It all occurred on just one tense and foreboding day, September 10, 1813, but the conflict proved to be one of the major battles of the War of 1812 that would see Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry and his sailors defeat the British Navy to secure the Great Lakes region for the U.S. once and for all.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20100902/CL58486 )

(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20100902/CL58486 )

Two hundred years later The Perry Group, a registered charity organization dedicated to supporting Perry's International Peace Memorial, is planning a massive tribute to that historic day. The victory led to Detroit and environs being returned to the U.S. as well as the securing of states such as Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and the coastal areas of Western New York.  

The celebration will begin on September 7, 2013, the exact week of the bicentennial of the battle, sometimes also called the "Battle of Put-In-Bay," the coastal and island area of Lake Erie near Sandusky, Ohio, and about ninety miles west of Cleveland.  

"We are engaging the entire region in our efforts to remember this day in history and to salute our freedom and sovereignty," says David Zavagno, a Perry group Board member.  "We expect thousands of people to attend - not just from the region but from across America, Canada, and overseas.  Many war history scholars and buffs have been interested in the Battle of Lake Erie for years. Many others would like to know more about how important it was in helping to establish a permanent, non-violent but mutually participatory, relationship between the United States and Great Britain that very much exists to this day."  

Hundreds of thousands of people, young and old, visit the towering Perry Monument on South Bass Island, near Put-In-Bay.  That number will swell significantly for the bicentennial celebration, organizers say.

"Don't give up the ship"

On Sept. 10, 1813, Master Commandant Perry, his 540 seamen, and nine vessels took on the British of Commander Heriot Barclay and his squadron of 450, and their six ships.  

Early in the battle, Perry's flagship, The Lawrence, suffered serious damage and many casualties. He was unhurt but forced, under heavy fire, to take a small rowing craft to reach another of his ships, The Niagara, to resume his command.  The Lawrence was nearly destroyed and had lost four-fifths of its crew to death and wounds.  

The odds seemed to be against Perry and his squadron.  In the end the British Navy, ironically then regarded as the largest and most professional in the world, was defeated by the Americans whose main mission was to preserve their country. Their heroic efforts helped preserve independent citizenship to the Americans of their day, to those born in the states in the future as well as to those who would become naturalized.  

"The men on both sides fought gallantly. In the very end the American navy and Oliver Perry prevailed. It was as important a naval battle as anything else that happened on the Great Lakes or at sea in the War of 1812," says Zavagno.

With Perry's capturing of the British vessels, the Americans were able to reclaim Detroit, which Barclay had invaded, and control the strategic territory of Lake Erie.  After the September 10 turnaround, Perry penned to American military commander, General Benjamin Harrison, this famous note on the back of an old envelope:  "We have met the enemy and they are ours.  Two ships, two brigs, one schooner, and one sloop."  

The Battle of Lake Erie helped lead to the signing of the Treaty of Ghent in 1814, which struck a harmonious accord between the two countries and ensured that the Canadian territory under England's control would be protected, as well, from any encroachment by the U.S.  Some scholars say it ultimately proved to be a win-win-win compromise for the three countries.

"More than a celebration from a bygone era"

"The bicentennial of the Battle of Lake Erie activities represent far more than a celebration of quaint relics from a bygone era," says Zavagno. "They represent the noble aspirations of the people.  They speak not only of what has passed, but also to what endures: ingenuity, bravery, and the sensational appetite for freedom."

Tall ships representing the U.S. and Great Britain will gather in the Put-In-Bay area, and there also will be a re-enactment of the Battle of Lake Erie to commemorate the occasion, something Zavagno says is designed to really bring home what "this pivotal conflict" represents to all Americans.

Along with the massive reenactment, Zavagno says plans for Saturday, September 7, 2013, and surrounding days include:

  • Major outdoor speaker's address
  • One of the biggest fireworks displays in North America
  • National music acts
  • A gala parade is planned featuring the largest and best marching bands in the area, namely Ohio State, Michigan, and some noted high schools are being courted;
  • Solemn ceremonies and honor guard to memorialize the fallen
  • Special dinners, lunches and fundraising events highlighting different aspects of Battle of Lake Erie history and the bicentennial festivities; and,
  • New Bicentennial flags and accessories unveiled.
  • Food and beverage concessions, featuring fare both exotic and comforting.

