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Through maps and graphs, the authors show how excluding cats within 350 meters of an (urban) forest may prevent most predation of native species.

Prey selection and predation behavior of free-roaming domestic cats in an urban ecosystem: Implications for urban cat management

Audio
Kasperbauer, Carmen_Z26_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Kasperbauer, Carmen_Z26_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. Carmen Artaro [sp?] Kasperbauer was dressed as an angel for the feast of the Immaculate Conception on Monday, December 8, 1941, when the Japanese attacked Guam. She was six years old and attending mass with her older sister Maria and her father. They heard a lot of airplanes and later an explosion. The priest let them go when they did not hear more planes approaching. Everybody was screaming and running, and the girls lost track of their father but were found by their aunt, who took them home. Their father and mother and siblings were sitting in their truck filled with household goods. Carmen thought her father had abandoned them and did not learn until after the war that he had asked her aunt to look after her so he could run home to her mother and siblings and get ready. As they drove the truck, people were hanging onto it, and Carmen’s father had to fight them off. 

They stayed in their aunt’s house on the family ranch for the rest of the war. It had no electricity and no running water and an outhouse. Occasionally they went to Agana and stayed at their own home. Carmen recalls that people had to get out of their trucks and bow deeply to the Japanese guards, and if they did not bow properly they would be punished. On one trip, Carmen’s mother was carrying a letter from George Tweed to Mrs. Johnston and was afraid she would be searched. At the beginning of the war there was enough food, but eventually things got harder. The Japanese would pass by their house on the way to the lighthouse they were building, and they would usually try to come during mealtime and would chase the family off the table and eat the food. When Carmen’s family saw the Japanese coming, her mother would keep the baby and smaller kids near her because she thought that would protect her from being raped or molested, and the older children would go hide in the jungle. 

Carmen remembers always being hungry on the ranch and watching her parents prepare food for her father to take to the jungle for George Tweed. She did not know whom it was for and resented it. She says it seemed like there were a lot of secretive things going on. Later her father started making fewer trips into the jungle and she began to help him carry the food, and they would have to be careful not to be seen by any Japanese. He would leave her in the jungle to gather something and told her he was taking the food to the Japanese in the nearby lighthouse, but she did not notice the contradiction. One time he left her for a long time in the jungle and she thought he was getting rid of her because there wasn’t enough food to feed everybody at home.

Carmen recalls another incident where she was playing and imitating a bird, saying “tweet, tweet, tweet,” and her mother told her never to say that and hit and kicked her. She thought her mother hated her and only later learned her mother was concerned that somebody would overhear and associate them with George Tweed. 

Carmen says when her father first saw Tweed he decided to help him because he was gaunt and reminded him of Jesus Christ before he was crucified. Her father remembered learning the biblical saying “I am my brother’s keeper” and took Tweed in. A lot of people wanted to help save Tweed because of their belief in American democracy. Others were angry that Tweed had not turned himself in. While Tweed was hiding he did not know what the Chamorro people were thinking. The Japanese were interested in getting Tweed because he was the only radioman on the island, and they wanted his help to spy on U.S. military activity in the Pacific.

When the Americans were bombarding the island, Carmen’s dad took the last of the provisional food to Tweed’s cave and planned to tell him he couldn’t bring more food. Tweed had left a note that he had signaled an American ship and left the island. Carmen’s father returned to the ranch and the family planned to go to the Japanese concentration camp.  As they were preparing to go, two Japanese came by, first to get another male relative and then to get Carmen’s father, under the guise of repayment for food from the ranch. Carmen ran and got a rifle or shotgun her father was hiding in a hollow tree. He refused to go with the Japanese and, after they left, took the family to Tweed’s cave. They remained there until August 8th, Carmen’s birthday, when Americans arrived and gave them a little food.

