The Adventures of Tommy Tourist: T.R.E.E. House Children's Museum and Kent Plantation House
Tommy Tourist is your typical tourist exploring the attractions in Central Louisiana, also called CenLa. As he travels, his tour is recorded to be shared with you. Learn more about the attractions in the video by visiting theHeartofLouisiana.com.
Best Attractions & Things to do in Ogden, Utah UT
Ogden Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Ogden. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Ogden for You. Discover Ogden as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Ogden.
This Video has covered Best Attractions and Things to do in Ogden.
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List of Best Things to do in Ogden, Utah (UT)
Hill Aerospace Museum
George S. Eccles Dinosaur Park
Treehouse Children's Museum
Union Station
Historic 25th Street
Utah State Railroad Museum
Waterfall Canyon Trail
Ogden Nature Center
Beus Pond Park
John M. Browning Firearms Museum
Top 14. Best Tourist Attractions in Ogden - Utah
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The most beautiful places and sight in Ogden.
Top 14. Best Tourist Attractions in Ogden - Utah: Hill Aerospace Museum, Union Station, George S. Eccles Dinosaur Park, Treehouse Children's Museum, Utah State Railroad Museum, Waterfall Canyon Trail, Ogden Nature Center, Cold Springs Trout Farm, Peery's Egyptian Theater, Fort Buenaventura, Ogden Botanical Gardens, John M. Browning Firearms Museum, Beus Pond Park, Golden Spike Arena
4 Year Old's First Time Indoor Skydiving! ???? Ogden, Utah: Traveling with Kids
Visiting Ogden, Utah with kids. Visiting Hill Aerospace Museum, George S. Eccles Dinosaur Park, Treehouse Museum, and iFLY Utah: Indoor Skydiving.
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It's All in Ogden - The Junction
Its ALL in Ogden! Visit the Ogden City Junction:
The Junction is anchored by the 125,000 square foot Salomon Center. Activities in the Salomon Center include bowling, glow in the dark golf, electric bumper cars, billiards, arcade, indoor surfing, indoor wind tunnel and a 55 foot climbing wall, along with a state of the art health club and two restaurants. The center averages 7000--8000 visitors per week.
The Larry Miller Megaplex Theatre brings the hottest new movies to Ogden. The theatre features 13 screens with reserved seating, in house catering for banquets and meetings, private screenings, and auditorium rentals.
The Children's Treehouse Museum located at The Junction is a favorite place where children can interact, and be creative. Family time spent at the Museum is educational, entertaining and fun.
Iggy's Sports Grill is a fun place to watch the big game and visit with friends. The great menu of food and beverages make game day even more enjoyable.
Sonora Grill serves authentic regional Mexican food, in a refined atmosphere. Watch the Chef at work while you sit at Utah's only Ceviche Bar.
Children-Pirates
Head Start children at the Treehouse Museum - Ogden, Utah
Treehouse Museum's Get Ready for Kindergarten with Miss Bindergarten
Learn how to prepare your student to enter kindergarten in the Ogden School District using the Treehouse Museum's Get Ready for Kindergarten with Miss Bindergarten Program!
Credits:
Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten
by Joseph Slate
Illustrated by Ashley Wolff
(Penguin Books)
Treehouse “Get Ready for Kindergarten with Miss Bindergarten Activity Book”
(Treehouse Press)
Treehouse Museum Early Learning Program
Made Possible By:
George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation
Stewart Education Foundation
State of Utah
RAMP
Video Produced by
Ogden School District Communications
Special Thanks to Heritage Elementary
UTAH OR BUST
Brandon packs up and heads to Utah. Along the way he tells some scary stories, makes fun of Idaho and hopes for the best.
Ogden, Utah
Ogden is a city and the county seat of Weber County, Utah, United States, approximately 10 miles east of the Great Salt Lake and 40 miles north of Salt Lake City. The population was 82,825 according to the 2010 Census. The city served as a major railway hub through much of its history, and still handles a great deal of freight rail traffic which makes it a convenient location for manufacturing and commerce. Ogden is also known for its many historic buildings, proximity to the Wasatch Mountains, and as the location of Weber State University.
Ogden is a principal city of the Ogden–Clearfield, Utah Metropolitan Statistical Area, which includes all of Weber, Morgan, and Davis counties. The 2010 Census placed the Metro population at 547,184. In 2010, Forbes rated the Ogden-Clearfield MSA as the 6th best place to raise a family. Ogden has had a Sister City relationship to Hof since 1954.
