10451 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.

Nokomis Beach

This beach is on the island just north of Venice Beach, across the pass near North Jetty Park. It's frequented more by sunbathing retirees than young partiers. Amenities: food and drink; parking; showers; toilets. Best for: sunset; swimming.

100 Casey Key Rd., Nokomis, FL, 34275, USA

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Nolan Center

The nexus of cultural life in Wrangell, the center houses the town's museum and visitor center as well as convention and performance facilities and a gift shop. Exhibits at the Wrangell Museum chronicle the region's rich history. On display here are the oldest known Tlingit house posts (dating from the late 18th century), decorative posts from Chief Shakes's clan house, petroglyphs, century-old spruce-root and cedar-bark baskets, masks, gold-rush memorabilia, and fascinating photographs. If you're spending any time in town, don't pass this up. The Wrangell Visitor Center, staffed when the museum is open, has information about local touring options.

Nome Convention & Visitors Bureau

Stop by the Nome Convention & Visitors Bureau for a historic-walking-tour map, a city map, and information on local activities. The offerings do a good job capturing Nome's historic and current role as a gateway to the vast expanses of western Alaska.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Norfolk Botanical Garden

The springtime Azalea Festival is one highlight of the lovely 155-acre Norfolk Botanical Garden on the eastern edge of the city. In addition to an abundance of azaleas, rhododendrons, and camellias, there is a delicately landscaped Japanese garden with trees native to that country, including unusual strains of cherry and maple. From mid-March to October, trams carry you along routes to view seasonal plants and flowers, including 4,000 varieties of roses on 3½ acres. Year-round, you can stroll 12 miles of paths. Eleven marble statues of famous artists, carved in the late 19th century by Moses Ezekiel, enhance the natural beauty of the gardens. The lakeside is ideal for picnics. Fall brings a 3-acre children's garden.

6700 Azalea Garden Rd., Norfolk, VA, 23518, USA
757-441–5830
Sight Details
$20
May 1--Oct 15 daily 9-7, Oct 16--April 30 daily 9-5

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Norfolk Pine

Considered the "mother" of all the pines on the island, this 160-foot-tall tree was planted here, at the former site of the ranch manager's house, in 1875. Almost 30 years later, George Munro, the manager, observed how, in foggy weather, water collected on and dripped off its foliage. This led Munro to supervise the planting of Cook pines along the ridge of Lanaihale and throughout the town in order to add to the island's water supply. This majestic tree is just in front of the Sensei Lanai resort.

1 Keomuku Hwy., Lanai City, HI, 96763, USA

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Norman Bird Sanctuary

Stroll through the woods or hike to the top of Hanging Rock for a spectacular view at this 325-acre sanctuary for diverse wildlife including more than 300 species of birds. The sanctuary has about 7 miles of trails traversing ridges, forests, thickets, fields, ponds, streams, salt marsh, and sandy beach. The raucous dawn chorus of birdsong in the spring is one of the great wildlife experiences in Rhode Island.

Norris Geyser Basin

From the 1930 Norris Ranger Station, which houses a small museum that helps to explain the basin's geothermal activity, you can stroll a network of short boardwalk trails—some of them suitable for wheelchairs—to Porcelain Basin, Back Basin, and several geysers and other interesting and constantly evolving thermal features.

Grand Loop Rd. at Norris Canyon Rd., Yellowstone National Park, WY, USA
Sight Details
Ranger station closed mid-Oct.–mid-May

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Norris Hot Springs

For a bit of relaxation, nothing beats soaking in the natural hot water of the Norris Hot Springs pool. Live musical acts perform on the poolside stage Friday through Sunday nights. There's a $2 cover charge for music. The hot spring is also home to delicious organic food (at the year-round cafe and the seasonal grill), most of which is sourced from the owner's own gardens (and everything else sourced as locally as possible). Camping is also available.

42 Norris Rd., Norris, MT, 59745, USA
406-685–3303
Sight Details
$12
Closed Tues. (by reservation only Mon. and Wed.)

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North 6th St. Pier

NYC Ferry's East River route stops in North Williamsburg at this clean, modern pier, but even if you're not taking the ferry, it's a nice place for a walk, with benches and excellent views of the Manhattan skyline. On summer days, you're likely to see teens skateboarding and people eating ice cream from OddFellows, just two blocks away.

North American Bigfoot Center

In the town of Boring along the main route from Portland to Mt. Hood (about 20 miles before you reach Welches), this museum devoted to all things Bigfoot is operated by one of the world's foremost researchers on the topic and has quickly become a favorite stop, especially with kids. Inside you'll find a 7½-foot-tall replica of a rather stern-looking Sasquatch (his name is Murphy), along with framed and cast footprints, indigenous masks, photos, books, and other artifacts that help visitors to decide for themselves about the likelihood that this creature actually exists.