Kasperbauer, Carmen_Z26_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

Audio
Siguenza, Peter_Z27_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Siguenza, Peter_Z27_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. Peter C. Siguenza was born in Guam and grew up in Agana until he left for high school. He remembers it being a peaceful, slow lifestyle. He and his friends were altar boys and choir boys and would often play on the Plaza de Espana early before mass, and the Marine Century [sp?] from the Governor’s Palace would tell them to keep down the noise or leave. At that time, under the naval government, they were forbidden from whistling and from taking and doing many things in Agana. On balance he thinks the administration of the navy was beneficial because it stressed sanitation and provided schools, medical and dental care, and the police department. When he returned to the island as a marine, he recalls seeing the destruction of the island, including his own home. Many people were given housing in villages and moved away from Agana. 

Siguenza was with the 3rd Marine Division during World War II. When he was a sophomore at San Diego State College in April 1942 he enlisted in the Marine Corps in San Diego, California. The division trained in New Zealand for Pacific jungle operations. Their first operation was the invasion of Bougainville on November 1, 1943. The next operation was Guam. They were in a convoy on transport on the USS Dupage when at Asan, outside of Guam, orders came through for Siguenza to return to the United States because he had been selected to go to officer’s candidate school. He wanted to continue to Guam but his commanding general would not let him. He was transferred to a destroyer and made his way back to Virginia. When he was commissioned he was flown out to Guam to rejoin the 3rd Marine Division after the island was already secured and his buddies had returned home.

Siguenza joined another outfit that was training in Guam for the invasion of Japan. During that time there were some problems on the island, and his battalion was sent out to secure the area and flush out some Japanese stragglers. The stragglers were strongly motivated not to surrender, but it seemed the Americans succeeded in flushing them out because there was no further harassment fire. 

Siguenza had relatives or friends in the villages; one time he had lunch with a man in his home, and another time he surprised a woman by understanding her statement in Chamorro, “no wonder the marines can’t catch Japanese because they are looking for women.” 

On September 2, 1945, the message came in that the Japanese had surrendered, and there was much joy among the troops. Siguenza had to stay in Guam because he was regular Marine Corps and he was assigned to island command, which had responsibility for the predecessor of the government of Guam. He returned to San Diego in mid-1946.

Siguenza attended events on Guam commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Japanese invasion on December 8, 1941. He met ten Japanese veterans and reflected on how, during the war, it was his mission to kill them. He told them that he has forgiven. He thinks there is much more to be gained in the world by peace than by war.

Siguenza, Peter_Z27_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

Audio
Elliot, Hirian_Z29_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Elliot, Hiram_Z29_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. Hiram W. Elliot was interviewed in 1992 to talk about his life in Guam in the early part of the 1940’s.  He starts by talking about the early part of December 1941 in Guam and visiting his wife in the hospital, who had just given birth to their first child.  On the morning of December 8th he noticed people were acting strange and ran into his father who told him he heard on the radio about Pearl Harbor being bombed.  A sailor friend of his came up to him and told him that he had better get out of there because the Japs may be coming to Guam to hit it.  Looking up in the sky, he saw some planes heading toward the direction of Sumay. At that point Hiram decided to get his wife out of the hospital, but found that her mother and sister had already gotten her and the baby and headed towards Barrigada.  Bombing had started, but Hiram recalls very few bombs being dropped in Agana – mostly where the government buildings were located.  They were also dropped in the smokestack of the power plant. Hiram headed up to Barrigada to be with his family, staying until the 9th. At that time he went back down to get some personal items out of their house in Agana.  He returned to Barrigada and the next day heard that there was a call out for people to proceed down to Agana and meet up with the Japanese.  Hiram was reluctant because he didn’t know whether it was a trap or a trick.  He decided to go and found that at the plaza there was a long line of people getting passes that would permit you to roam around.  They ran out of passes before Hiram reached the front of the line. They then proceeded to Plaza Despana where they were going to be introduced to the big wheels of the Japanese Navy, where they indoctrinated them and told them that they were now citizens of the Japanese Empire.  After a couple days, they felt safe enough to return to their home in Agana, which they had to clean out from the mess of the bombings.

One month after arriving, the Japanese Army left Guam, leaving only some Japanese Navy. Hiram was told to open his drug store up to the Japanese men to sell the merchandise.  He almost sold everything. He was then told to give what was left to the Japanese Office of Civil Affairs. 

