10405 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.

Wolfe Ranch

Civil War veteran John Wesley Wolfe and his son started a small ranch here in 1898. He added a cabin in 1906 when his daughter Esther and her family came west to live. Built out of Fremont cottonwoods, the rustic one-room cabin still stands on the site. Look for remains of a root cellar and a corral as well. Even older than these structures is the nearby Ute rock-art panel by the Delicate Arch trailhead. About 150 feet past the footbridge and before the trail starts to climb, you can see images of bighorn sheep and figures on horseback, as well as some smaller images believed to be dogs.

Off Delicate Arch Rd., UT, 84532, USA

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Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park

About 15 minutes' drive from downtown Freeport you'll find 5 miles of trails thread through this 200-plus-acre preserve, tracing the edges of Casco Bay, the Harraseeket River, and a salt marsh. It's an excellent place to view nesting ospreys. A park naturalist leads regularly scheduled, one-hour nature walks. There are picnic tables and a shelter with grills; overnight camping is prohibited. In winter, the trails are great for snowshoeing and cross-country skiing.

Wolff Vineyards

Syrah, Petite Sirah, Riesling, and Teroldego join the expected Pinot Noir and Chardonnay as the stars at this family-run Edna Valley winery 6 miles south of downtown San Luis Obispo. The pourers are friendly, and you'll often meet one of the owners or their children in the tasting room. With its hillside views, the outdoor patio is a great place to enjoy an afternoon picnic (guests can bring their own food or pick up provisions from the on-site deli).

6238 Orcutt Rd., San Luis Obispo, CA, 93401, USA
805-781–0448
Sight Details
$20 for tastings

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Wolverton Meadow

At a major trailhead to the backcountry, this is a great place to stop for lunch before a hike. The area sits in a mixed-conifer forest adjacent to parking. Drinking water, grills, and restrooms are available.

Sequoia National Park, CA, 93262, USA

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Woman's Industrial Exchange

Mount Vernon

This Baltimore institution was organized in the 1880s as a way for destitute women, many of them Civil War widows, to support themselves in a ladylike fashion through sewing and other domestic handiworks. To this day you can still purchase handmade quilts, embroidered baby clothes, sock monkeys, and many other arts and crafts.

333 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD, 21201, USA
410-685–4388
Sight Details
Tues.–Fri. 11–6, Sat. 11–5.

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Women in Military Service for America Memorial

What is now this memorial next to the visitor center was once the Hemicycle, a huge carved retaining wall faced with granite at the entrance to Arlington National Cemetery. Built in 1932, the wall was restored, with stairways added leading to a rooftop terrace. Inside are 16 exhibit alcoves showing the contributions that women have made to the military—from the Revolutionary War to the present—as well as the history of the memorial itself. A 196-seat theater shows films and is used for lectures and conferences. A computer database has pictures, military histories, and stories of thousands of women veterans. A fountain and reflecting pool front the classical-style Hemicycle and entry gates.

Arlington, VA, USA

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Women's Guild of the New Orleans Opera Association House

Garden District

This Greek Revival house, built in 1865, has an octagonal turret added in the late 19th century. The last private owner, Nettie Seebold, willed the estate to the Women's Guild in 1965. It's still furnished today with 18th- and 19th-century European and American pieces. Tours are available Monday through Wednesday, given on an ad hoc basis with no advance reservations required. In addition, walking tour companies will schedule a visit here as part of their tours.

2504 Prytania St., New Orleans, LA, 70130, USA
504-267–9539
Sight Details
$15
No public tours Memorial Day–Labor Day

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Women's Rights National Historical Park

Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and a handful of other pioneers in the women's rights movement organized the first Women's Rights Convention in the Wesleyan Chapel in Seneca Falls in 1848. Today, the park incorporates the site of the convention (the Wesleyan Chapel Declaration Park), a visitor center, and several off-site historic homes of key convention participants. Exhibits and an orientation film at the visitor center explore the development of the women's rights movement in the United States.

136 Fall St., Seneca Falls, NY, 13148, USA
315-568--0024
Sight Details
Free

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Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame

It's easy to find this museum dedicated to all things women's basketball—just look for the 30-foot-wide basketball sitting atop a metal cage on the edge of the city's skyline. Exhibits include jerseys from WNBA All-Stars, a locker room with recordings of inspirational half-time talks from top coaches, and play courts where you can test your skills against those of the game's top players.

