Diane and I just spent a day in Gettysburg, PA, touring the famous Civil War battlefield and parts of the town. We recommend this stop to any van or straight-truck expediter who enjoys tourist fun on the road.
Gettysburg is about 35 miles from the truck stops in Carlisle, PA. If you plan to lay over there for a weekend, drive the extra 35 miles and enjoy a day or entire weekend at Gettysburg.
Free bus and RV parking is available at the National Military Park and Information Center on Baltimore Pike, a little way out of town. You can park a straight truck there with no worries. The park gates close at night so if you stay too late into the evening you will be trapped there until the gates open the next day. The bus and RV parking lot is clearly marked when you drive in the main entrance.
That parking lot is just a short walk from he battlefield site which can be a multi-day attraction in itself. The indoor museum is an interesting stop as well. Restrooms are available in the parking lot and the museum lobby.
A free shuttle bus takes you into town and back on a regular schedule. The town is another tourist stop where you can spend a day walking the streets and exploring the many shops. Buildings that were there when the Civil War was fought are marked.
Diane and I started our day by arriving early at the bus and RV parking lot. We entered the museum shortly after it opened at 8:00 a.m., and learned a fair amount about the Gettysburg battle. That helped us better understand and appreciate what we would see later in the day.
The museum took a few hours to complete. We walked back to the truck for lunch and then took the free shuttle into town. At 2:00 p.m., we walked into the Segway Tours of Gettysburg shop where we had reservations for a three-hour battlefield tour on Segways. If you are not familiar with the Segway Personal Transporter™, click the link to see them in use (video at the bottom of the web page).
We have never been on Segways before. The tour company requires you to complete training before they let you leave the building. Instructors teach you how to dirve one on an indoor course. Most people had little trouble and the thing is easy once you catch on.
The weather was perfect today for an outdoor battlefield tour. Temps were in the mid-seventies. Winds were mild and the skies were partly cloudy. One down side of the Segway tour is that photo opportunities are limited. We got some good shots but would have gotten many more had we not been driving the Segways and keeping up with the group.
Returning to town and reluctantly turning in the Segways (they are a blast to drive!), we walked several blocks to the transportation center where we caught the free shuttle back to the parking lot. Being under load, we continued toward our Monday delivery. Had we not been under load, we would have found a place to stay nearby and spent another day in Gettysburg.
This is a great tourist stop for expediters. Parking is available and free, as is a shuttle that takes you into town and back. There are many ways to tour the battlefield (bike, walking, Segway, horseback, bus tour, self-guided car tour). The museum is an interesting place, and the town is fun.
We rank Gettysburg, PA a five-star expediter tourist stop.
Gettysburg is about 35 miles from the truck stops in Carlisle, PA. If you plan to lay over there for a weekend, drive the extra 35 miles and enjoy a day or entire weekend at Gettysburg.
Free bus and RV parking is available at the National Military Park and Information Center on Baltimore Pike, a little way out of town. You can park a straight truck there with no worries. The park gates close at night so if you stay too late into the evening you will be trapped there until the gates open the next day. The bus and RV parking lot is clearly marked when you drive in the main entrance.
That parking lot is just a short walk from he battlefield site which can be a multi-day attraction in itself. The indoor museum is an interesting stop as well. Restrooms are available in the parking lot and the museum lobby.
A free shuttle bus takes you into town and back on a regular schedule. The town is another tourist stop where you can spend a day walking the streets and exploring the many shops. Buildings that were there when the Civil War was fought are marked.
Diane and I started our day by arriving early at the bus and RV parking lot. We entered the museum shortly after it opened at 8:00 a.m., and learned a fair amount about the Gettysburg battle. That helped us better understand and appreciate what we would see later in the day.
The museum took a few hours to complete. We walked back to the truck for lunch and then took the free shuttle into town. At 2:00 p.m., we walked into the Segway Tours of Gettysburg shop where we had reservations for a three-hour battlefield tour on Segways. If you are not familiar with the Segway Personal Transporter™, click the link to see them in use (video at the bottom of the web page).
We have never been on Segways before. The tour company requires you to complete training before they let you leave the building. Instructors teach you how to dirve one on an indoor course. Most people had little trouble and the thing is easy once you catch on.
The weather was perfect today for an outdoor battlefield tour. Temps were in the mid-seventies. Winds were mild and the skies were partly cloudy. One down side of the Segway tour is that photo opportunities are limited. We got some good shots but would have gotten many more had we not been driving the Segways and keeping up with the group.
Returning to town and reluctantly turning in the Segways (they are a blast to drive!), we walked several blocks to the transportation center where we caught the free shuttle back to the parking lot. Being under load, we continued toward our Monday delivery. Had we not been under load, we would have found a place to stay nearby and spent another day in Gettysburg.
This is a great tourist stop for expediters. Parking is available and free, as is a shuttle that takes you into town and back. There are many ways to tour the battlefield (bike, walking, Segway, horseback, bus tour, self-guided car tour). The museum is an interesting place, and the town is fun.
We rank Gettysburg, PA a five-star expediter tourist stop.
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