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Glen Helen Regional Park Location of Sycamore Grove 2. Glen Helen Regional Park is a county park located in San Bernardino, California, United States adjacent to the Cajon Pass. [1] It was the site of both US Festivals of the early 1980s. It is also home to the Glen Helen Amphitheater, the largest outdoor amphitheater in the United States. [2]
Wozniak paid for the construction [10] of a new open-air field venue and an enormous state-of-the-art temporary stage at Glen Helen Regional Park near Devore. [11] This site was later to become home to the Glen Helen Amphitheater.
In 1989, RPFS was moved to the Glen Helen Regional Park in Devore, California, and in 2005 to its present location, the Santa Fe Dam Recreation Area in Irwindale, California. [8] In 1999, RPFN was moved to the Nut Tree in Vacaville, California and later was relocated again to Casa de Fruta in the Hollister/Gilroy area south of San Jose.
The Glen Helen Nature Preserve is a nature reserve immediately east of Yellow Springs, Ohio, United States. The initial 700-acre parcel was given to Antioch College by Hugh Taylor Birch in memory of his daughter Helen Birch Bartlet in 1929, [ 1 ] and is the largest private nature preserve in the region.
Glen Helen Regional Park; Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes; Gualala Point Regional Park; H. Helen Putnam Regional Park; Hellyer County Park; Mount Hood (California) I.
Glen Helen may refer to: Glen Helen, Isle of Man; Glen Helen Gorge, MacDonnell Ranges, Australia; Glen Helen Nature Preserve, owned by Glen Helen Association (earlier Antioch College) in Yellow Springs, Ohio, United States; Glen Helen Regional Park in San Bernardino, California, United States Glen Helen Pavilion, former name of the San Manuel ...
The Glen Helen Amphitheater (originally Blockbuster Pavilion and formerly Hyundai Pavilion and San Manuel Amphitheater) is a 65,000-capacity amphitheater located in the hills of Glen Helen Regional Park in San Bernardino, California. [2] It is the largest outdoor music venue in the United States. [1]
The name changed a few times, from El Cajon de Muscupiabe to Rancho Muscupiabe (both names were being used during the 1858 survey) to The Martin District (1887) to The Guernsey Tract (1895) to The Glen Helen Tract (1901) to Kenwood Heights (1903), and finally to Devore a year or so later. For years residents called Devore “The Southern Portal ...