Philadelphia - Backgroud - Overview

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Overview : Arrival and information
Posted by rguides on September 21, 2010 Category: Backgroud Target for: All

Philadelphia's International Airport (tel 215/937-6800) is eight miles southwest of the city off I-95. Taxis into town cost around $20 (try Yellow Cab; tel 215/829-4222), and the South East Pennsylvania Transit Authority (SEPTA) runs trains every thirty minutes (6ammidnight; $5.50) to three downtown destinations: 30th Street near the university, Suburban Station near City Hall and Market East, adjacent to the Greyhound terminal at 1001 Filbert St (tel 215/931-4000). The very grand 30th Street Amtrak station, the second busiest in the US, is just across the Schuylkill River in the university area (Amtrak passengers can transfer downtown on SEPTA for free; ask when you purchase your ticket), opposite the city's main (24-hour) post office at 30th and Market (zip code 19104).

The excellent visitor center , 1525 JFK Blvd (daily 9am5pm; tel 215/636-1666 or 1-800/537-7676, www.gophila.com ) at the Penn Center subway station in the heart of downtown, supplies a wealth of information and can help with accommodation.


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Overview : Philadelphia
Posted by rguides on September 21, 2010 Category: Backgroud Target for: All

The original capital of the nation, PHILADELPHIA was laid out by William Penn Jr. in 1682, on a grid system that was to provide the pattern for most American cities. It was envisaged as a "greene countrie towne" and today, for all its historical and cultural significance, it still manages to retain a certain quaintness. Just a few blocks away from downtown, shady cobbled alleys stand lined with red-brick colonial houses, while the peace and quiet of huge Fairmount Park make it easy to forget you're in a major metropolis.

Settled by Quakers , Philadelphia prospered swiftly on the back of trade and commerce, and by the 1750s had become the second largest city in the British Empire. Economic power fueled strong revolutionary feeling, and the city was the capital during the War of Independence (except for nine months under British occupation in 1778). It also served as the US capital until 1800, while Washington, DC was being built. The Declaration of Independence was written, signed and first publicly read here in 1776, as was the US Constitution ten years later. Philadelphia was also a hotbed of new ideas in the arts and sciences, as epitomized by the scientist, philosopher, statesman, inventor and printer Benjamin Franklin .

Philadelphia, which translated from Greek means "City of Brotherly Love," is in fact one of the most ethnically mixed US cities, with substantial communities of Italians, Irish, Eastern Europeans and Asians living side by side. Many of the city's residents are descendants of the migrants who flocked here after the Civil War when, like Chicago, Philadelphia was seen as a place of tolerance and liberalism. More recently, it voted in the nation's first black mayor, and has the country's best museum dedi-cated to African-American history and culture.

Once known as "Filthydelphia," and the butt of derision from W.C. Fields in the 1930s (as in his famous epitaph: "On the whole, I'd rather be in Philadelphia"), the city underwent a remarkable resurgence preparing for the nation's bicentennial celebrations in 1976. Philadelphia's strength today is its great energy fueled by history, strong cultural institutions, and a new influx of income due to its new downtown convention center grounded in its many staunchly traditional neighborhoods, especially Italian South Philadelphia . An impressive amount of new construction and revitalization is currently being undertaken in the downtown area, further testimony of the city's economic boom.


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Overview : City tours
Posted by rguides on September 21, 2010 Category: Backgroud Target for: All

Philadelphia Trolley Works (tel 215/925-TOUR) cruises the historic area and Fairmount Park in fake streetcars on ninety-minute narrated jaunts ($18 for a day pass board at any of the trolley's 20 stops); you'd do much better to get a map and wander around on your own. The best, guided walking tours are offered by the Foundation for Architecture (tel 215/569-3187; $8), while Poor Richard's Walking Tours (tel 215/206-1682; call for prices) are run by University of Pennsylvania graduate students and are for serious history buffs. Alternatively, Centipede Tours offers candlelight walks through the hidden gardens and courtyards of Society Hill, complete with a costumed guide; the tours leave from the Welcome Park at 2nd and Walnut (JuneOct FriSat 6.30pm; tel 215/735-3123; $5). Philadelphia Trolley Works (tel 215/925-TOUR; from $16) offer tours around downtown and Fairmount Park with stops throughout the city, while companies such as the 76 Carriage Co (tel 215/923-8516) run narrated thirty-minute horse-drawn tours around the historic district for $30 (14 people; daily 10am6pm).


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