Official invitees will include representatives from the U.S., British, and Canadian governments, and Native American Indian groups.  Local, regional and state officials will be part of these ceremonies, as will dignitaries from business, colleges, schools, historical organizations, and much will also be open to the general public.

Zavagno says the organization is seeking a national spokesperson for the celebration.

The bicentennial organization expects to raise $1.5 million for the celebration through corporate and other sponsorships, underwritings and through the registering of 1,000 U.S. pleasure craft and their owners as symbolic members of the U.S. fleet of the Battle of Lake Erie as well as members of the infantry.  

Participants will be able to register for $50.00 each and will be given numbered certificates that embody Perry's line: "Don't give up the ship" and a graphic treatment of the American flag with 13 stars.

The bicentennial organization also plans to sell at $2,000 to $5,000 per person spots for "commissioned" sailors to help man the American ships in the re-enactment of the Battle of Lake Erie. They will represent by name the actual American service personnel who have been identified as having been on the ships September 10, 1813. A permanent registry and dedication of all participants is being designed.

For further information about the Battle of Lake Erie Bicentennial, inquirers should contact: The Perry Group, 25 Town Hall Plaza, Put-in-Bay, OH 43456, telephone: 419-285-2804.    

A website for the celebration will be available soon, as will information about ticket prices for various events connected to the bicentennial.

SOURCE The Perry Group

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Time is running out to enjoy all the fun and excitement at Cedar Point.  The Sandusky, Ohio, amusement park/resort will only be open daily through Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 6, before it reopens for weekends beginning Sunday, Sept. 12.

But guests can still save big on two visits to the park through the end of October.  With the "Buy Once, Visit Twice" deal (P1V2), guests can visit Cedar Point on any two days of the 2010 operating season for only $64.  Tickets do not have to be used consecutively and are also valid during the park's extremely popular HalloWeekends festival.  (P1V2 tickets must be used by the same person and be purchased online at cedarpoint.com by Monday, Sept. 6.)  Other great deals will also be available online at www.cedarpoint.com throughout the remainder of the season.

Located adjacent to Cedar Point, the Soak City waterpark will close for the season on Labor Day.  The 18-acre waterpark has water slides, inner tube rivers, the 500,000-gallon Breakers Bay wave pool and special areas for children.  Soak City will be open daily from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Monday, Sept. 6.

After Labor Day, the park will hold several special events.  Cedar Point will host the Rev3 Triathlon on Sunday, Sept. 12.  The event will consist of a full triathlon and a half triathlon.  Both races will start on the Cedar Point Beach and will end on the park's midway.  Guests will also be able to watch the race on the large video screen near the Iron Dragon roller coaster.  While the park closes at 8 p.m., the finish line will be open until midnight.  For more race details, please visit www.rev3tri.com.

Cedar Point will be closed to the public on Saturday, Sept. 11.

On Saturday, Sept. 18, PointFest will return for the second year.  The event will feature a stellar list of contemporary Christian artists that includes Casting Crowns, Family Force 5 and David Nasser.  Combo tickets for the concert and Cedar Point are available at www.cedarpoint.com.

From Wednesday through Sunday, Sept 15-19, the 38th annual North American In-Water Boat Show will be held in the Cedar Point Marina.

Beginning Friday, Sept. 17, HalloWeekends will return for the 14th year. With haunted houses, outdoor attractions and special activities for the younger ones, HalloWeekends 14 has something for everyone.  Complementing this array of Halloween attractions will be the park's unmatched collection of rides, roller coasters and entertainment.  

Beginning Sunday, Sept. 12, Cedar Point will be open Friday nights, Saturday and Sundays through Sunday, Oct. 31.  Every Friday night, students can save $5 on admission when they show a valid student ID.  

For more information about Cedar Point, please visit cedarpoint.com or call the park's General Information Line at 419.627.2350.

SOURCE Cedar Point

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http://www.cedarpoint.com

With five new maze experiences, new "Scare Zones," a new "Terror Tram" backlot experience and the addition of the blockbuster new attraction, "King Kong 360 3D" Created by Peter Jackson – the world's largest, most intense 3D experience – Universal Studios Hollywood(SM) is preparing to bring the legends of movie horror to life for Halloween Horror Nights®, Southern California's most terrifying and exciting Halloween event. Tickets are now on sale at www.HalloweenHorrorNights.com/hollywood including a new "Killer Deal Nights" option, providing discounts of up to $25 for selected dates. Advance purchase is recommended as event nights will sell out.

Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Hollywood begins Friday, September 24 and continues on weekends and other select nights through Sunday, October 31.

Halloween Horror Nights mazes will include the all-new "A Nightmare On Elm Street™:  Never Sleep Again," "Friday the 13th™: Kill, Jason, Kill!," "Rob Zombie's  House of 1000 Corpses in 3D Zombievison," "Vampyre: Castle of the Undead" plus "Saw:  Game On."  Among the six "Scare Zones" is a new "La Llorona" experience, based upon the timeless Mexican legend.

"Chucky's Revenge" – an all-new "Terror Tram" experience -- plus an express visit to the new blockbuster attraction, "King Kong 360 3D" Created by Peter Jackson and an all-new "Bill and Ted's Excellent Halloween Adventure" show will also be featured within the event.

Universal Studios Hollywood's favorite thrill-ride attractions will also remain open for "Halloween Horror Nights" nocturnal affair, many with menacing twists.  Favorites include "The Simpsons Ride™," "Revenge of the Mummy(SM) – The Ride" and "Jurassic Park® In the Dark."

Updates on "Halloween Horror Nights" will be available at HalloweenHorrorNights.com and also on Twitter and Facebook, as Creative Director John Murdy reveals a running chronicle of exclusive information.  Fans are invited to follow John Murdy on Twitter at: Twitter.com/HorrorNights or via Facebook at: "Halloween Horror Nights - Hollywood (Official)."

Halloween Horror Nights will continue on consecutive weekends and selected weekday nights beginning Friday, September 24 through Halloween, Sunday, October 31.  Event dates are: September 24, 25 and October 1, 2, 8, 9, 15, 16,17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, 30, 31. The event will begin nightly at 7 p.m.; closing hours vary by night throughout the event.  

Universal Studios Hollywood, The Entertainment Capital of L.A.(SM), is a unit of Universal Parks & Resorts, a division of NBC Universal.  NBC Universal is one of the world's leading media and entertainment companies in the development, production, marketing of entertainment, news, and information to a global audience.  Formed in May of 2004 through the combining of NBC and Vivendi Universal Entertainment, NBC Universal owns and operates a valuable portfolio of news and entertainment networks, a premier motion picture company, significant television production operations, a leading television stations group, and world-renowned theme parks.  NBC Universal is 80% owned by General Electric (NYSE: GE), with 20% controlled by Vivendi.

SOURCE Universal Studios Hollywood

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http://www.HalloweenHorrorNights.com/hollywood
http://www.universalstudioshollywood.com/

More than $200 million in spending and 4,000 Virginia jobs supported by the six million visitors each year to Jamestown, Chincoteague and Shenandoah National Park are at risk if climate change remains on its current path, according to a major new report issued today by the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization (RMCO) and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).   Among the possible changes: a loss of Chincoteague's beach, the  complete flooding by higher tidal waters of historic Jamestown Island – site of the continent's original English settlement in 1607 – and the decline of the brilliant fall colors of Shenandoah National Park.

The report details the wide range of impacts from higher temperatures, rising water levels and stronger hurricanes on Jamestown, which is a part of Colonial National Historical Park (NHP), Shenandoah National Park, and Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge (NWR).  

The RMCO/NRDC report and audio recording of the news event will be available online at www.rockymountainclimate.org/programs_10.htm.

Jamestown is where America's colonial history began, with the first permanent European settlement in what became the original colonies and then the United States. It also is where representative democracy in America began.  Chincoteague NWR on the southern end of Assateague Island on Virginia's Atlantic coast has more than 14,000 acres of beach, forest, and marsh habitats that are home to a wide variety of migratory birds, plants, and other animals. Located just 70 miles from Washington, D.C., Shenandoah NP is a crown jewel of the United States' national park system.

Theo Spencer, senior advocate, Climate Center, Natural Resources Defense Council, said: "Climate change poses the greatest risk our National Parks have ever faced. The natural and cultural resources of Virginia's special places are directly linked to hundreds of millions of dollars in economic activity and thousands of jobs. Unfortunately, Jamestown, Shenandoah and Chincoteague face greater threats than ever before as a result of climate change, and on a scale that will substantially undercut people's interest in visiting those historic and natural sites. By acting now to reduce the pollution that causes climate change we will stimulate our economy and create millions of new jobs while continuing America's long-standing position of technological leadership."