Food was becoming scarce since the early part of 1943.  Hiram had a job working at the Naval Air Station at that time, the Japanese Air Base up at the Naval Air Station, one of the first ones they began building. The Japanese Army came back about February 1944 and that is when all the work started picking up for the building of the airports.  One at Orote Peninsula out at Sumay and the other one up at where Naval Air Station is now, the International Airport.  By then, Hiram and his family had moved up to Maite, a suburb of Agana.  Agana was re-occupied again by the army.  Soon after that, the city of Agana would be a target.  A target from American ships who were a little over 30 miles outside of Guam. Maite became an unsafe place to live with all the shrapnel flying from the bombs hitting Agana. They moved to the swamps where it was far and there was plenty of food in coconut trees and water. Hiram would hike towards Yigo to forage sweet potatoes and whatever grows in the ground. He talks about seeing the Japanese soldier’s cremating their dead.

The local Guamanian leader was directed to advise everyone around that area to proceed up towards Ordot.  This was very difficult travel with the terrain.  They finally got up to Yona, where they stopped for a while and waited for daylight and then proceeded down into Manenggon. At Manenggon, they crammed as many people as possible into pup tents. They stayed in Manenggon for a month where it was very rainy and muddy and the conditions were filthy and horrible. They left after an American soldier came to the camp.  They went up toward Mt. Tenjo.   Hiram hadn’t bathed in six weeks and was excited to take his first bath when he came down to a refugee camp in Anigua.   He remembers going to the USO galley for a big plate of bread pudding.  Hiram found his family down at the refugee camp in Anigua. He stayed with them until he got a job as sanitary inspector.  Soon his wife and child and mother in law proceeded back up to Maite where his mother in law used to live.  The roof was filled with holes and some Marines were living in the top floors for a couple weeks.  Hiram’s family lived in the bottom floor which had a dirt floor.

Hiram talks about having no change of clothes and running into a friend of his who was a steward in the Navy.  This friend managed to get Hiram a suit for $5, which was much too big but Hiram was happy to have it.   

Hiram returned to the subject of the destruction of Agana.  Talking about how the bombing started around about the later part of April – between April and May 1944. The bombs were dropped by dive bombers and they were coming incessantly, just about every day. As a result, Agana was burnt to a crisp.  As the rains came during the night, they would mix in with the coals and everything and later on, during the day, the bombs would come back and re-light up those flames again. Hiram went back to Agana about two weeks after the Americans had come in. The streets were filled with mud about a foot thick and it was soft and all white like ashes.  

Hiram became a telephone lineman and had been given the job of crew boss.  They went out to different US Army outfits to provide them with a crew to dig trenches for the island wide telephone system.  There were still Japanese snipers.  They had soldiers with them, guarding them.  

Hiram talks about having no objection to Japanese coming to Guam, but he can’t forget what their purpose was in the beginning.   He feels that since Hawaii was inside that Southeast Asia Co-prosperity Sphere, they were not hit by accident. The Japanese were going for little islands and Guam was included there. Because Japan is over-populated right now and they are very prolithic, they want to go into other places.  And Guam had been on their schedule for a long time.

Elliot, Hiram_Z29_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

Audio
Perez, Juan Namaulea_Z36_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Perez, Juan Namaulea_Z36_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. Juan Manuel Perez was 71 years old at the time of this interview. On December 8th, 1941, he was chief boatman for Pan American Airways. The upper manager told the maintenance crew that Pearl Harbor had been bombed and briefly told them what to do if a bomb was dropped, to lie down flat. Shortly after that shrapnel from a bomb hit Perez. He went home to pick up his family and went to the cave behind the church in Sumay with about half the residents in the area. After the planes left that afternoon he returned to work and found that the boat he operated was not hit. That night they heard the Japanese were ready to invade the island. Perez was picked up by the Japanese and held in Sumay for three days to train some of the crew on how to operate the boat. He tried to sabotage the boat and learned a week or two later that the transmission was not working. 

