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Cincinnati is a Heritage City
Lots of History and Lots of Fun
By Phyllis and Arvin Steinberg
Cincinnati is a city
steeped in historical attractions, fun activities for the whole family and
great educational experiences.
The Ohio River
separates Ohio from Kentucky. We took a cruise along the river and found it
a relaxing way to see the bridges connecting Ohio and Kentucky. We also had
great views from the boat of the Cincinnati Reds baseball stadium and the
Cincinnati Bengals football stadium as well as the Cincinnati skyline.
Incidentally, the Cincinnati Reds baseball team is the oldest major league
baseball team. BB Riverboats offers a one hour sightseeing cruise, adults
$12.50, children $6.25
Outstanding exhibits at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical
Garden were a high point on our visit to Ohio. It is the second oldest zoo
in the country (opened 1875), and offers an animal collection beyond compare
exhibited in 85 acres of naturalistic surroundings including Asian plants
and jungle sounds. The zoo houses more than 700 different animal species and
more than 3,000 types of plants. There are more than 20 major exhibits at
the zoo, and all of the exhibits are outstanding.
We
especially enjoyed The Lords of the Arctic exhibit that features polar bears
and allows visitors to view the bears walking through a shallow stream or
plunging into a 12 foot deep, 70,000 gallon pool. Visitors can also view the
polar bears almost nose-to-nose through underwater glass panels. The exhibit
also has five dramatic waterfalls and a replica of a bear den with
educational interactives. Admission to the zoo: Adults $11.50, children
$6.00, children under two are free, shows are free with zoo admission, adult
and child strollers are available.
For a fascinating
historical and educational experience for your family, we recommend visiting
the small town of Ripley, Ohio, an hour’s drive from Cincinnati along the
Ohio River. Ripley, located on the Ohio River, became the point of entry to
Ohio for hundreds of fugitive slaves during the years before emancipation.
They were helped on their way by some of Ripley’s leading citizens, who
secretly cooperated in the illegal activities of aiding and hiding the
slaves on their way to freedom.
Rev.
John Rankin, a white Presbyterian minister, was an outspoken opponent of
slavery. His house situated high on a hill overlooking the town of Ripley
and the Ohio River, was a stopping point for slaves who crossed the river
from the slave holding state of Kentucky into the free state of Ohio. Most
of the 2,000 slaves who traveled through Ripley before the end of the Civil
War stayed in the home of John Rankin. The Rankin family, which included 13
children, often hid as many as 12 slaves in their small home at one time.
In the winter of 1838,
a slave woman and her baby crossed the Ohio River from Kentucky on floating
sheets of ice to the safety of the Ripley shore. Harriet Beecher Stowe, a
resident of Cincinnati at the time, included that story and others she heard
from John Rankin about escaping slaves, in her novel, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”.
The Rankin House is now a National Historic Landmark.
We toured this interesting house and even retraced the route of escaping
slaves by walking up the “stairway to liberty” which was built on the hill
slaves climbed to reach the Rankin House – and safety. Admission: adults
$2.00, children (ages 6-12) $.50.
Another
National Historic Landmark in Ripley is the Parker House that faces the Ohio
River and northern Kentucky. It is the former home of John P. Parker, an
African American who was born into slavery and escaped into freedom. He
moved to Ripley where he became a prominent inventor and business leader.
John P. Parker often ventured daringly at night into Kentucky to guide
fugitive slaves in crossing the Ohio River. He is reported to have aided
more than 900 people en route to freedom.
The network of safe
houses and trails that helped slaves flee the South before the Civil War is
known as the Underground Railroad. Plans are underway to open a National
Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati in 2003. The site for this
new museum is on the land between the Reds baseball stadium and the Bengals
football stadium on the banks of the Ohio River.
After spending the
morning in Ripley, we had lunch at Coheart’s River House Restaurant about
two blocks from the Parker House. The restaurant overlooks the Ohio River
and serves tasty country cooking.