Stephen Saunders, president, Rocky Mountain Climate Organization, said:  "The extent to which these special places could be harmed illustrates why human-caused climate disruption is considered the greatest threat ever to our national parks and wildlife refuges. These three special places deserve particular attention. They show how much Virginia has at stake, from its coasts to its mountains and from its natural and cultural resources to its economy, as people alter the climate. And these three special places are extraordinarily important not just to Virginians but also to Americans everywhere."

Highlights of the report include the following:

  • Jamestown, Chincoteague and the Shenandoah NP are linked to a total of 4,030 jobs and $210.1 million in visitor spending.   "But these contributions to Virginia's economy are threatened by how climate disruption puts at risk the natural and cultural resources that draw visitors to these special places," according to the report.
  • Higher seas resulting from human-caused climate change threaten Jamestown and Chincoteague NWR. Globally, three feet or more of sea-level rise is now believed to be most plausible by century's end. Because the land along Virginia's coastlines is naturally subsiding, the local rise of seas and tidal waters will be even greater than the global average. The report identifies such possible outcomes as the flooding of "virtually all of Jamestown Island" and "'nothing less than a wholesale transformation'" of Chincoteague after sea-level rise of about three to four and a half feet by this century's end.
  • Before Jamestown and much of Chincoteague may be inundated by higher water levels, key historical, archaeological, and natural resources could be destroyed or damaged by storm surges and erosion resulting from stronger hurricanes and coastal storms. At risk is the original Jamestown Fort of 1607, a corner of which has already been lost to erosion by the James River. The barrier island containing Chincoteague is at very high risk of fragmentation by the natural forces of winds and waves, augmented by unnaturally higher seas and stronger storms resulting from human-caused climate change.
  • Also threatened by erosion could be resources at the Yorktown battlefield, which like Jamestown is part of Colonial NHP. One key site at risk is Redoubt 10, on the edge of a cliff along a stretch of the York River that has suffered erosion over the years. This was the scene of a key battle won by Revolutionary forces under the command of Colonel Alexander Hamilton, part of the decisive final offense that led to the surrender a few days later of the British army at Yorktown, effectively ending the Revolutionary War. The nearby Moore House, at which the terms of surrender were arranged, is also potentially exposed to shoreline erosion.
  • The famous fall colors of the Shenandoah are at risk due to the projected invasion of less colorful pine and other trees considered to be more Southern.
  • Higher temperatures are expected at all three sites.  Jamestown and Chincoteague could be 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit hotter and Shenandoah 8.1 degrees Fahrenheit hotter, under one scenario.  According to the report: "With the region's largest temperature increases projected for the summer, intolerable heat may become a real problem (for would-be visitors) at Jamestown and perhaps Chincoteague."
  • Extreme weather in the form of major downpours and more flooding could transform Shenandoah NHP. The amount of rain falling in heavy storms increased by 20 percent over the past century, and scientists believe there is at least a 90 percent likelihood that heavy downpours will become even more frequent and intense, causing more flooding. Shenandoah, with its steep mountain terrain, is particularly vulnerable to slope failure and debris flows during severe storms, as illustrated by a June 1995 storm in which about two feet of rain fell in a few hours, causing a mountainside slope in the park to give way, sending trees and boulders the size of houses tumbling downhill.      

ABOUT THE GROUPS

The Natural Resources Defense Council (http://www.nrdc.org) is a national non-profit organization dedicated to protecting public health and the environment, with more than 1.2 million members and online activists.

The Rocky Mountain Climate Organization (http://www.rockymountainclimate.org) is a Colorado-based coalition that works to reduce climate disruption and its effects.

EDITOR'S NOTE:  A streaming audio replay of the news event will be available on the Web at www.rockymountainclimate.org/programs_10.htm as of 5 p.m. EDT on September 1, 2010.

SOURCE Natural Resources Defense Council, Washington, D.C. and Rocky Mountain Climate Organization, Denver, CO.

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http://www.nrdc.org/
http://www.rockymountainclimate.org/

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