North Asheville Tailgate Market

On Saturday morning from 8 to noon, the UNC Asheville campus fills with produce, crafts, baked goods, and flower stands from the best small farm and organic vendors in the region. Expect crowds of in-the-know locals. There are typically several food trucks selling breakfast items.

North Avenue Beach

Lincoln Park

The beautiful people strut their stuff at this lakefront strand. The ocean steamer-shaped beachhouse, which received an overdue glow up in 2024, has concession stands, a restaurant, cabana rentals, and upper decks for surveying the skyline. There are over 50 volleyball courts (rented by the hour), kayak and Jet Ski rentals, and lots of sand. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards (late May--early Sept.); parking (fee); toilets; water sports. Best for: partiers; sunrise; swimming; walking.

North Beach

Along Burlington's "new" North End, a long line of beaches stretches to the Winooski River delta, beginning with North Beach, which has a grassy picnic area, a snack bar, and kayak and SUP rentals. Neighboring Leddy Park offers a more secluded beach. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; parking (fee); showers; toilets. Best for: partiers; swimming; walking; windsurfing.

North Beach

Tybee Island's North Beach is an all-in-one destination for beachgoers of every age. Located at the mouth of the Savannah River, the scene is generally low-key and is a great vantage point for viewing the cargo ships making their way to the Port of Savannah. A large, metered parking lot gives you convenient access to the beach, Fort Screven, and the adjacent Tybee Island Lighthouse and Museum, a 178-step lighthouse with great views of the surrounding area. The North Beach Grill, located in the parking lot, is perfect for an ice-cold beverage or bite to eat. To get here from Highway 80, turn left on Campbell Street and follow the signs to the Tybee Island Lighthouse. The local police are notorious for parking tickets, so make sure not to let your meter run over. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguard; parking (fee); toilets. Best for: solitude; sunrise; swimming; walking.

Meddin Dr. at Gulick St., Savannah, GA, 31328, USA

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North Beach

Just five minutes from St. Augustine, this site (aka Usina Beach) includes boat ramps, two campsites, and a picnic area with grills. If you'd rather eat in a restaurant, you're in the right spot—a variety of eateries overlook the ocean or the Intracoastal Waterway. Amenities: lifeguards (seasonal); parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: solitude; walking.

Rte. A1A, St. Augustine, FL, 32084, USA

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North Carolina Apple Festival

The North Carolina Apple Festival celebrates Henderson County's position as the leading apple producer in the state. Held Labor Day weekend, the Apple Festival occupies most of Main Street in downtown Hendersonville, with music, craft booths, and lots of apple products for sale.

Main St., Hendersonville, NC, 28792, USA
Sight Details
Free

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North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher

This small but beautiful oceanfront aquarium features a 235,000-gallon saltwater tank that's home to sharks, stingrays, and a Goliath grouper and green moray eel. There's a touch tank with rays, a room of glowing jellyfish, an albino alligator, and turtle ponds. Kids love the life-size replica of a megalodon shark and enjoy the daily feeding times and animal encounters. 

900 Loggerhead Rd., Kure Beach, NC, 28449, USA
910-772–0500
Sight Details
$13

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North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores

A 306,000-gallon habitat for sharks, fish, and a sea turtle—built around a replica of a German submarine (sunk nearby in 1942)—is the largest aquarium tank in the state. There's also a tank with a replica debris field of Blackbeard's flagship, the Queen Anne's Revenge, and a river otter exhibit. But the biggest standout of this location among the three major North Carolina aquariums is a 0.6-mile nature trail that winds through a wooded peninsula until its terminus on Bogue Sound, with nearly 360-degree views of the marsh and water.

1 Roosevelt Blvd., Pine Knoll Shores, NC, 28512, USA
252-247–4003
Sight Details
$13
Advance tickets recommended

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North Carolina Aquarium at Roanoke Island

Occupying 68,000 square feet of space overlooking Croatan Sound, this modern aquarium includes exhibits on sea turtles, shipwreck marine life, and wild wetlands. The Graveyard of the Atlantic—a 285,000-gallon ocean tank containing sharks and the re-created remains of the USS Monitor, which sunk off Hatteras Island in 1862—remains the centerpiece exhibit. The aquarium hosts a slew of activities and field trips, from feeding fish to learning about medicinal aquatic plants and participating in a workshop on injured sea turtles. It also manages the 1,000-foot-long Jennette's Pier in Nags Head.

