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Granada Relocation
Center
Granada, Prowers County, Colorado
Tule Lake
Segregation Center
Newell, Modoc County, California
Chinatown
Archeological Site
Riverside County, California
Little Tokyo
Historic District
Los Angeles County, California
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Immigrants arriving at the
Angel Island Immigration Station, c. 1916--one of the sites highlighted in
our Early History of
the California Coast travel itinerary Photo courtesy of California
State Parks
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Learn more about the Angel Island Immigration
Station, featured in our Early
History of the California Coast and World War II in the San
Francisco Bay Area travel itineraries and our 1999 Asian-Pacific
Heritage Month feature.
Visit Seattle's
International District (Chinatown), which combines Asian and Western
architectural traditions into a uniquely American neighbrhood.
Teaching with Historic
Places - This program offers a
series of award-winning lesson plans that use places listed in the National
Register to enliven the study of history, social studies, and geography. TwHP
has ready-to-use lesson plans, available for free downloading, that examine
important aspects of Asian-Pacific history.
Locke and
Walnut Grove: Havens for Early Asian Immigrants in California
Understand the experience of early Asian immigrants and the obstacles they
encountered as they struggled to make a living and find a place in American
society.
The
War Relocation Centers of World War II: When Fear Was Stronger than Justice
Learn what led the U.S. government to confine nearly 120,000 people of
Japanese ancestry to relocation centers in remote areas of the country during
World War II.
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
(Featured Park)
Learn about the people, legends, landscapes and footprints at the park's History & Culture
section.
Pacific Islander Heritage
Kaloko-Honokohau
National Historical Park
( Past Featured Park)
American Memorial Park
Kalaupapa
National Historical Park
National Park of American Samoa
Puuhonua o Honaunau National Historical
Park
Pu'ukohola Heiau National Historic Site
War in the Pacific National Historical
Park
Asian American Heritage
Manzanar
National Historic Site
(Past Featured Park)
Minidoka Internment National Monument
Jun Fujita
Cabin at Voyageurs National Park
(Past Featured Park)
![[graphic text] Learn More](aphm-add_files/image007.gif)
Prominent Asian Pacific Americans
Asian
Reflections on the American Landscape: Identifying and Interpreting Asian
Heritage
The National Park Service's Cultural Diversity Program has recently released,
Asian Reflections on the American Landscape: Identifying and Interpreting
Asian Heritage,
which examines Asia cultural heritage found in the American Built environment
and its interpretation within NPS cultural resources programs. The
publication is available in print and in PDF format.
A new publication describing the 35 historic
places listed in the National Register in the Commonwealth of the Northern
Marianas Islands is coming soon. It will be available in English, Japanese
and Korean versions. Check for availability with the Northern Marianas
Historic Preservation Office online at www.cnmihpo.com/historicplaces.html
or send an email to info@cnmihpo.com.
Presidential
Proclamation: Asian Pacific American Heritage Month 2005
Asian
Pacific American Heritage Council was formed in 1979 to bring existing
Asian Pacific ethnic organizations together.
Asian
Pacific American Heritage Association was formed in 1992 to promote
awareness and increase understanding of the Asian American culture and its
diversity through education and celebration.
Federal
Asian Pacific American Heritage Council was formed in 1985 to promote
equal opportunity and cultural diversity for Asian Pacific American in the
Federal and Washington, D.C. government.
Chinese
American Museum is the first such museum in Southern California dedicated
to the Chinese American experience and history in this region.
Five
Views: An Ethnic Historic Site Survey for California, is a publication of
the California Parks and Recreation Department, which contains valuable
information on the experience of Chinese
Americans and Japanese
Americans in the state.
Confinement
and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites
In 1942, almost 120,000 Japanese Americans were forced from their homes in
California, western Oregon and Washington, and southern Arizona in the single
largest forced relocation in U.S. history. Many would spend the next 3 years
in one of ten "relocation centers" across the country run by the
newly-formed War Relocation Authority (WRA). This report provides an overview
of the physical remains left at the sites of the Japanese American
relocation. The main focus is on the architectural remnants, the
archeological features, and the artifacts remaining at the relocation centers
where Japanese Americans were held during World War II.
"CRM"
is the flagship publication of the NPS Cultural Resources Stewardship and
Partnership Programs and contains articles on the full range of cultural
resources management and preservation topics. The following issues deal
directly with questions regarding Asian and Pacific Islands cultural
resources.
Pacific
Preservation
Another
View from Hawai'i
Approaches
to Heritage: Hawaiian and Pacific Perspectives on Preservation
Preservation
in the Pacific Basin
Diversity
and Cultural Resources
National Register
Information System
Since its inception in 1966, more than 80,000 properties have been listed in
the National Register. Together these files hold information on more than 1.4
million individual resources--buildings, sites, districts, structures, and
objects--and therefore provide a link to the country's heritage at the
national, state, and local levels. Search by name, location, agency, or theme
to locate National Register properties associated with Asian-Pacific history.
Library of Congress:
Built
in America (HABS/HAER/HALS)
The Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS), the Historic American
Engineering Record (HAER) and Historic American Landscapes Survey (HALS)
collections document achievements in architecture, engineering, landscape and
design in the United States through a comprehensive range of building types
and engineering technologies, including sites related to Asian-Pacific
history and culture. Searches on keywords like "Japanese," "Chinese,"
or "World War II" will provide information on an array of
associated sites. Most of the site records have publication-quality drawings,
photographs and historical data. Of special interest are the following
properties: the Chee Kung Tong Society in Hawaii, the Joe Shoong Chinese
School, and the Chinese Joss House in California.
Ansel
Adams's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar
In 1943, Ansel Adams (1902-1984), America's best-known photographer,
documented the Manzanar War Relocation Center. Adams's Manzanar work is a
departure from his signature style of landscape photography, and includes not
only numerous portraits, but also views of daily life, agricultural scenes,
and sports and leisure activities.
California
Office of Historic Preservation preserves and enhances California's
irreplaceable historic heritage as a matter of public interest so that its
vital legacy of cultural, educational, recreational, aesthetic, economic,
social and environmental benefits will be maintained and enriched for present
and future generations.
Hawaii
State Historic Preservation Division works to preserve and sustain
reminders of earlier times which link the past to the present.
Oregon
State Historic Preservation Office administer programs for the protection
of the state's significant historic and prehistoric resources
Asian-Pacific
Heritage Month 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001 (special
Micronesia feature), 2000, and 1999 For more
information about Asian-Pacific properties listed in the National Register,
please visit these past Asian-Pacific Heritage Month features.
Granada Relocation
Center | Tule
Lake Segregation Center | Chinatown
Archeological Site | Little Tokyo
Historic District | Asian-Pacific
Heritage Month Home
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