Valley Forge has learned names for all children in elementary school, but most people do not know the story yet what happened. The establishment of the Valley Forge National Historical Park is to protect the history of our country and to convey the Army's winter story from 1777 to 1978
Oaks Philadelphia Expo Center and the Valley Forge National Park Visitor Center are places to visit this area. Be 12.2 km (or 12.2 km) from the Valley Forge National Historical Park, visit Villanova University or spend less than 6 km by King of Prussia Mall.
The current Valley Forge National Historical Park will visit more than 4 million people in the year 1777, about twice the population. Some tourists come to see the mountain in the spring, others get down as the leaves change. Most come to the summer, but just because it is there, Valley Forge is back and forth in various places. In a calm season, the huts of the rebuilt logs and mud soldiers look odd, but it will take an hour for an hour to take an hour when the sun becomes a white pizza of the sky in the afternoon of January. It is also beneficial to wear a warm visitor. It is very cold and very dark. This is hard to see. Of course, it is better to sing in the past, but the Scorpion was living with firewood fogged with smog. It may be more accurate than he knows.
When my eldest daughter is learning while exploring the gift of Valley Forge Park, we find two noticeable marks in the woods. For the two soldiers who died in the spectacular winter from 1777 to 1778, they were small serious markers. No name is specified. These people are seedling patriots of our country, but here they lost the forest after 220 years. A few years later, when the park historian pointed out that the park on the road near the big monument pointed out setting the plaque, received honor and eventually informed two soldiers who died in battle. So as humble and forgotten, surrounded by spectacular rituals and tombs of unknown warrior, both tombs reflect their sacrifice, as well as the previous and the view behind this place, with more impressed and humble monuments It is to attach to things to do Homage to a permanent person the United States relies on