noe-place wrote:
Gettysburg isn't for very small kids, however it's really for those old enough to understand what happened there and why. Even then the person must have a real interest in the Civil War since that's what the whole area is about. My 2cts of course. I didn't take our daughter until she was in middle school and she enjoyed the tours because she was old enough to understand what happened. I took my grandson when he was 10 and he fell in love with the place and wants to go back every year and just walk over the battlefield. Good luck.
x2
Followup to my earlier post, my visit in 2008 was with three kids, while the youngest didn't enjoy it, my 13 year old son loved it. (So much that he enlisted in the army this year) He's a history/military/collector buff like dad. Gettysburg was our day, after a visit the day before to Hershey PA for the others.
Trips with children are properly focused on what they will be interested in. Harder to do as they get older and their likes diverge. Then its a bunch of compromises, everyone getting their turn. Parents who try to pull their children, especially young children, are usually the ones with unhappy, misbehaving kids. I loved taking my children places, lots of national parks. Enjoy those early years, they don't last long. Just have to gear the trips with their interests.
Gettysburg area is fine with small children, as long as the parent understands the visit is at their children's level, not the adult level. If that is what the OP is attempting, great, as long as there are no illusions that the visit won't be from a civil war buff perspective.
Still envious at anyone being within a few hours of the area. :-) Hoping to return for an in depth visit with my son in the next decade or so.
Back on the topic, I recall a wonderful historic inn with a nice restaurant called Dobbins Inn, very memorable meal, and kid friendly for a sit down place.