700 Hall of Fame Dr., Knoxville, TN, 37915, USA
865-633--9000
Sight Details
$8
Closed Sun; closed Mon. from Sep.–April

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Wonder Gardens

Opened in 1936 by two retired moonshiners from Detroit, this was one of the state's first roadside attractions and remained little changed until 2013, when the family decided to close its doors—and, thus, ending a rich chapter of Florida tourism history—forever. In stepped Florida landscape photographer John Brady, who negotiated a lease with the founding family and transformed the old-style cramped zoological gardens (that once featured Florida panthers, black bears, crocodiles, alligators, and tame Florida deer) into a botanical garden by conserving the flora and fauna following contemporary standards. Now in focus are diverse gardens that include old-growth trees like kapok, banyan, candle nut, egg fruit, plumeria, jaboticaba, mahogany, cashew, avocado, and mango, as well as integrated animal exhibits with tortoises, turtles, smaller alligators, flamingos, and a butterfly garden. The original buildings have been preserved and made into a modern gallery that showcases Brady's photography.

27180 Old 41 Rd., Bonita Springs, FL, 34135, USA
239-992–2591
Sight Details
$12

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Wonderland Trail

Family-friendly Wonderland Trail, a 1.4-mile round trip, follows an old fire road through spruce forest and leads to rocky coast with nice tide-pooling at low tide. The nearby Ship Harbor Trail also draws families. Easy.    A portion of Route 102A (Seawall Road) was temporarily closed after 2024's winter storms. While repairs should be complete, if the loop road is closed, access it from its southern terminus with Route 102 in Bass Harbor, not its northern terminus in Manset. Watch for signs.

WonderWorks

In an upside-down world, this is the sort of wacky, interactive learning museum that will help make sense of life's lingering questions like: What does it feel like to be shaken by an earthquake? Can you really move an object with nothing but brain power? How do you design a roller coaster? Schedule at least two hours to move through the activities and exhibits, or longer if you really want to dig into learning.

WonderWorks Orlando

International Drive

The building seems to be sinking into the ground—at a precarious angle and upside down. Many people stop to take pictures in front of the topsy-turvy facade, complete with upended palm trees and broken sidewalks. Inside, the upside-down theme continues only as far as the lobby. After that it's a playground of 100 interactive experiences—some incorporating virtual reality, others educational (similar to those at a science museum), and still others pure entertainment. You can experience an earthquake or a hurricane, land a space shuttle using simulator controls, make giant bubbles in the Bubble Lab, play laser tag in the enormous arena and arcade, design and ride your own roller coaster, lie on a bed of real nails, and play baseball with a virtual Major League batter.

Wood Island Lighthouse

The 42-foot stone lighthouse and attached two-story keeper’s house are on the 35-acre, uninhabited Wood Island off the coast of Biddeford. The island is closed to the public except for two-hour guided tours hosted by Friends of Wood Island Lighthouse. Tours are offered in July and August, and reservations are required. Boats leave from Vine’s Landing in Biddeford Pool.

20 Yates St., Biddeford, ME, 04006, USA
207-200–4552
Sight Details
$35
Closed Sept.–June

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Wood Valley Temple

Behind the remote town of Pahala, this serene and beautiful Tibetan Buddhist temple, established in 1973, has hosted more than 50 well-known lamas, including the Dalai Lama on two occasions. Known as Nechung Dorje Drayang Ling (Immutable Island of Melodious Sound), this peaceful place welcomes all creeds. You can visit and meditate, leave an offering, walk the lush gardens shared by strutting peacocks, browse the gift shop, or stay in the temple's guesthouse.

96-2285 Wood Valley Rd., HI, 96777, USA
808-928–8539
Sight Details
$5

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Wood's Cove

Off South Coast Highway, Wood's Cove is especially quiet during the week. Big rock formations hide lurking crabs. This is a prime scuba-diving spot, and at high tide much of the beach is underwater. Climbing the steps to leave, you can see a Tudor-style mansion that was once home to Bette Davis. Street parking is free yet limited. Amenities: none. Best for: snorkeling; sunset.

