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Philadelphia Zoo

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Philadelphia

Philadelphia Zoo

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Home to more than 1,300 animals, many of them rare and endangered. The Zoo, fulfilling its mission of conservation, science, education and recreation, supports and engages in conservation efforts to protect endangered species around the world. Cheetahs, hippos, giraffes and much more make the Zoo Philadelphia's leading family attraction with over 1.2 million visitors last year. Like many other Philadelphia landmarks and institutions, the Philadelphia Zoo is an American first. The charter establishing the Zoological Society of Philadelphia was approved and signed on March 21, 1859. Due to the Civil War, however, it was another 15 years before America's first zoo was ready to open. The Zoo opened its gates on July 1, 1874. The Frank Furness Victorian gates and gatehouses, and the Zoo's location, are the same today as they were on the day it opened. One of its assets, then and now, is John Penn's home, The Solitude, which sat on the land chosen for the Zoo. John Penn was the grandson of William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania. The Solitude is considered to be Philadelphia's most precise and elegant expression of neoclassical style.

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Liberty Bell

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Allentown

Dorney Park & Wildwater Kingdom

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Othes cities Pennsylvania

Dutch Wonderland

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Cherry Crest Adventure Farm

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Flight 93 National Memorial

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Lititz Springs Park

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Crayola Factory

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Claws N Paws Wild Animal Park

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Strasburg Railroad

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Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium

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