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pickelball ss
Original file date: Mon, 10 Aug 2015, ID:9nd18i
OGDEN — Philanthropist John Gullo announced Tuesday he’s moving his Pickleball Tournament of Champions from Ogden to Brigham City in September. With less than five weeks to spare, Gullo said mounting frustration with Ogden Mayor Mike Caldwell forced his hand. Gullo’s Tournament of Champions, which drew 90 players from 20 states, two Canadian provinces and Europe last year, was scheduled for Ogden’s Monroe Park. But citing a lack of vision on the part of Ogden’s leaders, Gullo decided to relocate the Sept. 9-12 tourney to Brigham City’s Rees Pioneer Park during the town’s annual Peach Day events. RELATED: Pickleball tourney has ample room to grow in Ogden, July 25, 2013 “I made an offer to Ogden City to improve the current facilities that we have right now — not just for me but also to create a championship court that would work for tennis,” Gullo said. “They turned me down.” Gullo, who moved to Ogden from Buffalo, New York, sold his Burger King Franchises and established the nonprofit American Dream Foundation in 1998. “I love Ogden City. It’s my kind of town,” Gullo said. “It’s a good blue-collar town and I’ve done a lot to promote Ogden City.” His charitable fingerprints can be found throughout the city — the Children’s Treehouse Museum has a Freedom Trail, printing press and miniature oval office where youth can come and explore American history. And 15 years ago, he launched the annual Hot Rocking 4th. But Gullo’s near-death experience in 2008, when he had to undergo five heart bypasses, shifted his focus to pickleball — a game that looks like a mix of tennis, ping pong and racquetball. “I weighed 320 pounds, started playing pickleball, and dropped down to 245,” Gullo said. In 2010, Gullo was instrumental in installing the city’s first four pickleball courts at Mt. Ogden Park. “Only six people knew how to play the game,” Gullo said of those early days. But the sport took off, and now there are almost 60 sites between Layton and Tremonton where people of all ages play. Gullo described it as “the most social game ever invented.” RELATED: Love of pickleball quickly growing in Top of Utah Gullo decided to bring 35 of the world’s best pickleball players to Ogden for a tournament in 2013 and offered $48,000 in prize money. The Tournament of Champions grew in 2014. And the breaking point with Ogden? “I offered to pay half of a 24-court complex with a championship court, and the city said no,” Gullo said of his dream of expanding pickleball facilities at Mt. Ogden Park, which sits high on the city’s east bench. Instead, Ogden installed eight pickleball courts at the more central Monroe Park at 30th Street and Monroe Boulevard. While Monroe Park wasn’t Gullo’s first choice for his tournament, he moved ahead with plans at the site — until conflicts with other events surfaced. “They told us that they’d scheduled the AYSO soccer and I’d have to have my fences down and the park cleaned up by 8 a.m. Saturday morning,” Gullo said. “There’s not a lot of parking to begin with, and they threw another event there — they don’t care, they don’t see the vision.” Caldwell called Gullo’s relocation of the tournament “unfortunate,” but said he wishes him luck. “We’re sad to lose it, but we can’t be everything to everybody,” Caldwell said. “We try to strike a balance. We can’t do 100 percent of one enthusiast’s vision on any one project.” Regarding Gullo’s offer to help expand pickleball amenities at Mt. Ogden Park, Caldwell said it’s one of the city’s busiest and “we didn’t have the parking or infrastructure to put his 24 courts in.â...
Resolute desk
The Resolute desk is a large, nineteenth-century partners' desk often chosen by presidents of the United States for use in the White House Oval Office as the Oval Office desk. It was a gift from Queen Victoria to President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1880 and was built from the timbers of the British Arctic Exploration ship Resolute. Franklin Roosevelt requested the addition of a door with the presidential seal to conceal his leg braces. Many presidents since Hayes have used the desk at various locations in the White House, but it was Jackie Kennedy who first brought the desk into the Oval Office in 1961 for President John F. Kennedy. It was removed from the White House only once, after the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963, when President Johnson allowed the desk to go on a traveling exhibition with the Kennedy Presidential Library. After this it was on display in the Smithsonian Institution. President Jimmy Carter brought the desk back to the Oval Office, where Presidents Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush used it. It is currently in use by President Barack Obama.
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