Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The property is known as Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz (La Paz), which was designated as a National Historic Landmark along with the monument on October 8, 2012. The monument is the 398th unit in the National Park System and is managed collaboratively by the National Park Service and the National Chavez Center.
Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park; Jack London State Historic Park; La Purísima Mission State Historic Park; Leland Stanford Mansion State Historic Park; Los Angeles State Historic Park; Los Encinos State Historic Park; Malakoff Diggins State Historic Park; Marconi Conference Center State Historic Park; Marshall Gold Discovery State ...
Heritage Square Museum: Montecito Heights, Los Angeles: California: Living: Covers different periods; includes eight historic structures, a train car, and a trolley car Leonis Adobe: Calabasas: California: Living: 1880s California ranch San Dieguito Heritage Museum: Encinitas: California: Local history: Offers family living history programs on ...
Pfeiffer Big State Park to the north Monterey: 1940-United States Army Fort Iaqua: Iaqua: Humboldt: August 5, 1863: 1866: Union Army Fort Irwin: near Barstow: San Bernardino: 1940: United States Army Fort Jones: Fort Jones: Siskiyou: October 18, 1852: June 23, 1858: United States Army Camp Lincoln: just west of Jedediah Smith Redwoods State ...
The camp, which began operation in 1942, covered 18,000 square miles. It was the largest military training ground ever to exist. Over one million men were trained at the eleven sub-camps (seven in California). [6] Patton Memorial Museum – Camp Young
Drum Barracks Civil War Museum, August 2008. Drum Barracks was the Union Army's headquarters for Southern California and New Mexico during the Civil War. It consisted of 19 buildings on 60 acres (240,000 m2) in what is now Wilmington, with another 37 acres (150,000 m2) near the waterfront.
Fort Ord Dunes State Park is a state park in California, United States, along 4 miles (6.4 km) of coastline on Monterey Bay and created from part of the closed Fort Ord.The park includes a boardwalk, a path to the beach, a 4-mile (6.4 km) road for walking and biking, and interpretive exhibits describing its former use as a military training area.
Henry W. Coe State Park was one of 70 California state parks proposed for closure by July 2012 as part of a deficit reduction program. [13] Park advocates from the San Jose and Silicon Valley area organized the Coe Park Preservation Fund and raised donations to keep the park staffed from July 2012 through June 2015.