Now, you have been selected as a scout for the American Army. You have crept near a British patrol. Study the picture on the next page for one minute, then answer as many of the following questions as you can.
One man has a torn paper piece stuck in his hat. What two letters are written on it?
ACTIVITY 5—“Sign In” Here!
One of the ways visitors learn about important or interesting parts of a National Park is by reading signs. What a sign says, where it is placed, and what it looks like are important to consider. Based on what you’ve seen during your visit to Saratoga National Historical Park, think up a sign to describe something here you think is important, and create your sign below. It will help you to remember your trip here! Don’t forget to put the National Park Service “arrowhead” on the sign.
Blank signpost
ACTIVITY 6—Codebreaker
Every National Park is special and unique. Each has natural resources (like plants, trees, birds, insects, fish, land) and cultural resources (such as very old homes, factories, battlefields, forts, roads, or even ancient dwellings). The National Park Service works to preserve these resources, and to help visitors learn about and appreciate them.
To help us in our mission, the National Park Service uses a system of abbreviations, sort of like codes, for park names. The “code name” generally uses the first four letters of the park name. For Saratoga National Historical Park, the abbreviation is SARA. Morristown National Historical Park, in New Jersey, is MORR. Parks with more than one name generally use the first two letters of the first two words in the park name. Fort Stanwix National Monument, in Rome, NY, becomes FOST. There are exceptions: Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico is CAVE.