374 Airport Rd., Manteo, NC, 27954, USA
252-475–2300
Sight Details
$13

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North Carolina Central University Art Museum

South/NCCU

Located in the first publicly supported liberal arts college for African Americans, this gallery showcases work by black artists. The permanent collection includes 19th-century masterpieces and 20th-century works created during the Harlem Renaissance.

1801 Fayetteville St., Durham, NC, 27707, USA
919-530–6211
Sight Details
Free
Tues.–Fri. 9am–4:30pm, Sun. 2-4pm
Closed Mon. and Sat.

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North Carolina Maritime Museum

An exhibit about the infamous pirate Blackbeard includes artifacts recovered from the discovery of his flagship, Queen Anne's Revenge, near Beaufort Inlet. Other exhibits feature coastal culture and the state's rich marine science history. You'll see model ships of all sizes, fossils, duck decoys, and a full-scale shark lunging out from the wall. The associated Watercraft Center, across the street, has lectures and classes on boatbuilding, and you can see various projects under construction.

North Carolina Museum of History

Downtown

Founded in 1902, this Smithsonian-affiliated museum is now in a state-of-the-art facility on Bicentennial Plaza. Its signature exhibit, The Story of North Carolina, traces more than 14,000 years of the state’s history. The museum also houses the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, which displays memorabilia from hundreds of inductees, from college heroes to pro superstars and Olympic contenders. You can see Richard Petty's race car, Arnold Palmer's Ryder Cup golf bag, and Harlem Globetrotter Meadowlark Lemon's uniforms. Even if your time is short, it's worth popping in to admire the wall-sized oil paintings of the state's most beautiful natural vistas.

North Cascades Park & Forest Information Center

This is the park's major administrative center and the place to pick up passes, permits, and information about current conditions.

810 Rte. 20, Sedro-Woolley, 98284, USA
360-854–7200
Sight Details
Mid-Oct.–mid-May, weekdays 8–4:30; mid-May–mid-Oct., daily 8–4:30
Closed weekends and federal holidays Oct.–mid-May

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North Cascades Visitor Center

The main visitor facility for the park has extensive displays on the surrounding landscape. Learn about the history and value of old-growth trees, the many creatures that depend on the rain-forest ecology, and the effects of human activity on the ecosystem. Check bulletin boards for special programs with park rangers.

North Cheyenne Cañon Park

The 1,600 acres of this city park, which is open year-round, manifest nature and natural history without a hint of commercialism—or charge. The canyon's moderate hikes include the Lower Columbine and Mt. Cutler trails, each less than a 3-mile round-trip. Both afford a view of the city and a sense of accomplishment.

North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame

This museum features six galleries and rotating exhibits, hosts special events, and is dedicated to the horse culture of the plains.

250 Main St., Medora, ND, 58645, USA
701-623–2000
Sight Details
$9
May–Sept., daily 9–6

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North Fork Road

Enter Glacier National Park through the back door by driving the North Fork Road. It's a rutted, bumpy, dusty gravel road that's teeming with wildlife along the North Fork of the Flathead River. The 40 miles to the Polebridge entrance station passes through thick forests, some of which burned during the fires of 2001 and 2003. As a result, many of these areas become seas of purple fireweed in early summer. You can opt out early and enter Glacier at the Camas Creek entrance gate and avoid rough roads. If you make it all the way to Polebridge, stop at the Mercantile for lunch or one of their famous huckleberry bear claws.

Columbia Falls, MT, USA

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North Hero State Park

The 399-acre North Hero has a swimming beach and nature trails. It's open to rowboats, kayaks, and canoes.

North Jetty Park

At the south end of Casey Key, this beach is a favorite for family outings and fishermen. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; toilets. Best for: swimming; walking.

1000 S. Casey Rd., Nokomis, FL, 34275, USA

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North Kaibab Trail

At 8,241 feet, this trail leads into the canyon and down to Phantom Ranch. It is recommended for experienced hikers only, who should allow four days for the round-trip hike. The long, steep path drops 5,840 feet over a distance of 14½ miles to Phantom Ranch and the Colorado River, so the National Park Service suggests that day hikers not go farther than Roaring Springs (5,020 feet) before turning to hike back up out of the canyon. After about 7 miles, Cottonwood Campground (4,080 feet) has drinking water in summer, restrooms, shade trees, and a ranger. A free shuttle takes hikers to the North Kaibab trailhead twice daily from Grand Canyon Lodge; reserve a spot the day before. Difficult.

AZ, 86023, USA

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