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For five centuries, travelers have brought their
hopes and dreams to America. For the earliest pioneers, it was a
virgin wilderness ready to be shaped into a "New World," a
potential paradise wasted on its native peoples. Millions of
immigrants followed, to share in the building of the new nation and
to better their lives, far from the hidebound societies of Europe
and Asia. Eventually, slaves, who had been shipped over from Africa
and the Caribbean, joined them as free citizens. As the United
States expanded to fill the continent, something genuinely new was
created: a vast country that took pride in defining itself in the
eyes of the world.
Every traveler in the United States – be they foreigners on a
coast-to-coast road trip or locals exploring their extraordinarily
diverse land – has some idea of what to expect. American culture
has become so thoroughly shared throughout the globe that one of the
principal joys of getting to know the country is the repeated,
delicious shock of the familiar. Yellow taxis on busy city streets;
roadside mailboxes straight out of Peanuts cartoons; wooden porches
overlooking the cotton fields; tumbleweed skittering across the
desert; endless highways dotted with pick-up trucks and
chrome-plated diners; the first sight of the Grand Canyon, or the
Manhattan skyline – now more than ever an indelibly iconic image.
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