The Columbus Dispatch

5 overlooked travel sites certainly worth a visit

- So to speak Joe Blundo

In 43 years of living in Ohio, I’d somehow missed a few sights. So in mid-september, my wife and I set out to see them.

We favored attraction­s that required — or at least encouraged — masks, in light of the pandemic. Here’s my report on what I’ve waited too long to see:

National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton

Why did it take me so long to get to the massive Air Force museum? It begins with the compelling story of the Wright brothers and proceeds through an overwhelmi­ng array of flying weapons the United States has deployed to wage war and keep peace since.

Also there: The plane that flew President Kennedy’s body back to Washington after his assassinat­ion (the craft is open for a walk-through), and one of the space vehicles that landed astronauts on the moon.

Westcott House in Springfield

In the early 1900s, industrial­ist Burton Westcott, who made — and ultimately lost — a fortune in automobile manufactur­ing, hired Frank Lloyd Wright to design a magnificent Prairiesty­le house for his family. It was later sold, divided into apartments and al

lowed to deteriorat­e. But preservati­onists acquired it two decades ago, and a long restoratio­n effort returned it to glory. The tour is fascinatin­g.

The American Sign Museum in Cincinnati

This place is a riot of blinking lights, glowing neon and oversized arrows. But it’s not all just visual spectacle. The museum takes a visitor through sign history, in chronologi­cal fashion, as the modest, hand-painted wood and metal of the horse-and-buggy era gave way to the illuminate­d giants of the automobile age.

This is surely the only museum anywhere that chronicles the evolution of Frisch’s iconic Big Boy from chubby, red-haired lad with a slingshot in his hip pocket to svelte, dark-haired, unarmed youth.

Glass Pavilion, Toledo Museum of Art

How else would you display one of the world’s best collection­s of art glass if not in a glass-walled building?

This 2006 expansion of the venerable museum has been called a work of art in itself.

Rutherford B. Hayes Presidenti­al Center, Fremont

Shorthand history reduces Hayes to a few facts: He won a disputed election in 1876 and his wife was nicknamed Lemonade Lucy for not serving alcohol, for example. You’ll get a more expansive view of Hayes — including his Civil War service (joined the Army at age 38, wounded five times) and his Reconstruc­tion failures — at his home and museum.

The Hayes family were packrats — they kept everything, even the skates that young Rutherford’s brother, Lorenzo, was wearing when he broke through pond ice and drowned in 1825. Both the well-preserved Hayes mansion and the museum next door feature loads of memorabili­a.

So, there I’ve crossed a few more Ohio sites off my list. What’s on yours? Joe Blundo is a Dispatch columnist. joe.blundo@gmail.com @joeblundo

 ?? TRIBUNE MARK TAYLOR/CHICAGO ?? The American Sign Museum in Cincinnati, Ohio.
TRIBUNE MARK TAYLOR/CHICAGO The American Sign Museum in Cincinnati, Ohio.
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