If you like museums, Cincinnati has some of the most
interesting ones in the nation. The city has an entire museum center located
in an Art Deco building, the former Union Terminal. Once a bustling train
station, the Cincinnati Museum Center is now a major tourism destination
with more than a million visitors a year. There are three museums at the
Center: Cinergy Children’s Museum, the Museum of Natural History & Science,
and the Cincinnati History Museum. The center also has an OMNIMAX theater.
The Cinergy Children’s
Museum has nine state-of-the-art, totally interactive exhibits appropriate
for infants to ten year olds. We enjoyed watching The Woods exhibit where
children can look out from a two-story tree house (it is wheel- chair
accessible) to view the real waterfall that empties below into a pond of
live river creatures. They can also cross the rope bridge spanning the
“river” below, or try the horizontal climbing wall.
Another exhibit, Little
Sprouts Farm, is ideal for children four years of age or younger. Toddlers
and preschoolers can ride down a slide through the barn, sort fruits and
vegetables in the garden, fish from a row boat, play at a sand table, and
gather around the story tree theater for puppet shows.
The second museum, the
Museum of Natural History & Science, has eight excellent exhibits for
visitors of all ages. The third museum, the Cincinnati History Museum, is
one of the largest urban history museums in the country. It includes a
re-creation of the Cincinnati Public Landing in the late 1850’s, where
visitors can step aboard a 94-foot steamboat. Plus, visitors can talk with
costumed actors who make “history come to life”.
Prices
at the Museum Center: Any one museum $6.50 for adults and $4.50 for children
(ages 3 through 12); any two museums $9.00 for adults and $6.00 for children
(ages 3 through 12); all three museums $12.00 for adults and $8.00 for
children (ages 3 through 12). OMNIMAX tickets are $6.50 for adults and
$4.50 for children.
If you would like to
have some outdoors fun and physical activity, you can find it within 30
minutes of Cincinnati at the The Dude Ranch in Morrow, Ohio. This is a
working cattle ranch that offers horseback and trail riding, and authentic
cattle drives. It also has a petting zoo of farm animals and pony rides for
younger children. Horses are available for all ability levels, including
horses perfect for children seven and up.
After explaining that
we wanted to experience the best the ranch had to offer, but that we had
almost no horseback riding experience, we joined a group of 12 novice
horseback riders. We mounted our horses and began single file down a slope
and then up through a wooded area. Two experienced cowboys rode with us. We
then came to a pasture where about 35 Texas Longhorn cattle were grazing.
The cowboys instructed us on how to spread out and form a “U” shape and how
to drive the cattle through an open gate in the fence into another pasture
and then through another open gate into a third pasture. They explained how
to advance our horses and shout repeatedly “YAW”, “HAW”, “MOVE”, or anything
else that would get the Longhorns moving. What fun it was driving the
cattle. We had become “wranglers”. Prices: pony rides $5.00; 1 hour
trail ride $27.50; 1 hour cattle drive $39.95.
Ohio has been the home
to eight U. S. presidents, including William Howard Taft of Cincinnati. We
enjoyed the interesting guided tour of the home where the president lived.
It is also a National Historical Site. Next door to the home is the Taft
Education Center that opened in 1999 with many interesting exhibits.
For
roller coaster fanatics and all those young at heart, Paramount’s Kings
Island amusement park is a 15-minute drive from Cincinnati. It features 364
acres packed full of world-class attractions, including 12 roller coasters,
two complete areas for children, and characters from Hanna-Barbera Land and
Nickelodeon. There are also several scheduled shows and a 30-acre water park
with a 600,000-gallon wave pool. Two of the roller coasters deserve special
mention. The Beast is the world’s longest wooden roller coaster, and Son of
Beast is the world’s tallest, fastest, and only looping wooden roller
coaster. Admission: Adults $39.99, children ages 3-6 $19.99, children under
2 years free.
For more information on
tourism in Ohio, phone 1-800-BUCKEYE;
www.OhioTourism.com
Photos by Arvin Steinberg
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