Voyageurs National Park
I have explored many National Parks on solo driving tours. There is something about the quiet rhythm of the road with long stretches of highway and time to think. Driving to Voyageurs in northern Minnesota was one of those journeys.

I followed the North Shore of Lake Superior for part of the trip, marveling at its vastness. Lake Superior feels more like an inland sea than a lake, immense, powerful and stretching beyond sight. The drive itself felt expansive.
As I turned inland and approached the Kabetogama Lake Visitor Center at Voyageurs, my phone announced that I had crossed into Canada. I had not but had this technological notification tell me something that is true about this place. Voyageurs sit directly along the Canadian border. Water, islands and channels weave between the United States and Ontario.
Voyageurs National Park was established in 1975 when President Gerald Ford signed it into law. Voyageurs was part of a later preservation effort, protecting nearly 220.000 acres of interconnected waterways.
The park is named after the French-Canadian voyageurs, paddlers who traveled these waters in the 18th and early 19th centuries transporting furs and trade goods. Their routes connected Lake Superior to the interior of the continent. The waterways that we navigate today follow many of the same paths.
Voyageurs is a place where boundaries blur between land and water, between nations, between past and present. It carries the spirit of travel and movement.
Read More From Nancy
Grand Portage National Historical Site
This is Grand Portage National Monument in Minnesota, a place that tells the story of movement, trade and connection across a vast landscape. I explored much of Minnesota on solo road trips, and it is a beautiful state with miles between sites, long stretch of road. Each destination is chosen with intention, like Grand Portage. Grand Portage […]
James A. Garfield National Historic Site
When my love for National Parks combines with my fascination with the lives of our presidents, I am always willing to travel out of my way to explore. During a family cross-country trip, we made a stop at the James A. Garfield National Historic Site in Mentor, Ohio, to learn more about one of America’s […]
Homestead National Historical Park
Homestead National Historical Park in Beatrice, Nebraska preserves the story of one of the most transformative legislations in American history: The Homestead Act of 1862. Signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln, the Act allowed citizens to claim 160 acres of public land if they lived on it, built a dwelling and farmed it for […]