
If you love history and visit landmarks hoping to learn something new about the people, places or events that shaped our world - then VodoModo is for you.
Get an immersive learning experience that engages, educates and entertains right here (vodomodo.com). Take that experience with you on your smartphone (m.vodomodo.com), to make history come alive!
Click here to watch the free Washington Monument mini-movie. After watching it, click here to signup. Then you can purchase credits and start watching landmark mini-movies for as little as $.99 cents each, here and on your smartphone.
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Bartholdi Park is named for the artist who sculpted the fountain which is central to the tract.
For years the nation's longest serving president was honored by only a small memorial in Washington, D.C. That changed in 1997.
The Folger Shakespeare Library, dating to 1932, has the world's largest collection of the Bard's printed works.
A 20-foot marble likeness of Abraham Lincoln has gazed north toward the Washington Memorial and the Capitol since 1922.
The National Cathedral has been the site of celebrations and presidential funerals. Construction spanned 83 years.
The events that led to the resignation of President Richard M. Nixon began with a break-in at Democratic headquarters in the Watergate complex.
When this landmark suspension bridge was built in 1883, it changed life radically for many New Yorkers.
New York's Chinatown, with 250,000 residents, can trace it's history to an 1847 visit to the city by a Chinese junk.
The Art Deco Chrysler Building, one of New York's most spectacular skyscrapers, has an intriguing history.
The Empire State Building, 102 stories high, remains one of the world's most beloved icons.
The twisted metal of Ground Zero has been turned into American warships and spacecraft.
Herald Square is named for the New York Herald of James Gordon Bennett, whose stock in trade was sensational journalism.
The original City Tavern was frequented by America's founding fathers. The current tavern is a recreation.
This county courthouse was the place where Congress ratified the Bill of Rights.
The iconic Liberty Bell was not known by that name until some 60 years after the American Revolution.
The first U.S. Supreme Court met in a municipal courtroom in this Philadelphia building.
The nation's first mint was a surprisingly hard sell in the early years of the Republic.
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