27 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex
· 0.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Prepare to be awestruck, because you're approaching Pennsylvania's State Capitol, a building so grand it's practically a palace of democracy! The current capitol building wasn't the first. The previous one, completed in…
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Pennsylvania State Capitol
· 0.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever wonder why Harrisburg became Pennsylvania's capital? It's a story of compromise and location. Initially, Philadelphia held the honor, but as the state grew westward, its citizens thought the capital should move…
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State Museum of Pennsylvania
· 0.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pulling up on North Street in Harrisburg? You're near the State Museum of Pennsylvania, a treasure trove of the Commonwealth's story.The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, or PHMC, was created in 1945 to…
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State Street Bridge (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania)
· 0.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Take a look at this bridge! It's more than just a way across the road and creek; it's a memorial. Completed in 1930, the State Street Bridge, officially known as the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Bridge, was designed as…
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Pennsylvania Railroad 4859
· 0.8 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Hold on, history buffs! That hulking metal beast you see before you, Pennsylvania Railroad 4859, isn't just any train. It's a relic of a time when electric locomotives ruled the rails, and it played a key role in…
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Harrisburg State Hospital
· 0.9 mi · Scraped Hmdb
From 1851, this was Pennsylvania's first public mental health facility, a place of both treatment and controversy. Known then as the Pennsylvania State Lunatic Hospital, it aimed to provide care for the mentally ill and…
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Walnut Street Bridge (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania)
· 1.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Known as The People's Bridge, this historic truss bridge met its end when ice floes destroyed it in 1996. Built in 1890 by the Phoenix Bridge Company, the Walnut Street Bridge was a vital connection between Harrisburg…
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Simon Cameron House
· 1.2 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever wonder where political giants plotted their moves? This is it. The Simon Cameron House, right here in Harrisburg, was once the home of a man who wielded immense power during the Civil War. Simon Cameron, born in…
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Zembo Shrine Building
· 1.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Prepare to be transported to the Middle East, right here in Harrisburg! This isn't some mirage, but the Zembo Shrine Building, a testament to the city's unique architectural tastes. Construction on this Moorish Revival…
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Rockville Bridge
· 4.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Look to your left – that's the Rockville Bridge, the longest stone arch railroad bridge *in the world*! Back in 1902, the Pennsylvania Railroad completed this massive structure to carry trains across the wide…
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Archibald McAllister House
· 5.0 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Once a frontier outpost, this historic home offers a glimpse into 18th-century life along the Susquehanna River. The Archibald McAllister House began as a simple two-room stone cabin built in 1787. Archibald McAllister,…
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Calver Island
· 6.2 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine generations of people living right here, on this island in the middle of the Susquehanna! Calver Island is more than just a patch of land; it's an archaeological site revealing the lives of some of…
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Hummelstown Brownstone Company
· 10.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever notice the reddish-brown buildings in older cities? There's a good chance the stone came from right here. From 1863 to 1929, the Hummelstown Brownstone Company operated quarries nearby. They extracted a distinctive…
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Solid in Your Hand, Liquid on Your Tongue
· 11.7 mi
Chocolate pulls off a trick almost no other food can: it's solid in your hand but turns liquid in your mouth. The secret is cocoa butter's unusually sharp melting point, which sits just below body temperature -- around…
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Chocolate Flavor Begins With Rot
· 11.7 mi
Real chocolate flavor doesn't start in a factory -- it starts with rot. After harvest, cacao beans sit in their own sugary pulp under banana leaves for three to nine days, heating up to around a hundred and twenty-five…
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Three Mile Island
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
Site of America's worst commercial nuclear accident on March 28, 1979, which caused a partial meltdown of reactor Unit 2.
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The Town Almost Named Hersheykoko
· 11.8 mi
Milton Hershey sold his Lancaster Caramel Company for a million dollars in 1900, took the chocolate-making gear he'd seen at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition, and broke ground on a new factory here in 1903. By 1905…
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The 'Food of the Gods' Molecule With No Bromine
· 11.9 mi
The buzz in chocolate isn't mostly caffeine -- it's theobromine, a mild stimulant and close chemical cousin of caffeine. The name comes from cacao's botanical genus, Theobroma, which is Greek for "food of the gods."…
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Hersheypark & Chocolate World
· 12.2 mi · Historical Marker
Milton Hershey built a chocolate empire and an entire town around it, including housing, schools, and an amusement park for his workers.
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Six Crystals, One Perfect Snap
· 12.3 mi
That clean snap when you break a chocolate bar is pure physics. Cocoa butter is polymorphic, meaning it can crystallize into six different solid forms, labeled one through six. Only one of them -- Form Five -- gives…
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When Chocolate Was Cash
· 12.3 mi
Before chocolate was a bar, it was a drink -- bitter, frothy, and unsweetened. The Aztec word "xocolatl" roughly means "bitter water," and it's the likely root of our word "chocolate." But cacao did more than fill a…
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Milton S. Hershey Mansion
· 12.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pull over here for a second; you're looking at the former home of the man who brought affordable chocolate to the masses. It's called High Point, and it was Milton Hershey's personal residence. Built in 1908, this…
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Clemson Island Prehistoric District
· 13.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine a bustling village here over a thousand years ago! Clemson Island isn't just a pretty spot; it's a window into the lives of people who called this area home long before European settlers arrived. Between 900 and…
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Warrington Meetinghouse
· 15.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pull over for a moment and reflect on this peaceful spot, where the ideals of religious freedom took root. Built in 1769, the Warrington Meetinghouse offered a haven for Quakers in York County. Quakers, also known as…
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Millersburg Ferry
· 19.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever wonder what it was like to cross the Susquehanna before bridges dominated the landscape? You're near a tangible piece of that history: the Millersburg Ferry. Established in the early 1800s, the Millersburg Ferry…
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Codorus Forge and Furnace Historic District
· 19.5 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine the roar of a furnace and the clang of hammers – this quiet spot was once a bustling center of iron production! In the mid-1800s, Codorus Forge, also known as Hellem Forge, was a key player in Pennsylvania's…
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Little Buffalo Historic District
· 19.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
You've stumbled upon the Little Buffalo Historic District, a place where time seems to slow down, offering a glimpse into rural Pennsylvania's past. This district, added to the National Register of Historic Places in…