Thursday, August 29, 2019


August 9-19, 2019

Codorus State Park

Hanover, PA

Part 3-Tours

While in the Hanover and York area we took advantage of free factory tours beginning with
the 600,000 square foot facility where the famous Utz potato chips and snacks are made.  The self-guided tour goes along a glass enclosed observation gallery that looks down on the production process from beginning to end.  At the conclusion of the tour we were each given a bag of chips.

The company was started in 1921 by Bill and Salie Utz who made the first batch of potato chips in their kitchen in Hanover.  The hand-operated equipment produced 50 pounds of potato chips per hour.  Successful sales allowed the couple to move operations to a small building in 1938.  An automatic fryer boosted production capability to 300 pounds of chips per hour.

Today, Utz Quality Foods remains family-owned.  The company’s 2500 employees make 150 million pounds of snacks in its eleven manufacturing facilities.  In addition to potato chips, Utz makes 395 different types of flavors of snacks included pretzels, cheese curls, sunflower chips, tortilla chips, popcorn, pork rinds and party mix.

We also toured Snyder’s of Hanover, an American bakery and snack food distribution company specializing in German traditional pretzels. 

Reservations were required for the Snyder’s guided tour.

The tour concludes at the factory outlet store where we proceeded to load up our cart with all kinds of goodies.  By the time we walked out of the store, our “free” tour had cost us almost $30.
The final tour we took during our stay at Codorus State Park was at the Harley Davidson Factory in York. 
 
 
The Classic Factory Tour is free of charge but does encourage making a reservation as it is a very popular tour. The tour offers a company history and factory introduction video and a view of machining, fabrication and assembly.
 
As with the other tours we took during the week no photography is allowed except in the exhibit area and gift shop.   
The noise in the climate-controlled factory was deafening so Monte asked our guide for ear plugs that did help. 

I’m not into motorcycles but did enjoy learning how the bikes are made and was very impressed with the overall cleanliness of the factory.
 
 
Unfortunately, I had to remind Monte that there was only one model we could afford.

August 9-19, 2019

Codorus State Park

Hanover, PA

Part 2-Harpers Ferry National Historical Site and Antietam National Battlefield.

Harpers Ferry is a historic town in West Virginia situated at the confluence of the Potomac ad Shenandoah Rivers, where the states of Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia meet.
Due to limited parking in the town, visitors are encouraged to park at the Visitor Center and take a shuttle bus to the Lower Town.
 
 
During the Civil War, the town was the northernmost point of Confederate controlled territory.
Historically preserved Shenandoah Street
 
 
 
The Dry Goods Store
 
Frankel's Clothing Store-This exhibit reveals a revolution
 in the clothing industry tied to machines and advanced by war.
 
Steps leading up to St. Peter's Catholic Church 
 
 
 
 
 
Jefferson Rock is comprised of several larges masses of Harpers Shale, piled upon the other.  The name of this landmark derives from Thomas Jefferson, who stood there on October 25, 1783.  His description of the view first appeared in the Notes on the State of Virginia published in 1785.
 
The lower part of Harpers Ferry is within the National Historical Park notable as a center of 19th-century industry and the scene of John Brown’s failed abolitionist uprising. 
In 1859 an armed group, led by abolitionist John Brown, captured the armory in Harpers Ferry in hopes of arming the slaves and leading them against U.S. forces in a rebellion to overthrow slavery.
Brown was captured and before being hanged predicted there was a civil war looming on the horizon, a prediction that came true less than two years later.  

Later in the afternoon we drove to the Antietam National Battlefield in Maryland where we began our tour in the Visitor Center that contains exhibits and an orientation film. 
The Battle of Antietam ended the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia’s first invasion into the North and led Abraham Lincoln to issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation.





On September 17, 1862, 23,000 soldiers were killed, wounded or missing after twelve hours of savage combat.
Upon leaving the Visitor Center we drove the 8.5 mile driving tour with eleven stops including the observation tower with a great view of the surrounding countryside.