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Small Wonders

Philadelphia has the Liberty Bell. New York has Ellis Island. San Antonio has the Alamo. U.S. history isn't just confined to its metropolises, though. Foundations and turning points can be found in the most unlikely of places, including small towns and dust-blown fields. Here are a few places with a much bigger effect than their populations would suggest. Do you have a favorite that's not listed here? Tell us in the comments.


Related: Attractions to See While Driving Across the Country

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Skagway, Alaska

Population: 1,191
Founded: 1897
Nearest big city: Juneau, Alaska (87 miles; accessible only by boat or plane)
The gateway to the Alaskan Gold Rush maintains its false-front buildings and wooden boardwalks, recalling a time the best bet in town was selling shovels to the thousands who came to seek their fortunes in Canada's Klondike. The trail into the mountains was so perilous that Canada required prospecting groups to carry one ton of food and supplies with them along the Chilkoot Trail.


Related: The Best Remote Vacation Spot in Every State

Jeff Black/istockphoto

Los Alamos, New Mexico

Population: 12,978
Founded: 1943
Nearest city: Albuquerque, New Mexico (96 miles)
Los Alamos was a sleepy hilltop until 1942, when the U.S. government chose it as the top secret laboratory of the Manhattan Project. J. Robert Oppenheimer led many of the nation's greatest scientific minds in developing the atomic bomb. To do so, they took over the Los Alamos School for Boys, a guest cottage of which is now a museum telling the social and logistical history of creating a city overnight.


Related: Tiny Travelogue: 50 Small Towns to Visit Across the U.S.

milehightraveler/istockphoto

Pine Ridge, South Dakota

Population: 2,984 
Founded: 1899
Nearest city: Rapid City, South Dakota (84 miles)
Twice this spot of prairie on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation has served as a turning point in America. In the Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890, U.S. forces responded to a spiritual gathering of Lakota Indians by killing as many as 300 men, women, and children — the final blow to Plains Indians as the government claimed their lands. Nearly a century later, in 1971, American Indians organized here to protest U.S. policies toward them during a 71-day standoff between the American Indian Movement and federal government.

DFeinman/istockphoto

Port Townsend, Washington

Population: 9,710 
Founded: 1851
Nearest city: Seattle (41 miles; 112 miles by road)
In the late 19th century, Port Townsend was a boomtown, as people expected the town to be a crucial seaport. That dream, and the town's growth, were extinguished when the Northern Pacific Railroad bypassed the area. As a result, today's Port Townsend is a beautifully preserved collection of elegant Victorian homes overlooking the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

pabradyphoto/istockphoto

Manteo, North Carolina

Population: 1,883 
Founded: 1580s
Nearest city: Virginia Beach, Virginia (104 miles)
You may know Manteo better for the island it occupies, Roanoke. One of the earliest English settlements in North America, Roanoke was the brainchild of Sir Walter Raleigh, who persuaded Queen Elizabeth I to invest and sent forth the first ships of settlers in 1585. It was the birthplace of Virginia Dare, the first English person born on American soil. By 1590, the settlement was deserted. The only clue: The word "Croatan," carved into a fencepost of the fort.

traveler1116/istockphoto

Cahokia, Illinois

Population: 14,035 
Founded: 1696
Nearest city: St. Louis (9 miles)
Cahokia was founded by French Canadian missionaries, and its log-built Church of the Holy Family is the oldest continuously operating Catholic church in the country. That's far from the oldest construction in the area, though. In nearby Collinsville is the largest pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico, Cahokia Mounds. Consisting of 51 grassy mounds, it recalls a thousand-year-old society that ranged from 10,000 to 20,000 inhabitants in its time.

Stations of the Cross by James Lavin (CC BY-NC-ND)

San Luis, Colorado

Population: 665 
Founded: 1851
Nearest city: Colorado Springs, Colorado (118 miles)
The oldest city in the state of Colorado, San Luis began as a land grant from the King of Spain, and its adobe architecture and town layout still reflect its Spanish origins. San Luis was part of the Territory of New Mexico for a decade before the Territory of Colorado was established. Today, it is known for its hilltop Stations of the Cross shrine, its stations spread along a trail and created by artist Huberto Maesta.

Library of Congress

Saint Helena Island, South Carolina

Population: 8,407 
Founded: 1521
Nearest city: Savannah, Georgia (50 miles)
St. Helena Island was colonized by the French, then the Spanish, and finally, the English. It was the site of rice, indigo, and cotton plantations, but today is known best for its residents, settlers of slaves and the sustainers of Gullah culture, which has preserved African linguistic, culinary, and cultural traditions to this day.

Bristol, Rhode Island by Kenneth C. Zirkel (CC BY-SA)

Bristol, Rhode Island

Population: 22,131
Founded: 1680
Nearest city: Providence, Rhode Island (13 miles)
Bristol is just a quick drive from the mansions and beauty of Newport, Rhode Island, but its history is less attractive: In 1675, it was the location of the last major battle by American Indians trying to force the English out of New England. The battle is commonly known as King Philip's War, referring to the English name for the Wampanoag leader Metacom. The 14-month war was, in proportion to population, the deadliest war in American history.


Related: The Best State Park in Every State

American Museum of Science and Energy

Oak Ridge, Tennessee

Population: 29,124 
Founded: 1942
Nearest city: Knoxville, Tennessee (25 miles)
Like Los Alamos, Oak Ridge was a creation of the U.S. atomic bomb program. Landlocked and rural, with an available workforce nearby in Knoxville, Oak Ridge also had a steady supply of electricity, thanks to the 9-year-old Tennessee Valley Authority. It needed it for the production of plutonium and uranium. The secret city also produced resentment in Knoxville, where plant employees showed up with unlimited rations during wartime privations.


