|
Educational Travel Tours - High School and Middle School Trips for Teachers and Students | Questions? Call 1.888.310.7120
| Day 1 Start Tour | Day 2 Hallo Amsterdam | Meet your Tour Director and check into hotel |  | Rijksmuseum visit Amsterdam’s most popular art museum opened in 1885 to house William V’s personal art collection. It now holds an unbelievable collection of Rembrandts, Vermeers, and other Dutch masters, plus an extensive collection of Asian and decorative arts. Upstairs there’s a collection of 17th- and 18th-century dollhouses, furnished just as real houses of the time would have been. |
| Day 3 Amsterdam Landmarks | Amsterdam Tour Director-led sightseeing tour Canals and crocuses. Bicycles and bluebells. With more canals than Venice (and more flower merchants than perhaps any other city in the world), downtown Amsterdam is an explosion of color and light reflecting off the water. Take a glass-topped canal boat ride--the best way to see the gabled houses and nearly 1200 bridges. Visit a diamond factory to see how the stones are cut. And take a tour of Anne Frank's house, where three different Jewish families hid for more than two years during World War II. See the bare rooms where they lived before being betrayed and deported to concentration camps. , Canal guided cruise, Diamond factory visit, Anne Frank’s house visit |
| Day 4 Amsterdam--Bastogne | Travel to Bastogne |  | Ardennes American Cemetery & Memorial "Band of Brothers" depicted the difficult terrain and frequently isolating fog that made the Ardennes forest inhospitable ground on which to fight the Battle of the Bulge. The German surprise attack began December 16, 1944, and while they moved forward quickly they also ran into more Allied resistance than they had expected. The Germans were slowed, then stopped, and then finally retreated from Bastogne on January 13, 1945. The Ardennes American Cemetery and Memorial contain the graves of 5,328 American soldiers and the names of 462 Americans missing, many of whom died during the Battle of the Bulge. |  | Bastogne Historical Center visit On December 21, 1945, during the Battle of the Bulge, German attacking troops had surrounded the Belgian town of Bastogne. Asked to surrender, General Anthony McAuliffe replied, "Nuts." The Allies went on to defeat the Germans, and McAuliffe's defiant syllable now adorns bumper stickers, t-shirts, and signs throughout the town. The Bastogne Historical Center commemorates the battle with three-dimensional reenactments, films, and historical equipment, including portions of a B-17 cockpit that was shot down, American and German guns, and uniforms. |
| Day 5 Bastogne--Reims | Travel to Reims via Verdun |  | Tour Director-led sightseeing During World War I, the Germans attacked the heavily fortified city of Verdun with as much firepower as they could. The battle opened with a ten-hour, two-million shell barrage and lasted ten months. While the French eventually won, the battle destroyed nine French villages, killed more than 250,000 citizens, and left a pockmarked battlefield still largely barren of trees. French Field Marshall Phillipe Pétain earned a high reputation during the battle, leading to his later disastrous appointment as Prime Minister during the Vichy Regime. A less problematic honor was awarded to another battle contributor -- soldiers surrounded by German forces sent a passenger pigeon to the command post asking for reinforcements; the pigeon safely delivered its message and then died from having passed through the gas-filled battlefield. The French awarded the pigeon the Legion of Honor. |  | Guided visit of The National Museum of Military History Luxembourg's National Museum of Military History takes a unique approach. They've worked with veterans from both sides of the war to create realistic displays, to capture the daily life and the suffering of both armies, and to help heal the rifts between the survivors. The museum also examines the history Luxembourg's army, both before and after World War II. |
| Day 6 Reims--Normandy  | Travel to Normandy |
| Day 7 Normandy | Arromanches Museum visit Ingenious military engineering allowed the Allied forces to land at Arromanches on D-Day. Barges towed 600,000 tons of concrete across the English Channel, sinking them to create an artificial harbor, and then 33 jetties and 10 miles of floating roadways allowed the troops to land in France. Learn about this feat and other at the Arromanches Museum, where dioramas, interactive displays, and models detail the Allied landing. |  | D-Day beaches See the D-Day beaches where on June 6, 1944, thousands of Allied troops landed in an effort to recapture the coast from Germany. All along the beaches, deserted German bunkers have been turned into memorials and the stark white crosses and stars that mark the cemeteries are grim reminders of the war. |
| Day 8 Normandy--Paris | Travel to Paris |  | Paris city walk This city was made for walking. Stroll grand boulevards with sweeping views of the city, pristine parks with trees planted in perfect rows, and narrow streets crowded with vendors selling flowers, pastries and cheese. Then head to the Île de la Cité, a small island in the Seine, to see Notre Dame Cathedral. Look up at the great stone buttresses, grotesque gargoyles, and massive stained-glass windows. , Ile de la Cité, Notre Dame Cathedral, Ile St. Louis, Latin Quarter visitVisit one of the original college towns. Since the Sorbonne’s founding in the 1100s, the Left Bank has attracted not only intellectuals but also the cafés, bookstores, and cinemas that tend to accompany them. It’s also attracted its fair share of famous residents – a plaque marks one of Hemingway’s apartments on rue du Cardinal-Lemoine, and the imposing neoclassical Panthéon holds the tombs of Voltaire, Rousseau, Victor Hugo, and Marie Curie. |  | Dinner in Latin Quarter |
| Day 9 Paris Landmarks | Paris guided sightseeing tour What's that huge white arch at the end of the Champs-Élysées? The Arc de Triomphe, commissioned by Napoleon in 1806 after his victory at Austerlitz. Your licensed local guide will elaborate on this, and other Parisian landmarks. See some of the most famous sites, including the ornate, 19th-century Opera, the Presidential residence, the ultra-chic shops of the Rue du Faubourg St-Honoré, and the gardens of the Tuileries. You'll pass the Place de la Concorde, where in the center you’ll find the Obelisk of Luxor, a gift from Egypt in 1836, and the Place Vendôme, a huge square surrounded by 17th-century buildings.
