CYBERTRAVEL

Plan fun trip to W. Virginia online


Associated Press
Published on: 05/18/08

It's time to get out of the city and head for the hills, especially if the hills are in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia, a corner of the world that's been attracting visitors since Colonial times and American Indians before then. And it's easy to get to from the major metropolises of the Mid-Atlantic region.

Here's a good reason to consider the easternmost extension of the Mountain State now. The Mountain Heritage Arts & Crafts Festival — www.jeffersoncounty.com/festival — is coming up on June 13-15. The festival's "crafters" will be displaying wares ranging from art glass to furniture to musical instruments and West Virginia wines. And they say this year's scheduled entertainment includes the Seldom Scene, a bluegrass group that has had three Grammy nominations.

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The festival Map & Directions page can show you just how centrally located the Panhandle is. The festival site is 60 miles from Washington, 70 from Baltimore, 160 from Philadelphia, 220 from Pittsburgh and about 160 from Richmond. By the way, the festival site is near Charles Town — www.charlestownwv.us — which was laid out in 1786 by Charles Washington, George's brother, not to be confused with Charleston, the state capital, on the other side of the state.

From Washington, the closest part of the Panhandle is Harpers Ferry National Historic Park — www.nps.gov/hafe — the community at the intersection of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers that was a busy industrial town well before the Civil War. According to the park's history, Thomas Jefferson visited the spot in 1783 (you can read his description of his visit), and George Washington was there two years later. In 1859, John Brown captured the federal armory at Harpers Ferry, thinking he would raise an army to free slaves. But more than its historical importance, check out Photos & Multimedia to see how scenic the town and deep river valleys are.

If you prefer not to drive, the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park — www.nps.gov/choh — offers 185 miles of hiking and biking trails passing Harpers Ferry on its way from Washington to Cumberland, Md.

For scenic driving instead of hiking, the Washington Heritage Trail — www.washingtonheritagetrail.org — loops around the Eastern Panhandle. Click on Self-Guided Tours for connections to local tours along the way, and peruse History & Heritage for more connections to George Washington. Slide your cursor over Find by Area on the left side of the screen to open a menu of information on the Panhandle's three counties and towns. Visit the National Scenic Byways Program — tinyurl.com/5j3lr5 — for a map and additional information.

The arts and crafts festival and Harpers Ferry are both in Jefferson County — www.hello-wv.com — where Shepherdstown (chartered in 1762) has its Shepherdstown Street Fest on June 28. Explore Activities for a link to the Appalachian Trail, which crosses the Potomac at Harpers Ferry, local parks, golf courses, orchards and whitewater rafting companies. And you won't go hungry; the Dining directory is unusually long for a non-urban area.

In Morgan County to the west, on the far side of Cacapon Mountain, the town of Berkeley Springs — www.berkeleysprings.com — boasts that it's the nation's first spa. Washington and his friends and family were so impressed they established the town, officially called Bath, in 1776. Spas is a directory of spots to soothe your travel-weary bodies, including Berkeley Springs State Park. Attractions holds a few photos of the scenery and some working links, and you definitely have to investigate Walking/Driving Tours.

The third county in the Panhandle is Berkeley — www.travelwv.com — which also holds the city of Martinsburg. Take a look at To Do for more history and outdoor recreation including the Sleepy Creek hunting and fishing preserve and — as in much of the Panhandle — antique shops.

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