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Carla Davidson

Carla Davidson formerly served as Senior Editor at American Heritage and has been a frequent contributor to The New York Times.

Articles by

Carla

Davidson

Articles by this Author

Nashville’s rewards go beyond music
The QM2 , the latest in a line of great Cunarders, aims to command the seas
Down To The Sea, June/July 2005 | Vol. 56, No. 3
There’s a lot more to the often overlooked mid-coastal Maine than lobster. but the lobster is amazing.
New Neighborhoods, April/May 2005 | Vol. 56, No. 2
Cruising The Briefly Embattled San Juan Islands
Art And The City, June/July 2004 | Vol. 55, No. 3
How Grand Rapids Regained Its Grandeur
Passion, April/May 2004 | Vol. 55, No. 2
BOTH ART AND NATURE HAVE MADE MODERN SCOTTSDALE
An artists’ colony in Woodstock, New York, celebrates its hundredth year
Enlarging America, April/May 2003 | Vol. 54, No. 2
Showplace, November/December 2002 | Vol. 53, No. 6
IN THE 1870S, WEALTH FROM THE NORTH TRANSFORMED THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA
River Time, August/September 2002 | Vol. 53, No. 4
FLOATING ON THE OHIO ABOARD THE ONLY BARGE THAT PLIES AMERICAN WATERS
To Plan A Trip, June/July 2002 | Vol. 53, No. 3
SONOMA COUNTY HARVESTS A RICH IMMIGRANT PAST
Sailing On, April/May 2002 | Vol. 53, No. 2
Architectural relics from great old liners find a home in the dining rooms of four new ships
A Great Lake, September 2001 | Vol. 52, No. 6
EARLY NAVAL HISTORY AND TODAY’S URBAN ENERGY ON CHAMPLAIN’S SHORES
FRANCE, BRITAIN, AND THE UNITED STATES ALL WANTED TO OWN MARITIME CANADA. IT’S EASY TO SEE WHY.
Under Water, April 2001 | Vol. 52, No. 2
Ancient City, February/March 2001 | Vol. 52, No. 1
ST. AUGUSTINE, SETTLED IN 1565, FLAUNTS ITS SPANISH ORIGINS
Finding The Real, April 2000 | Vol. 51, No. 2
In The Hotel New York, April 1999 | Vol. 50, No. 2
Traveling Together, April 1998 | Vol. 49, No. 2
Open Door, April 1996 | Vol. 47, No. 2
Explorers, April 1993 | Vol. 44, No. 2

"WEB ONLY STORIES" BY THIS CONTRIBUTOR

Cruising the briefly embattled San Juan Islands  From a cab hurtling down the West Side Highway en route to Newark Airport from New York City, I spied the looming superstructures of three giant ships. They were waiting to take on their complements of 2,000 or more passengers heading for weeklong…
How Grand Rapids Regained its Grandeur I’ve long held the notion that my lion-pawed oak dining table was a prime example of Grand Rapids furniture. Michigan’s second city is the birthplace of mass-produced furniture in America, but when I visited last summer, I didn’t see anything that resembled it…
“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than the ones you did do,” Mark Twain once instructed his readers. “So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream.” In this eighteenth year of our…