Perez made some trips to steal dynamite and distributed it to friends and family to use it to fish. The last trip he made with two friends to steal dynamite, they got caught and threw sticks of dynamite in front of the guards, then jumped over a cliff and swam across the channel to escape. They successfully hid from the Japanese that day but were arrested the next day and taken to the barracks in Sumay, where they were interrogated and tortured. That night they were fed and watched a movie with the Japanese. The next day they were taken to Agana and watched a firing squad in the cemetery, but still would not confess. They were taken to court; Perez was sentenced to five years, one of his friends was sentenced to ten years, and the other friend was sentenced to ten years to life. The prison where they were held was damaged and they would usually escape at night and return by morning. They had small rations but got some help from civilians in the area. 

This continuation of Juan Perez’s interview starts with him talking about how he wants his children to learn to forgive and not to forget. 

Juan talks about being brought to Agat, to a camp where the local people were stationed.  The following day, he went the 59 Battalion and spoke to Lieutenant Commander Jenkin and told him he knew where the Japanese Army are concentrating – where they are now.  He was interviewed at Island Command in Apra and they filmed him as he spoke.  He pointed to the area where he knew the Japanese were moving.  Up in Yigo, by Dededo, going to the northwest field.  

Juan explains how he was never able to return to his town, Sumay.  When the Americans invaded the island, they were told that they made an arrangement for the people of Sumay to move to Ypan, but people of Sumay rejected that. They ended up in Santa Rita.  Juan describes the beauty of Sumay before the war and tells about how the people in the town worked together and helped each other.

Perez, Juan Namaulea_Z36_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

Audio
Reyes, Jose_Z40_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Reyes, Jose_Z40_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. The interviewer describes how difficult life was in Guam during World War II. The Japanese attacked on December 8th, 1941. During three and a half years of occupation, the Chamorros were subjected to forced labor and eventually placed in concentration camps. Near the end of the occupation, Japanese behavior grew more violent. The Japanese command made a decision to kill all of the residents of the southern village of Merizo, and some of the worst mass executions of Chamorros took place there, in the caves of Tinta and Faha. Jose Soriano Reyes, whose wife had been executed, led an uprising against the Japanese. 

On July 10th, 1944, Jose’s wife, Laurice [ph] Cruz Reyes, told him that she was to be executed. A fight with an airplane in the area stopped the execution. Jose was about 20 miles away in Agana, and he returned to Merizo on the 15th. The Japanese were gathering the villagers and he sent his wife ahead with the children. On his way to join them, he heard grenades being thrown into the cave at Tinta where 30 villagers were held. Fourteen survived and hid under dead bodies to avoid being bayoneted by the Japanese. After nightfall they escaped. The next day, the Japanese gathered 30 more villagers and asked for help delivering supplies to Japanese to the north. The villagers were taken to Faha cave and again executed with hand grenades. This time there were no survivors. Other villagers, including Jose, were forced to move supplies. They went to the concentration camp at Atate. Jose learned that the Japanese had the young women massage them and deduced that it was time for the bonsai [sp?]. The Japanese had the villagers dig a large hole, which Reyes thought was for the people of Merizo, and he decided it was time to act. 

Reyes went with John Angulta [ph] and Pat Tidyron [ph] to fight the Japanese, and after they attacked the first guards, four other boys who had previously agreed to help Jose joined them. They killed four guards and took their weapons. About 50 or 60 people joined them, armed with sticks. They killed more Japanese and went to a supply depot. Two boys from Inarajan approached Jose with a note for the Japanese people in the Merizo cemetery. Jose asked the guards who were protecting the people from Merizo to keep the boys there. Then Jose and his people went to Agat and continued going after the Japanese. Jose sent his brother-in-law, Tony Leong Guerrero [ph], with five men on an outrigger canoe to go to an American ship and tell its commander that the Japanese were moving north. After reaching the ship they returned as scouts and guides leading the Marines through Agat and Merizo. 

According to the interviewer, Merizo was the only village on Guam that was liberated by its own people. The Guam Legislature adopted resolutions in 1972 and 1989 expressing recognition and commendation of Jose Reyes and the band of Guamanians he led.

Reyes, Jose_Z40_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

Feral horses (Equus ferus) fighting, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, 2015..

Feral horses (Equus ferus) fighting, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, 2015.

Farm cat, Jimmy Carter National Historical Park, 2015..

Farm cat, Jimmy Carter National Historical Park, 2015.

Wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo), Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, 2016.. North America's wild and domestic turkeys are actually the same species, originally derived from a southern Mexican subspecies of wild turkey. Interestingly, the moniker 'turkey' probably didn't originate in North America at all. Instead, as the domesticated variety of turkey was imported to Britain via Spain, the British associated the bird with the country Turkey and the common name was never changed.

Wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo), Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, 2016.

Heritage farm in winter, George Washington Birthplace National Monument, 2015.. Merlin is one of the retired horses living at the heritage farm.

Heritage farm in winter, George Washington Birthplace National Monument, 2015.

Audio
Reyes, Rafael_Z35_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Reyes, Rafael_Z35_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. Ralph Reges was fifteen, the youngest child and an errand boy at his home in 1941. His errand on December 8th was to take his niece to church for the lady of the Immaculate Conception day. About halfway through the mass they heard planes and then an explosion, and the priest ended the mass and told them to go home because Sumay was just bombed by the Japanese. Everybody went berserk, running and screaming. Ralph got his niece to his sister in Agana and ran back to his home in Agana Heights where his family was gathered. They loaded household items, provisions, and clothing onto the bull carts and prepared to go to the boonies. Ralph’s father sent him to help his aunt, a widower, who he stayed with throughout the war. When he and his aunt walked down San Ramon Hill to secure their surrender badges, it was like a different world with soldiers all over the place. 

Ralph was known as a hardworking boy and was selected for forced work details. He replaced his brother-in-law on the manganese mining crew for a couple of days. Toward the end of the war Ralph’s civilian group dug tunnels and foxholes. They hustled and had little rest. The only way to escape being hit, slapped, poked or struck with a bayonet was through good behavior. The experience reminded him of slavery in the South. Ralph was also chosen to lay mines on the shores as tank barriers. While on this detail it began to rain very hard and the American bombardment began, and he and four friends took cover under a raised hut. A shell hit the hut and one friend died immediately, another later that day. Ralph told his detail supervisor that he was not well and would be burying his friends, and he was told to be at home because soon people would be sent to the concentration camps. Ralph’s area was sent to the camp called Mata, in Talafofo, where they built shelters and were able to hunt and forage for food. He was climbing a coconut tree when he saw Americans. They did not realize he spoke English and at first tried to communicate with him like Tarzan, saying “You Guam, me American.” Marines worked to secure the area and led people out, and then Ralph learned that his brother had been brutally beheaded and his father was in a concentration camp elsewhere cooking for Japanese officers. From then on they knew they were in safe positions and started picking up where they left off. 

After the war Ralph served as a superintendent at the park in Asan where the emplacements [sp?] he built were located. At the tenth anniversary in August 1988 he made a statement about being the only superintendent in the National Park Service helping to protect and preserve what he unwillingly helped construct. The structures are deteriorating fast because they were meant for temporary protection from invading troops. When he was superintendent he was asked how he felt about the Japanese, and while he hated the one who beheaded his brother, he knows the Japanese were working under strict orders.

Reyes, Rafael_Z35_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

Audio
Pellett, Father Marian_Z34_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_public.mp3

Pellett, Father Marcian_Z34_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf. Father Marcian was thirty when he came to Guam, and thirty-one in December 1941. At the time of this interview, he has been in Guam for fifty-two years. On Monday, December 8th, 1941, the Japanese bombed Guam at the same time that they were bombing Honolulu (where it was Sunday) and the Philippines. Father Marcian was at the commissioner’s house after performing a High Mass when a young man who had run seven miles from Agat to Umatec began yelling in Chamorro that the Japanese were bombing Sumay. The second day a plane came and shot over the houses. Overnight the Japanese started the invasion. On Wednesday there was bombing. Father Marcian and a corpsman [sp?] and a marine stayed in a shack that night and surrendered to Japanese soldiers going by the next morning. Father Marcian and the corpsman were taken to a house and told to stay there or they would be shot. That night they learned the Japanese had left, and they went back to Father Marcian’s house and stayed for a while. 

