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Map of the Awaswas area. The Boulder Creek area is in the traditional tribal territory of the Achistaca, an Awaswas-speaking people [10] of the Ohlone cultural unit, who were a group of contiguous bands that inhabited the coastal region of present-day California from the San Francisco Bay to the Monterey Peninsula and down to San José and Salinas Valley.
Burlingame, California: 1923 School Yes Boulder Creek High School Boulder Creek, California: 1906 School [4] No (1946) Convention Hall Monterey, California: 1910 Commercial Bank of Monterey Monterey, California: 1909 Commercial Goldstine Block (Monterey Hotel), 406 Alvarado Monterey, California: 1906 Commercial Yes Underwood Building, 416 Alvarado
The San Lorenzo River starts at its headwaters above Boulder Creek, it runs through the valley on its way to the city of Santa Cruz, where it then flows into the Monterey Bay and the Pacific Ocean and also supplies the city of Santa Cruz with its drinking water. Much of the river valley is rural and wooded and other areas have neighborhoods and ...
The San Lorenzo Valley Museum is a pair of galleries and education centers created by the San Lorenzo Valley Historical Society "to preserve and share the history of the San Lorenzo Valley". [1] Founded in March 1976, it operates as a nonprofit educational institution. The Museum's original gallery is located in Boulder Creek. An additional ...
Boulder Creek receives Hare Creek, 1.56 miles (2.51 km) in length [3] and at 797 feet (243 m) in elevation, [4] on the right bank within the boundaries of the Country Club. Downstream of the Hare Creek confluence, the creek flows through a heavily shaded canyon with steep, near-vertical walls and a streambed dominated by large granitic cobbles ...
The Hotel Boulderado is located at 13th and Spruce St. in downtown Boulder, Colorado. It opened on New Year's Day 1909. The original 1908 Otis Elevator is still in operation. [2] The hotel was designed by local architects William Redding, Floyd Redding, and James Cowie, all of whom were members of the architectural firm Redding & Sons. [3]
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The history of glass-making dates back to at least 3,600 years ago in Mesopotamia. However, most writers claim that they may have been producing copies of glass objects from Egypt. [1] Other archaeological evidence suggests that the first true glass was made in coastal north Syria, Mesopotamia or Egypt. [2]