Éléments | Mountain Spies Tour, the Secrets of the Catoctin Mountains
Mountain Spies Tour, the Secrets of the Catoctin Mountains
(5) Avis
Thurmont
Informations importantes
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Déconseillé aux voyageurs souffrant de lésions de la colonne vertébrale
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Déconseillé aux femmes enceintes
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Déconseillé aux voyageurs ayant une mauvaise santé cardiovasculaire
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Adapté à tous les niveaux de condition physique
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The tour does involve walking on unstable terrain.
Politique d'annulation
Pour un remboursement complet, annulez au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de départ prévue.
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Pour un remboursement complet, vous devez annuler au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience.
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Les délais limites sont basés sur l'heure locale de l'expérience.
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Si vous annulez moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience, le montant que vous avez payé ne sera pas remboursé.
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Cette expérience nécessite un nombre minimum de voyageurs. Si elle est annulée parce que le minimum n'est pas atteint, on vous proposera une autre date/expérience ou un remboursement intégral.
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Toute modification effectuée moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience ne sera pas acceptée.
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Explore the covert history of the Catoctin Mountains on this guided 3-hour tour, which connects significant sites like Gettysburg, Fort Ritchie, Camp David, and Raven Rock. Discover how this serene mountain area served as a key player in American intelligence during World War II and the Cold War. Encounter locations tied to OSS training, the Ritchie Boys, and the secret interrogation center at PO Box 1142, while uncovering how President Eisenhower utilized Camp David for national leadership. This driving experience offers a rich narrative of the geographical and historical factors that shaped modern American intelligence.
- Guided 3-hour driving tour through the Catoctin Mountains - Explore...
Points forts
3 heures
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
3 heures
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Private transportation
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
Fairfield
The location of the tour meeting place will be disclosed after booking. The tour guide will greet you in a bowler style had and appropriate Mountain Spies uniform.
Retour
Mountain Spies Tour, the Secrets of the Catoctin Mountains
(5) Avis
Thurmont
À propos
Explore the covert history of the Catoctin Mountains on this guided 3-hour tour, which connects significant sites like Gettysburg, Fort Ritchie, Camp David, and Raven Rock. Discover how this serene mountain area served as a key player in American intelligence during World War II and the Cold War. Encounter locations tied to OSS training, the Ritchie Boys, and the secret interrogation center at PO Box 1142, while uncovering how President Eisenhower utilized Camp David for national leadership. This driving experience offers a rich narrative of the geographical and historical factors that shaped modern American intelligence.
- Guided 3-hour driving tour through the Catoctin Mountains - Explore...
Points forts
3 heures
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
3 heures
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Private transportation
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
Fairfield
The location of the tour meeting place will be disclosed after booking. The tour guide will greet you in a bowler style had and appropriate Mountain Spies uniform.
Retour
Itinéraire
1
Catoctin Mountain Park
Catoctin Mountain Park provides the landscape where the Mountain Spies story begins. During World War II, the rugged terrain and isolation of the Catoctin Mountains made the area ideal for secret training and experimentation. In 1942, the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the precursor to the CIA, established a covert paramilitary training site at nearby Camp Greentop known as Camp B-2. Here, small teams trained in sabotage, guerrilla warfare, clandestine communications, and resistance coordination before deploying to occupied Europe.
The same protected mountain landscape also hosted the presidential retreat originally called Shangri-La, later renamed Camp David by Dwight D. Eisenhower. The proximity of OSS training, military intelligence activity at Fort Ritchie, and presidential leadership in the Catoctins illustrates how this quiet Appalachian corridor became an important setting for the development of American intelligence and national security during and after World War II.
45 minutes
2
Fort Ritchie
Fort Ritchie, located in the Catoctin–South Mountain corridor, served as the U.S. Army’s Military Intelligence Training Center during World War II. Here, thousands of intelligence specialists known as the Ritchie Boys were trained in interrogation, psychological warfare, and battlefield intelligence. Many were European refugees whose language and cultural knowledge proved invaluable during the Allied advance across Europe.
Fort Ritchie operated within a broader regional intelligence system that included POW screening at Pine Grove Furnace POW Camp and strategic interrogation operations at PO Box 1142 at Fort Hunt.
During the Cold War, the region’s strategic role expanded with the construction of the underground command center at Raven Rock Mountain Complex, which serves as the Alternate National Military Command Center supporting continuity-of-government and national command communications.
45 minutes
3
High Rock Overlook
Pen Mar Park sits along the crest of South Mountain on the Pennsylvania–Maryland border and offers sweeping views across the Cumberland Valley. Developed in the late 19th century as a railroad resort destination, it became a popular scenic overlook and gathering place for visitors traveling the mountain line.
In the Mountain Spies narrative, Pen Mar represents the high ground of the Catoctin–South Mountain corridor—terrain that later supported military training, intelligence activities, and strategic infrastructure throughout World War II and the Cold War.
10 minutes
4
Blue Ridge Summit
Blue Ridge Summit is a historic mountain community located along the crest of South Mountain near the Pennsylvania–Maryland border. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the area developed as a resort destination where visitors escaped the summer heat of the cities below to enjoy the cooler mountain climate and sweeping valley views.
Within the Mountain Spies story, Blue Ridge Summit sits at the geographic center of the Catoctin–South Mountain corridor. Its location along the ridgeline placed it near key sites that later shaped American intelligence history, including Fort Ritchie, OSS training areas in the Catoctin Mountains, and the Cold War command infrastructure at Raven Rock Mountain Complex. Today the area reflects how this quiet mountain landscape became part of a broader national security corridor stretching between Gettysburg and Washington, D.C.