Wood-Tikchik State Park

Located in the Bristol Bay region, this state park is the largest in the nation at 1.6 million acres. Two separate groups of interconnected lakes, some up to 45 miles long, dominate the park, making it a region dense with waterways despite being inland. Bears, caribou, porcupines, eagles, and loons abound in the park's forests and tundra, but Wood-Tikchik is best known for its fish. The park's lakes and streams are critical spawning habitat for five species of Pacific salmon. They also support healthy populations of rainbow trout, arctic char, arctic grayling, and northern pike. As a result, Wood-Tikchik draws anglers and boaters interested in fishing in a place without maintained trails (and with few visitor amenities). Most campsites here are primitive, and anyone planning to explore the park should be experienced in backcountry travel and camping. Besides the many large lakes and streams, the park's landscape includes rugged mountains, glaciers, and vast expanses of tundra.

Wooden Boat Show

Each October, Front Street is transformed into a popular event where craftsmen showcase their works in the wooden boat exhibits. There's an intense boatbuilding competition (finished off by a rowing race on the river), kids' model-building contest, live music, and arts and crafts. All proceeds from the show are donated to the Harbor Historical Association's maritime museum.

Wooden Shoe Arch Overlook

Kids will enjoy looking for the tiny window in the rock that looks like a wooden shoe with a turned-up toe. If you can't find it on your own, there's a marker to help you.

Off main park road, UT, 84535, USA

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The WoodenBoat School

This school, which sits on a 60-acre oceanfront campus, is renowned for its weeklong woodworking and boatbuilding workshops. It also offers sailing and kayaking courses, as well as coastal-theme photography and art classes. The school is off the road to Naskeag Point, a sleepy, serenely beautiful spot at the end of the peninsula road with a small rock beach, a teeny park, and a lovely view across the harbor.

Woodenhead Wine

A former girlfriend bestowed the nickname "Wooden Head" on Nikolai Stez for his stubborn nature, but he also has a sense of humor, resurrecting the name years later for his winery. The meticulous, if idiosyncratic, winemaker has an impeccable pedigree, having begun his education working harvests for Burt Williams of the acclaimed Williams Selyem Winery, eventually becoming assistant winemaker there. Pinot Noir and Zinfandel are Woodenhead's focus, but don't miss the French Colombard, Chardonnay, and other whites. Tastings are relatively old-school, with most patrons perched on a deck overlooking Pinot Noir vines, a Russian River Valley panorama unfolding beyond them.

5700 River Rd., Forestville, CA, 95436, USA
707-887–2703
Sight Details
Tastings from $30
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Woodford Mansion

Fairmount Park

A good choice for those who enjoy history and the decorative arts, the Naomi Wood collection of antique household goods, including Colonial furniture, unusual clocks, and English delftware, and "Colonial household gear" designated in Wood's will, can be seen on guided tours (required) in this Georgian mansion. This National Historic Landmark was built about 1756 as an elegant summer retreat from the city. The tour includes stories about the families who lived here and also presents a room representative of where some servants, including enslaved people, lived.  

3400 W. Dauphin St., Philadelphia, PA, 19132, USA
215-229–6115
Sight Details
$8
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Woodford Reserve Distillery

Limestone buildings dating from the early 19th century have been restored to operation for distilling, aging, and bottling Woodford Reserve bourbon. At the end of the distillery tour, guests 21 and over can sample the whiskey

7855 McCracken Pike, Versailles, KY, USA
859-879–1812
Sight Details
$5
Apr.–Oct., Tues.–Sat. 9–5, Sun. 12:30–4:30

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Woodford State Park

This state campground is the highest in Vermont at 2,400 feet. Adams Reservoir is the dominant feature and focus of activities, with swimming, fishing, and boating, including canoes, kayaks, and paddleboards for rent. A nature trail also circles the reservoir.

Woodland Park

One of 28 city green spaces, Woodland Park has a playground, ball fields, rose gardens, and a picnic area. Geese, ducks, peacocks, and black swans swim and flutter at the pond, which offers night-lit ice-skating and comfy locker rooms in winter. Open from June to August, Woodland Water Park is an affordable and popular attraction with a pool, waterslides, and a "Lazy River" float.

