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Stewart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building and Museum
The Interior Department headquarters was the first buildin...
Bryce Canyon National Park
The person most responsible for Bryce Cany...
Salt River National Historical Park and Ecological Reserve
Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Pre...
Palace Hotel, San Francisco
The original Palace Hotel th...
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park
Born in a single room log cabin on his father's Sinking Sp...
Saratoga National Historic Park
On September 19, 1777, Burgoyne had split up his 7500-man ...
George Washington Memorial Parkway
Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, the first section of the...
George Washington's Birthplace
By the time of George Washington’s birth in 1732 on the...
Lewis Clark Interpretive Center
"We commence building our cabins."
- ...
The Portage of the Great Falls
Having discovered a series of waterfalls on a twenty-mile ...
Results for P
Stewart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building and Museum
The Interior Department headquarters was the first building in Washington, DC authorized, designed, and built by the Franklin Delano Roosevelt administration. The building reflects the dedication and commitment to government service of President Roosevelt and Secretary of the Interior Harold ...
Bryce Canyon National Park
The person most responsible for Bryce Canyon becoming a National Park was J. W. Humphrey. Mr. Humphrey was a U. S. Forest Service Supervisor who was transferred to Panguitch, Utah in July 1915. An employee suggested that J. W. ...
Salt River National Historical Park and Ecological Reserve
Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve was created in 1992 as part of the National Park System. The National Park Service and the Government of the United States Virgin Islands jointly manage this 1,015-acre park.
The area’s blend ...
Palace Hotel, San Francisco
The original Palace Hotel that stood on this site was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire. The current building, designed by architects Trowbridge & Livingston, was completed in 1909. Occupying most of a city block, this nine-story ...
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park
Born in a single room log cabin on his father's Sinking Spring Farm on Sunday, February 12, 1809, Abraham Lincoln's early years on the Kentucky frontier helped to shape his character and prepare the boy who would grow up to ...
Saratoga National Historic Park
On September 19, 1777, Burgoyne had split up his 7500-man army into three columns to sweep around where he believed the Americans might be. One column of British troops would move west about 2 miles inland and begin to move ...
George Washington Memorial Parkway
Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, the first section of the George Washington Memorial Parkway, opened in 1932, the bicentennial of the birth of the man who shaped the nation as peerless leader in the War for Independence, chairman of the Constitutional ...
George Washington's Birthplace
By the time of George Washington’s birth in 1732 on the marshy shores of Popes Creek, his family had been on the land between Mattox and Popes Creek for three quarters of a century. The George Washington Birthplace National Monument ...
Lewis Clark Interpretive Center
"We commence building our cabins."
- William Clark, November 3, 1804
That simple journal entry marked the construction of Fort Mandan, the Corps of Discovery's winter home from 1804-1805. Through the winter, Lewis & Clark interviewed members of the nearby Mandan-Hidatsa ...
The Portage of the Great Falls
Having discovered a series of waterfalls on a twenty-mile stretch of the Missouri River in present-day Great Falls, Montana, the Corps of Discovery established their base camp, called Lower Portage Camp, and began their preparations for the portage around the ...