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  • A history lesson on how various kings and rulers had theories on how to protect their country from..invaders. Each child, including two friends on spring break from the local elementary school, took turns being king for a moment.
    Home school Los Angeles CA26.jpg
  • Visitors to a civil rights exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of American History in Washington DC.
    Smithsonian Museum02.jpg
  • Visitors to a civil rights exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of American History in Washington DC.
    Smithsonian Museum01.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Avery Clayton is opening a African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 007.
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 006.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Avery Clayton is opening a African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 010.
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 005.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 002.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 009.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 001.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 012.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Avery Clayton is opening a African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 008.
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 004.jpg
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Avery Clayton is opening a African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 011
  • CULVER CITY, CA, January 29, 2008: Some of the artifacts gathered by Avery Clayton to be displayed at the African American museum in Culver City, California. The museum will house artifacts from private collections, especially his mother's collection of African American history.
    Avery Clayton 013.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5771.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5751.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5733.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5719.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5709.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5645.jpg
  • Known as the Exorcist Stairs, the set of around 94 stairs in Georgetown draw fitness enthusiasts and film buffs to the vertical staircase. This is the site of one of the final scenes when the priest battles the demons and is thrown from a window at the top of the staircase and falls down the narrow, concrete stairs.
    Washington DC Travel-5484.jpg
  • Known as the Exorcist Stairs, the set of around 94 stairs in Georgetown draw fitness enthusiasts and film buffs to the vertical staircase. This is the site of one of the final scenes when the priest battles the demons and is thrown from a window at the top of the staircase and falls down the narrow, concrete stairs.
    Washington DC Travel-5474.jpg
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway02.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway07.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway03.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway09.JPG
  • Legendary UCLA Basketball coach John Wooden
    John Wooden03.jpg
  • Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    SharonRogone08.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: A guard tower at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp11.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp06.jpg
  • Avery Clayton worked to open an African American museum in Culver City, California where he will project a life-size hologram of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., making a speech from a Birmingham, AL jail.
    Avery Clayton 003.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5816.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5815.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5810.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5789.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5805.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5793.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5754.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5702.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5723.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5707.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5696.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5683.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5675.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5658.jpg
  • The statue of Iwo Jima commemorating the US Marine Corps during the famous World War II battle. The statue is based on the famous photograph by Joseph Rosenthal
    Washington DC Travel-5639.jpg
  • Known as the Exorcist Stairs, the set of around 94 stairs in Georgetown draw fitness enthusiasts and film buffs to the vertical staircase. This is the site of one of the final scenes when the priest battles the demons and is thrown from a window at the top of the staircase and falls down the narrow, concrete stairs.
    Washington DC Travel-5528.jpg
  • Known as the Exorcist Stairs, the set of around 94 stairs in Georgetown draw fitness enthusiasts and film buffs to the vertical staircase. This is the site of one of the final scenes when the priest battles the demons and is thrown from a window at the top of the staircase and falls down the narrow, concrete stairs.
    Washington DC Travel-5490.jpg
  • Known as the Exorcist Stairs, the set of around 94 stairs in Georgetown draw fitness enthusiasts and film buffs to the vertical staircase. This is the site of one of the final scenes when the priest battles the demons and is thrown from a window at the top of the staircase and falls down the narrow, concrete stairs.
    Washington DC Travel-5494.jpg
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway01.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway04.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway05.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway06.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway08.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway10.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway12.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway11.JPG
  • SAN DIEGO, CA- February 25, 2006: The Midway, famous for it's World War 2 battle by the same name, is now a floating museum in San Diego, California. Visitors can view the many planes on the Midway from the flight deck which offers views of the San Diego skyline or visit the interior of the ship.
    Midway13.JPG
  • The Historic Knight Wheel is situated along the Mammoth Lakes Town Bike Loop.
    Mammoth Eastern Sierras Fall Climate...jpg
  • The Historic Knight Wheel is situated along the Mammoth Lakes Town Bike Loop.
    Mammoth Eastern Sierras Fall Climate...jpg
  • The Historic Knight Wheel is situated along the Mammoth Lakes Town Bike Loop.
    Mammoth Eastern Sierras Fall Climate...jpg
  • Legendary UCLA Basketball coach John Wooden
    John Wooden02_B&W.jpg
  • Legendary UCLA Basketball coach John Wooden
    John Wooden04.jpg
  • Legendary UCLA Basketball coach John Wooden
    John Wooden02.jpg
  • Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    SharonRogone12.jpg
  • Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    SharonRogone11.jpg
  • Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    SharonRogone10.jpg
  • Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    SharonRogone09.jpg
  • Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    SharonRogone07.jpg
  • SAN BERNARDINO, CA, June 14, 2007: Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation. Sharon holds one of the tiny diapers.
    Sharone Rogone06.JPG
  • SAN BERNARDINO, CA, June 14, 2007: Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    Sharone Rogone05.JPG
  • SAN BERNARDINO, CA, June 14, 2007: Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation. She discusses care with a nurse in the NICU.
    Sharone Rogone04.JPG
  • SAN BERNARDINO, CA, June 14, 2007: Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation. She visits with a nurse caring for a preemie.
    Sharone Rogone03.JPG
  • SAN BERNARDINO, CA, June 14, 2007: Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    Sharone Rogone02.JPG
  • SAN BERNARDINO, CA, June 14, 2007: Sharon Rogone, a former Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse turned innovator and businesswoman, formed a company called Small Beginnings Inc, which specializes in medical supplies to care and treat premature infants. Her inventions, including the tiny diaper called the Cuddle Buns Diaper, earned her a place in the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation.
    Sharone Rogone01.JPG
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The entrance to Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, is off U.S. 395 in Independence, California. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp16.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp15.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp14.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp13.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp12.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The sentry posts Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, were built by a internee at the camp. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp10.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp09.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp08.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp07.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp05.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp04.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp03.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Visitors in the Interpretive Center at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp02.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Visitors in the Interpretive Center at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp01.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle_iPhone-7798.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle_iPhone-7797.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5457.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5394.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5386.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5381.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5373.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5324.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5295.jpg
  • The most snow in history fell on Mammoth Lakes in the Eastern Sierras in February, 2019. Upwards of 20 feet fell on Mammoth Mountain and blanketed the town.
    Mammoth Winter Lifestyle-5300.jpg
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Todd Bigelow Photography

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