705 2nd St. E, Kalispell, MT, 59901, USA
406-758–7812
Sight Details
Waterpark $7

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Woodland Park Zoo

Phinney Ridge

Ninety-two acres are divided into bioclimatic zones, allowing many animals to roam freely in habitat areas. A jaguar exhibit is the center of the Tropical Rain Forest area, where rare cats, frogs, and birds evoke South American jungles. The Humboldt penguin exhibit is environmentally sound—it uses geothermal heating and cooling to mimic the climes of the penguins' native home, the coastal areas of Peru. With authentic thatch-roof buildings, the African Village has a replica schoolroom overlooking animals roaming the savanna; the Trail of Vines takes you through tropical Asia; and the Northern Trail winds past rocky habitats where wolves, mountain goats, a grizzly bear, and otters scramble and play. The Zoomazium is a nature-themed indoor play space for toddlers and kids under eight, and the Woodland Park Rose Garden is also worth a stroll. Check out Woodland Park's ZooTunes lineup of summertime outdoor concerts at www.zoo.org/zootunes (tickets sell out in advance, so plan ahead).

5500 Phinney Ave. N, Seattle, 98103, USA
206-548–2000
Sight Details
Oct.–Apr. from $18.95, May–Sept. from $26.95

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Woodlawn and Pope-Leighey House

Two iconic homes on one site are found just west of Mount Vernon. Woodlawn overlooks the Potomac River on lands first belonging to the Algonkian-speaking Doeg people, and then lands of George Washington’s larger Mount Vernon plantation. Finished in 1805, the Federal-style mansion was designed for Eleanor and Lawrence Lewis by William Thornton, the architect of the U.S. Capitol. It displays the power and prosperity of America’s first ruling class. Anti-slavery Quakers purchased and transformed Woodlawn in 1805. The Quakers and local free Black people demonstrated that with agricultural reforms and Black landownership, the South could be successfully cultivated without slavery.

Also on the grounds, Pope-Leighey House is a Frank Lloyd Wright Unison home. Designed for the Pope family in 1940, it artfully blends into the landscape. Its innovative design concepts and natural materials create a sense of space and grace. The home is an expression of Wright’s radical vision for beautiful, affordable, and more inclusive middle-class housing. To save it from demolition, the home was moved from Falls Church, Virginia, to Woodlawn in 1965 by its second owner, Marjorie Leighey. It's the only Wright house open to the public in Virginia.

Guides and exhibitions at both houses offer insight into the architectural details of both houses, as well as thoughtful narratives dedicated to telling the fullest story possible about all people associated with the property.

Woodlawn Cemetery

Mark Twain rests in the Langdon family plot, with his daughter Clara and son-in-law, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, at his feet. A 12-foot-tall monument marks the spot (12 feet, in river terminology, is 2 fathoms, or "mark twain," the derivation of Clemens' pen name).

1200 Walnut St., Elmira, NY, 14905, USA
585-394--0840
Sight Details
Free
Daily dawn–dusk

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Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery

Berry Hill

The 133 lush green acres of Woodlawn Memorial Park have served as the final resting space for generations of Nashvillians, including many major country music stars whose grave sites are open for visits from tour groups or individuals. Among those buried in Woodlawn are George Jones, Tammy Wynette, Felice and Boudleaux Bryant, Little Jimmy Dickens, Jerry Reed, Webb Pierce, Johnny Paycheck, Marty Robbins, and Porter Wagoner. The beautiful Lynn Anderson Rose Garden pays homage to the late-great songstress and her greatest hit.

Woodlawn Museum, Garden & Grounds

In the mid-1820s, Colonel John Black built an elegant Federal-style mansion with a distinct full-length front porch and balustrades on a 180-acre estate of fields and woods. Inside the Black House (as it's locally known) is an especially fine elliptical flying staircase and period artifacts from the three generations of the family who lived here. Outside, Woodlawn has a formal garden, a fairy village in the tree nursery, 2 miles of walking trails that Colonel Black used as a bridle path, and a croquet court that's in play. Check the website for court fees and availability as well as information about special events, including children's programs. The trails and gardens are open year-round.

19 Black House Rd., Ellsworth, ME, 04605, USA
207-667–8671
Sight Details
Guided tours (Thurs. only in season) $15; audio tours $10 (Wed. and Fri. in season)
Museum closed Sat.–Tues. and from mid-Sept. or later in the fall–early July

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