Monument Hill (Beaverhead County, Montana)
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Monument Hill (Beaverhead County, Montana)
Monument Hill may refer to: * Monument Hill (Colorado), a mountain pass in Colorado, in the United States * Monument Hill (Washington), a hill in Eastern Washington, in the United States * Monument Hill and Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites, a state park in Texas, in the United States *Monument Hill, a site at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, Arizona *Monument Hill, a lookout and picnic spot near Kaikohe, New Zealand. See also *Monument Hills, California Monument Hills is a census-designated place in Yolo County, California. Monument Hills sits at an elevation of 135 feet (41 m). The 2010 United States census reported Monument Hills's population was 1,542. Geography According to the United States ...
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Monument Hill (Colorado)
Monument Hill or Black Forest Divide Pass is a elevation mountain pass in the Palmer Divide in central Colorado in the United States. The pass dividing the Arkansas River drainage system to the south and the Platte River drainage system to the north is the high point on I-25 between Denver and Colorado Springs. See also * Castle Rock, Colorado * Colorado Springs, Colorado * Monument, Colorado The Town of Monument is a Home rule town situated at the base of the Rampart Range in El Paso County, Colorado, United States. Monument is one of the three communities that make up the Tri-Lakes area (along with Palmer Lake and Woodmoor). Th ... References Mountain passes of Colorado Landforms of El Paso County, Colorado Interstate 25 {{Interstate-stub ...
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Monument Hill (Washington)
Monument Hill in the Beezley Hills is the second highest summit in Grant County, Washington at or . Monument Hill Road runs nearly to the summit, and another road runs a few hundred meters to the antenna farm at the summit itself. The antenna farm at the summit includes the KWWW-FM KWWW-FM (96.7 MHz, "KW3") is a radio station broadcasting a Top 40 (CHR) music format. The station went on the air in 1985, built by Jim Corcoran, who owned KWWW-AM in Wenatchee. Licensed to Quincy, Washington, United States, the station is curre ... transmitter and KZML transmitter. References Further reading * Mountains of Grant County, Washington Mountains of Washington (state) {{GrantCountyWA-geo-stub ...
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Monument Hill And Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites
Monument Hill and Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites is a historic state park located at 29.888° -96.876°, just off U.S. Route 77, south of La Grange, Texas. The park sits on a sandstone bluff above the Colorado River. Monument Hill is a crypt and memorial to the men who died in the Dawson Massacre and in the Black Bean Episode of the ill-fated Mier Expedition. The Kreische Brewery site commemorates the contribution European immigrants made in Texas, specifically German immigrant, stonemason and brewer Heinrich Kreische, whose house and brewery ruins are in the park. The Kreische Brewery and house were listed in the National Register of Historic Places on April 16, 1975. History On September 18, 1848, the remains of Texans killed in the Dawson Massacre and the Black Bean Episode (death lottery), which had been retrieved from their original burial sites, were reinterred in a common tomb with a sandstone vault at the location now known as Monument Hill. Over 1,000 p ...
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Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument
Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument is a U.S. national monument and UNESCO biosphere reserve located in extreme southern Arizona that shares a border with the Mexican state of Sonora. The park is the only place in the United States where the senita and organ pipe cactus grow wild. Along with this species, many other types of cacti and other desert flora native to the Yuma Desert section of the Sonoran Desert region grow in the park. Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument is in size. In 1976 the monument was declared a Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO, and in 1977 95% of Organ Pipe Cactus was declared a wilderness area. Land for the Monument was donated by the Arizona state legislature to the federal government during Prohibition knowing that the north–south road would be improved and make contraband alcohol easier to import from Mexico. In 1937 the land was officially opened as a national monument. At the north entrance of the park is the unincorporated community of Why, Arizona; ...
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