM 15 north to Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument. From the monument backtrack on NM 15 to NM 35 heading southeast to NM 152, which leads west back to Silver City.

3005 E. Camino Del Bosque, Silver City, NM, USA
575-388--8201-Silver City Ranger District Office

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Gilahina Trestle Wayside

This peaceful stop alongside the Gilahina River is framed by the Gilahina Trestle, a mammoth wooden structure that was originally 90 feet high and required ½ million board feet of timber. Even more impressive is that it was completed in just eight days in the winter of 1911. The rest area has a large pull-out and vaulted toilets.

Mile 29, McCarthy Rd., USA

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Gilbert House Children's Museum

Celebrating the life and the inventions of A.C. Gilbert, a Salem native who became a toy manufacturer and inventor, this museum is an amazing place to let the imagination run wild. There are themed interactive rooms along with a huge outdoor play structure. In addition to the children's activities, many beloved toys created by A.C. Gilbert are on display, including Erector sets and American Flyer trains. The wide range of indoor and outdoor interactive exhibits will appeal to children (and adults) of all ages.

116 Marion St. NE, Salem, OR, 97301, USA
503-371–3631
Sight Details
$10
Closed Mon. except during school holidays

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Gilbert Stuart Birthplace and Museum

Built in 1750, the authentically restored childhood home of one of America's foremost portrait artists—his image of George Washington graces the $1 bill—is set on 23 woodsy acres in Saunderstown containing a scenic millpond and stream, Colonial herb gardens, nature trails, and a fish ladder. The fully restored gristmill here has the original granite millstones used to grind local whitecap flint corn into cornmeal. Inside the Stuart home is a snuff mill, used to grind tobacco and still turned by water power. Stuart painted more than 1,000 portraits, including those of the first six U.S. presidents. The Welcome Center and Bell Art Gallery exhibits the works of Stuart and his daughter, also a painter, along with works by local and other artists. Guided tours take place at 11 am and 1 pm; self-guided tours are also available.

815 Gilbert Stuart Rd., North Kingstown, RI, 02874, USA
401-294–3001
Sight Details
$12
Closed mid-Oct.–mid-Apr.; closed dates vary in the spring, summer, and fall, check website for details

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Gilbert's Bar House of Refuge Museum

Built in 1875 on Hutchinson Island, this is the only remaining example of 10 such structures that were erected by the U.S. Life-Saving Service (a predecessor of the Coast Guard) to aid stranded sailors. The displays here include antique lifesaving equipment, maps, artifacts from nearby wrecks, and boatbuilding tools. The museum is affiliated with the nearby Elliott Museum; package tickets are available.

301 S.E. MacArthur Blvd., Jensen Beach, FL, 34996, USA
772-225–1875
Sight Details
$8

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Gilcrease Museum

Immerse yourself in the world's most comprehensive collection of Western American art, including 18 of the 22 original Remington bronze sculptures and a quarter-million specimens of archaeology and ethnographic materials from Native American, Hispanic, and Anglo-American cultural traditions. It's all housed on 460 acres, 23 of which comprise themed gardens. Other artists whose work is featured at the Gilcrease include John James Audubon, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, James McNeill Whister, and Western art masters Thomas Moran, Charles M. Russell, George Caitlin, and Albert Bierstadt.

1400 Gilcrease Museum Rd., Tulsa, OK, 74127, USA
918-596–2700
Sight Details
$8
Tues.–Sun. 10–5
Closed Mon.

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Gilpin History Museum

At the Gilpin History Museum, photos and reproductions, as well as vintage pieces from different periods of Gilpin County history, paint a richly detailed portrait of life in a typical rowdy mining community.

228 E. 1st High St., Central City, CO, 80427, USA
303-582–5283
Sight Details
$7
By appointment only Oct.–Memorial Day

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Ginkgo Petrified Forest State Park

About 30 miles east of Ellensburg via Interstate 90, Ginkgo Petrified Forest hugs the western bank of the Columbia River and preserves the remarkable petrified-wood logs that were once part of a thriving ginkgo forest. The 1¼-mile Trees of Stone Interpretative Trail loop trailhead and Trailside Museum are a 2-mile drive west of the interpretive center (closed Monday through Thursday, mid-September–mid-May). The adjacent Wanapum Recreation Area has camping, swimming, and river access for boaters.

Girdwood Center for Visual Arts

Though you'll go to Girdwood to ski or hike, find some time to peruse the crafts and artwork at this nonprofit co-op gallery. With pieces from more than 30 local artists on display, there's plenty to look at—and you might end up taking care of any gift needs (from the trip or for the holidays) in one fell swoop.

194 Olympic Mountain Loop, Girdwood, AK, 99587, USA
907-783–3209
Sight Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. in winter

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The Girl Puzzle Monument

Roosevelt Island

Located in Roosevelt Island Lighthouse Park, this intriguing and monumental sculpture honors Nelly Bly, the journalist who exposed the horrors of the island's Women’s Lunatic Asylum by going undercover as a patient. Simultaneously, it spotlights women who have endured—and overcome—hardship. Shown as sections of faces in silver for Bly, and bronze for the others, the pieces represent being both broken and repaired. Also on-site, just behind the sculpture, is the Roosevelt Island Lighthouse. The stone structure was built by the New York City government in 1872. It is on the National Register of Historic Places and is also a New York City Landmark.

Glacier Bay National Park Visitor Information Station

At this building down by the dock, next to the sheltered picnic tables, park rangers provide camping permits, backcountry or boating orientations, and updates on weather and other current conditions.