June 8—Cleveland, Ohio

We arrived in Cleveland at 1 pm, after a 6 hour drive.  Other than about 2 hours of heavy traffic on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the drive was easy. Cleveland was founded in 1796 near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River by General Moses Cleveland. It grew into a major manufacturing center due to its location on both the river and the lake shore, as well as numerous canals and railroad lines.  A port city, Cleveland is connected to the Atlantic Ocean via the Saint Lawrence Seaway.  The Cuyahoga River Valley begins in Akron and ends in Cleveland.

 After sitting in the car for 6 hours we decided on a walking tour of the city.  We saw an old steam ship, submarine, a statue honoring Jesse Owen, the Cleveland Brown’s football stadium, and a war memorial.  All this was interesting and photos of many of these can be seen in our photo section.  Most of the sites were found on our walk to the International Women's Aviation Museum.  Despite having 2 phones with map programs and a separate GPS we could not find the museum.  It wasn’t where it was supposed to be.  Finally we asked for directions and were told to walk another ½ mile (in what turned out to be the wrong direction).  Eventually, we decided to head back to our hotel, which took us past the regional airport (again) and as a lark we went inside, just in case the museum was there.  It was, but not well marked from the outside.  Jeff wanted to see the museum because he read several non-fiction and historical-fiction books about women's role in early aviation.

Tomorrow starts our cycling journey on the OTET to Cincinnati, Ohio.

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