Chicago to Virginia Beach
Hello we have NEVER been on a road trip before. My husband, myself, two of our children and several dogs are driving to VA. I did the AAAtripmap and there is a lot of construction. I was wondering if anyone had some tips or ideas for the drive. My one son 11yrs is a war history buff; 14 yr old daughter will want to reach our destination (the beach) ASAP. Yet being as we have never taken a road trip I am not so ambitious as to drive straight through. I was hoping someone may be familiar with the trip and have advice.
So glad to have found this site. I initially went to Trip Adviser and looked up road trips and found nothing!
Thanks, Kathy
Never been there.............
......to Harper's Ferry, that is. What pictures I've seen show a beautiful area, and surely there's lots to see, military history-wise.
Surely Chicago to VB is too much for 1 day--it's around 900 miles.
For better or worse, all of my 53 years have been spent in towns and cities no larger than Raleigh, NC. For that reason, my tolerance with matters like DC, New York, Atlanta, LA, Chicago traffic hovers just above zero. I'd just about cut my own trail through the Blue Ridge Mountains before driving through DC, but if you're from Chicago, maybe you're used to it. On your trip, leaving on Friday, you'd pass by or through DC on Saturday, so MAYBE it wouldn't be excruciating, MAYBE. But, it'd give your son a chance to see the WWII Memorial.
OH, WAIT, at Quantico, VA is the fairly new USMC Museum, right on I-95. You can't miss it, its roofline mimics the profile of the Marines raising the flag on Iwo Jima, and I've heard it a great museum. It should be easy enough to work your way over there from US 17.
Given that WWII history is your son's primary interest, I'd say Nauticus (the museum at Waterside where USS Wisconsin is berthed) is a must, and he'd likely enjoy the Transportation Museum at Ft Eustis. Come to think of it, the Air & Space Museum at Hampton may have some WWII warbirds on display. I just two weeks ago saw an airshow at Langly AFB in Hampton, VA where a British Spitfire, a B-26 Marauder, and a Lockheed Electra were flown, among many more modern warbirds.
I've got some contacts in the area (I live 200 miles SW of Tidewater in Raleigh, NC, but visit there a lot and own a home up there) and I'll ask around for specific WWII history museums and sights. Many years ago, as a child of about your son's age, I visited the McArthur museum in Norfolk, and it was loaded with memorabilia from Gen Douglas McArthur's life. Surely there's more than I can think of right now.
Generally speaking, are you renting at the Oceanfront, Sandbridge, or over on the Bayside? It makes a difference in how much effort it'd be to go one place or another.
Foy
Frederick, MD or Fredericksburg, VA?
As you drive E on I-70 from I-80, the PA Turnpike, you come to Frederick, MD, and that's probably what you're referring to, as it's closer to 1/2 way than Fredericksburg, VA, another 2-2.5 hours along the way.
I've only passed through Frederick, MD once, but it seems like a nice, small city. To avoid DC from there, take US 15 south from Frederick, enter Virginia, and stay on US 15 south all the way past I-66 to US 29 south. Until you get to US 29, US 15 is mostly 2-lane, but it passes through some beautiful rolling hills and fabulous horse farm countryside. From the US 29 junction, follow the combined US 29/US 15 south a few miles through Warrenton (take the bypass) and within, say, 5-6 miles south of Warrenton, US 17 turns south towards Falmouth and Fredericksburg, VA. At Falmouth, you'll get on I-95 south and pass by Fredericksburg en route to I-295 north of Richmond, thence I-64 into Tidewater, over the HRBT, and thence to US 13 north (Northampton Blvd-the signs direct you to the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel or CBBT). Take Northhampton Blvd to the last exit before the CBBT, thence Shore Drive to and across the Lesner Bridge over Lynnhaven Inlet, thence to Great Neck Rd, where you'll then probably have specific directions to your rental on Broad Bay.
If you Mapquest a map of Virginia Beach, look to the far north end, where the Atlantic coastline turns west into the mouth of the Bay. There you'll see an Army base on the point (Fort Story) and a State Park (First Landings State Park). Broad Bay is the large body of water immediately south of Ft Story and FLSP. Your daughter has the choice of the State Park beach on the Bay, a public beach at the far North End of Va Beach, right by the southern entrance to Ft Story, and any of the main Oceanfront beaches a few miles south of there. From the vicinity of Broad Bay, you're no more than 25-30 minutes, tops, from Waterside/Nauticus in Norfolk, where a secure parking deck awaits you.
If your family enjoys baseball, the Norfolk Tides are a AAA team and play at beautiful, modern Harborside Park just on the VA Beach side of downtown Norfolk.
Stopping at the USMC museum on the return trip would work. To again avoid DC traffic, stay on I-95 past Falmouth, on up to Quantico, see the museum, then north a bit further to VA 234, and west on 234 to I-66, thence west on I-66 for a few miles to the US 15 north exit.
I'll get back on when I have some more info on WWII sights in the area.
Foy
enough stuff for a months trip!
Man there is so many things there. Thanks for narrowing it down its just overwhelming will all the attractions in VA. I'm looking at the suggestions you have made for bypassing DC. I went and amended my AAAtriptik map. If I'm not going to the USMC on the way to VB would it be better to take 15 out of Fredrick MD and get on 17 all the way down? Would the ride be better?
Again thanks for all the info, I really appreciate getting info from you.
Yes, US-15 to US-17, and..........
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kathyhere
Man there is so many things there. Thanks for narrowing it down its just overwhelming will all the attractions in VA. I'm looking at the suggestions you have made for bypassing DC. I went and amended my AAAtriptik map. If I'm not going to the USMC on the way to VB would it be better to take 15 out of Fredrick MD and get on 17 all the way down? Would the ride be better?
Again thanks for all the info, I really appreciate getting info from you.
Yes, kathy, that's exactly what I'd do. Get off of I-70 at Frederick, MD. Take US 15 south there, cross the Potomac at Point of Rocks, stay on 15 (using the bypass) around Leesburg, VA, and keep going south to US 29 near Gainsville, VA. Where US 15 intersects US 29, the two southbound sides occupy the same roadway to a point around 5-6 miles south of Warrenton, VA (where you will also have taken the bypass around) . At the crossroads community of Opal, VA, US 17, having joined US 15 + 29 at Warrenton, turns left, southwards towards Falmouth and Fredericksburg, VA, while US 15 + 29 continue straight towards Culpeper, VA. At Falmouth, on the north side of the (large and scenic) Rappahannock River, you join I-95 south, cross the river, and there's Fredericksburg. While you can take US 17 south from Fredericksburg all the way to Newport News/Hampton, I do not recommend that, as it requires that you go through urban/suburban parts of Fredericksburg and a fair amount of old highway travel south from there. Once on I-95 at Falmouth, I'd keep I-95 to the I-295 bypass just north of Richmond, then follow the signs to take I-64 from I-295, thence through Williamsburg, Newport News, Hampton, cross the HRBT, Norfolk, and on towards your Va Beach destination. Depending on just where your Broad Bay rental is, you'll get off of I-64 on US 13 north (Northampton Blvd) or perhaps continue on to the Norfolk-Va Beach Expressway (I-264).
There are, indeed, an abundance of attractions in Tidewater, VA. I think your family will really enjoy it there.
Tell your son to be particularly attentive as you approach the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (HRBT) as you can get a good look at the Navy piers across the water from the HRBT. The view is even better, and closer, on the Norfolk side of the tunnel. There, you're only about a mile away from 2 giant 1,100' long nuclear powered aircraft carriers. They're HUGE!
Foy