On January 3rd Father Marcian was imprisoned with other priests, and on January 10th they were taken to Japan. They were on the ship with American marines and there was little food.
They arrived in southern Japan and stayed in a prison for two weeks, and then were taken to Kobe, Japan. They spent two winters with other British and American prisoners in the Canadian Academy, the first without heat. There was almost no food and they lost a lot of weight. There were about 160 people in the camp. They were moved to another camp just before the B-29s started flying over Japan in 1944.  They remained in the camp until after the emperor’s surrender. 

General Macarthur arrived in 1945 and started sending rescue teams to the camps. They were transported to Seattle and then flew or took a train to their individual places. Father Marcian returned to Guam on March 18, 1946, and saw that it was all torn up. He knew two people who were killed in a massacre.

Pellett, Father Marcian_Z34_WAPA-246_WAPA 4170_OralHist_Audio_transcript.pdf

The backside of a colored postcard of Palm Avenue near Queen's hospital in Honolulu. The words “Post Card” are centered on the card.  Above the words is “A-11644.” In between “Post Card” is the Hawaiian Coat-of-Arms. On the top right corner of the image there is a stamp box. Inside the stamp box are the instructions, “Place the Stamp here, One Cent for United States and Island Possessions, Cuba, Canada, and Mexico Two Cents for Foreign.” The postcard is divided into two halves. On the left side there is a description, “The royal palm is one of the most graceful and dignified of all of Hawaii’s trees, it is especially stately when planted in avenues, and it is a feature of landscape gardening in Hawaiʻi to plant these in two parallel long rows. One of the most beautiful of these royal palm avenues is at the Queen’s Hospital.” Also, printed along the left edge of the image is “75 Published by Hawaii and South Seas Curio Co., Honolulu. Made in USA.” Below “Card” is the subtitle “Address Only on This Side.”

Back of "Palm Avenue and Queen's Hospital Grounds"

Griswold, Florence, House and Museum.

Griswold, Florence, House and Museum

Griswold, Florence, House and Museum.

Griswold, Florence, House and Museum

Bush--Holley House.

Bush--Holley House

Bush--Holley House.

Bush--Holley House

San Diego Presidio.

San Diego Presidio

San Diego Presidio.

San Diego Presidio

Rancho Camulos.

Rancho Camulos

Rancho Camulos.

Rancho Camulos

Palmer, Capt. Nathaniel N., House.

Palmer, Capt. Nathaniel N., House

Palmer, Capt. Nathaniel N., House.

Palmer, Capt. Nathaniel N., House

Johnson, Philip, Glass House.

Johnson, Philip, Glass House

Johnson, Philip, Glass House.

Johnson, Philip, Glass House

Hill--Stead.

Hill--Stead

Hill--Stead.

Hill--Stead

Bowen, Henry C., House.

Bowen, Henry C., House

Bowen, Henry C., House.

Bowen, Henry C., House

Nixon, Richard, Birthplace.

Nixon, Richard, Birthplace

Austin, A. Everett, House.

Austin, A. Everett, House

Austin, A. Everett, House.

Austin, A. Everett, House

Armsmear.

Armsmear

Leadville Historic District.

Leadville Historic District

Leadville Historic District.

Leadville Historic District

Georgetown -- Silver Plume Historic District.

Georgetown -- Silver Plume Historic District

Georgetown -- Silver Plume Historic District.

Georgetown -- Silver Plume Historic District

Central City -- Black Hawk Historic District.

Central City -- Black Hawk Historic District

Central City -- Black Hawk Historic District.

Central City -- Black Hawk Historic District

Warner's Ranch.

Warner's Ranch

Warner's Ranch.

Warner's Ranch

Mission Inn.

Mission Inn

Mission Inn.

Mission Inn

Kennecott Mines.

Kennecott Mines

Eagle Historic District.

Eagle Historic District

Locke Historic District.

Locke Historic District

Locke Historic District.

Locke Historic District

Little Tokyo Historic District.

Little Tokyo Historic District

Larkin House.

Larkin House

Angel Island, U.S. Immigration Station.

Angel Island, U.S. Immigration Station

Angel Island, U.S. Immigration Station.

Angel Island, U.S. Immigration Station

Hotel Del Coronado.

Hotel Del Coronado

Hotel Del Coronado.

Hotel Del Coronado


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