Related: Incredible Feats of American Ingenuity Across the Country

The Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill by Carl Wycoff (CC BY)

Harrodsburg, Kentucky

Population: 8,480 
Founded: 1774
Nearest city: Lexington, Kentucky (38 miles)
Downtown Harrodsburg has charming streetscapes of buildings from the 1880s and 1890s. Its biggest attraction is the Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill. A Christian sect originating in England, the Shakers founded a community at Pleasant Hill in 1806. Today, they are remembered for their simple and meticulously made wooden furniture. The group believed in racial and gender equality, as well as celibacy. The last of the Kentucky Shakers, Sister Mary Settles, died in 1923. A historic park lives on in Pleasant Hill.


Related: The Best Places in America to Travel Back in Time

Harpers Ferry & Potomac River Overlook by Nicolas Raymond (CC BY)

Harpers Ferry, West Virginia

Population: 334 
Founded: 1733
Nearest city: Washington, D.C. (48 miles)
Tiny Harpers Ferry has nearly more events from history than it does current residents. It's best known as the center of John Brown's attack on the U.S. armory, an abolitionist insurrection that moved the United States toward the Civil War. Just a few years later, Confederate general Stonewall Jackson trained troops there and later routed the Union Army. If that's not enough, it's home to historically black college Storer College, where W.E.B. Du Bois helped to birth the civil rights movement.


Related: Smallest Towns in America Worth Visiting

DeSmet, South Dakota by Loren Kerns (CC BY)

DeSmet, South Dakota

Population: 1,041 
Founded: 1880
Nearest city: Sioux Falls, South Dakota (97 miles)
There is one thing that draws people to DeSmet summer after summer: It's history with Laura Ingalls Wilder, author of the "Little House on the Prairie" books. The setting of several books in the series, DeSmet honors Wilder each summer with an outdoor pageant. Wilder's childhood home is long gone, but you can immerse yourself in frontier life by standing on the windblown spot of her homestead, visiting such iconic locales as the Big Slough and Silver Lake, and walking through the town's false-front stores.

Whitney Plantation, Louisiana by Jeremy Weate (CC BY)

Edgard, Louisiana

Population: 1,788 
Founded: Became Parish Seat in 1852
Nearest city: New Orleans (30 miles)
During the antebellum period, Edgard was the heart of Louisiana's sugar industry and home to multiple plantations. It's the 1752 Whitney Plantation that stands out, though, as the only one in Louisiana to focus on the history of the enslaved people who toiled there. Tours include restored slave cabins, the owner's house, and memorials to honor the enslaved.


Related: Amazing Places to Visit During Black History Month

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Plymouth Notch, Vermont

Population: 641 
Founded: Before 1800
Nearest city: Schenectady, New York (106 miles)
How much has Plymouth Notch staked its future to history? The birthplace of President Calvin Coolidge has preserved most of the town to reflect the period of Coolidge's childhood, before he presided over the Roaring '20s. You can visit his birthplace, his schoolhouse, his church, and even the cheese factory his father once owned.


Related: Travel Back in Time in These Historic Towns Across America

milehightraveler/istockphoto

Guernsey, Wyoming

Population: 1,025 
Founded: 1900
Nearest city: Cheyenne, Wyoming (98 miles)
In the beauty of central Wyoming is the history of great struggle and perseverance. Guernsey is a destination for Oregon Trail buffs. They come to see the ruts left in the rock by a legion of covered wagons seeking better lives out west, and to pay their respects at Register Cliff, where emigrants on the Oregon, California, and Mormon trails carved their names to leave some record that they were here.


Related: Great American Road Trips Through History

traveler1116/istockphoto

Vicksburg, Mississippi

Population: 22,045 
Founded: 1811
Nearest city: Hattiesburg, Mississippi (132 miles)
An early shipping connection between the Mississippi River and the railroad, Vicksburg is best known for its pivotal role during the Civil War. Believing Vicksburg was the key to winning the war, Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant laid siege to the city. His eventual triumph divided the confederacy in half and paved the way for a Union victory.


Related: Boat Tours That Take You Back in Time

Lake City, Colorado by J. Stephen Conn (CC BY-NC)

Lake City, Colorado

Population: 438 
Founded: 1875
Nearest city: Grand Junction, Colorado (142 miles)
This mountain town is known for history both geological and sociological. Just outside town is the melodically named Slumgullion Earthflow. About 700 years ago, a massive earthflow of partially decomposed volcanic rock slid down the mountain, forming a natural dam and what are now the scenic waters of Lake Cristobal. More recently, Alferd Packer was accused of dining on his traveling companions in 1874 when his party of prospectors was trapped by a snowstorm. When he emerged six weeks later, he claimed to have lost them in a blizzard. Their graves and a plaque commemorating the incident are beside the town's main street.

Nevada City, California by Erin Johnson (CC BY-NC)

Nevada City, California

Population: 3,145 
Founded: 1849
Nearest city: Sacramento, California (53 miles)
The entire downtown of this Gold Rush center is a National Historic Landmark. No less than Herbert Hoover lived there while working as a gold miner. Although long settled by the native Nisenan, the town sprang to prominence as Americans flooded California to get rich. Today, the original brewery stands, and a number of other historic buildings.


Related: Oldest Breweries in America

Greg Meland/istockphoto

Williamsburg, Virginia

Population: 15,034 
Founded: 1699
Nearest city: Newport News, Virginia (20 miles)
One of the United States's best-known and most-developed historic towns, Williamsburg was founded in 1699 as the new capital of Virginia Colony. One of the country's first planned cities, its neatly laid-out streets are preserved, walked by live reenactors, in the popular historic park. Williamsburg is also the home of the College of William and Mary, which educated presidents Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and John Tyler, as well as comedian Jon Stewart.