Spot chic locals (and tons of tourists) strolling the Champs-Élysées. Look up at the iron girders of the Eiffel Tower, built for the 1889 World's Fair to commemorate the centenary of the French Revolution. See Les Invalides (a refuge for war wounded), the École Militaire (Napoleon's alma mater), and the Conciergerie (the prison where Marie Antoinette was kept during the French Revolution). , Arc de Triomphe, Champs-Élysées, Eiffel Tower, Champ de Mars, Les Invalides, École Militaire, Conciergerie, Opera House, Tuileries, Place Vendôme |  | Optional Versailles guided excursion (pre-book only) $75 The ultimate palace, Versailles was built by Louis VIX, and housed the royal family and its groveling court from 1582, when the Sun King moved in, to the French Revolution. Everything in Versailles is worth a look, from the 250-foot-long Hall of Mirrors, with themed salons-"war" and "peace"-on either side, to Marie Antoinette's faux country hamlet. When being a queen became too much to bear, she would pretend to be a commoner, tending her sheep and wearing peasant clothes. (Please note Versailles is closed on Mondays.) |  | Seine cruise See the city from the water on an hour-long cruise along the River Seine. The Seine cuts right through Paris, dividing the city in half. See the Eiffel tower rising up on the Left Bank, the walls of the Louvre on the Right Bank. A guide will point out other monuments and architectural marvels as you pass, many of which are illuminated by clear white light at night. |
| Day 10 Start Extension to Berlin | Louvre visit The world's largest art museum, the Louvre is housed in a medieval fortress-turned-castle so grand it's worth a tour itself. You walk through the 71-foot glass pyramid designed by I.M. Pei and added in 1989, and step into another world-one with carved ceilings, deep-set windows, and so many architectural details, you could spend a week just admiring the rooms. But check out the art on the walls. The Mona Lisa is here, as well as the Venus de Milo and Winged Victory (the headless statue, circa 200 BC, discovered at Samothrace). The Louvre has seven different departments of paintings, prints, drawings, sculptures and antiquities. Don't miss the Egyptian collection, complete with creepy sarcophagi, or the collection of Greek ceramics, one of the largest in the world. (Please note the Louvre is closed on Tuesdays.) |  | Overnight train to Berlin |
| Day 11 Berlin Landmarks | Berlin guided sightseeing tour Join a professional, licensed tour guide as you discover one of the most historical cities in Germany. Although nothing remains of the mortar and cement-block barrier between East and West Berlin, the Berlin Wall (built in 1961; destroyed in 1989) is still a main “site” in Berlin. View the well-known Brandenburg Gate, once a main gate hidden behind a 10-foot barrier and now known for celebratory dancing on its flat top during the reunification. Travel to the Checkpoint Charlie Museum, the most famous border crossing point. Checkpoint Charlie, once a wooden guard hut, was the most (in)famous border-crossing point between East and West Berlin from 1961 to 1989. All that remains of the checkpoint itself is a skeletal watchtower and a memorial of attempted escapees. Follow your guide as they lead you through the museum’s accounts of the most ingenious of these escape attempts— even a few by hot air balloon. , Checkpoint Charlie Museum visit, Potsdamer Platz visit, Berlin Wall, Brandenburg Gate, Victory Column |  | Sachsenhausen excursion Visit Sachsenhausen, one of the major Nazi concentration camps in Germany. Most of its prisoners arrived after the Crystal Night pogroms, when Nazis arrested over 30,000 Jews over the course of just a few days. From its construction in 1936 until its liberation by the Soviet army in 1945, this camp held more than 200,000 prisoners. The site now holds a museum, memorial hall, and cinema, which screens a film depicting the camp’s history. |
| Day 12 Potsdam | Jewish Museum visit |  | Potsdam guided excursion Seen as Germany’s “Little Hollywood” from 1921 through WWII, Potsdam was the dazzling city of Frederick the Great, with countless marble fountains, exotic pavilions and Baroque castles (mostly built in the name of Frederick and Prussia’s power). Among the parks are testaments of Frederick’s eclectic and sometimes odd tastes, especially the parasol-toting Buddha on the roof of the Chinesisches Teehaus pavilion and the glittering seashell-covered reception room of the Neues Palais, Frederick’s “guest house.” |
| | Day 13 End Tour |
|
|
|