User:Clorox/United States national monuments

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The United States National Monuments are protected federal lands created by presidential proclamation or an act of Congress. These lands are administered by various federal agencies, including the National Park Service, the Forest Service, and the Bureau of Land Management. Accordingly, they may be a step down from the national parks in general, but they are still spectacular and fascinating pieces of natural scenery and national history; many of these places could be the highlight of a major trip or could be worth a whole trip on their own.

Monuments operated by the National Park Service offer a similar experience to the country's national parks, though often on a smaller scale. Like national parks of the United States, visitor centers with information and restrooms are typically present, though they require a fee to enter. Monuments administered by other agencies are usually free to visit, but restrooms and other amenities may be limited or unavailable. While the full experience of Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management monuments may be limited to more adventurous offroad drivers or backcountry hikers, many still boast stunning scenery and breathtaking views for drivers who prefer sticking to the paved roads.

The map markers in this article are color-coded by the agency that operates the national monument: green for the National Park Service, brown for the Forest Service, orange for the Bureau of Land Management, and gray for other federal agencies. All marine national monuments are blue.

Map
Map of United States national monuments

New England[edit]

Maine[edit]

  • 1 Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, Patten

Mid-Atlantic[edit]

Maryland[edit]

Fort McHenry National Monument
  • 2 Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine, Federal Hill, Baltimore — Site of a famous battle in the War of 1812 where Francis Scott Key saw the American flag still flying over the fort and composed the lyrics to the Star Spangled Banner, which later became the country's national anthem.

New York[edit]

Statue of Liberty National Monument
  • 3 African Burial Ground National Monument, Financial District, New York City — A site in Lower Manhattan containing the remains of hundreds of Africans buried in what was a colonial-era cemetery.
  • 4 Castle Clinton National Monument, Financial District, New York City — A former fort at the southern tip of Manhattan that also served as the main immigration station in the country until a larger one at Ellis Island was built.
  • 5 Fort Stanwix National Monument, Rome — A fort in upstate New York that was the site of a battle in the American Revolution.
  • 6 Governors Island National Monument, New York Harbor, New York City — An island park just off the southern tip of Manhattan that was once the site of military fortifications and an army base.
  • 7 Statue Of Liberty National Monument, New York Harbor, New York City — Home to Lady Liberty, still greeting visitors to New York Harbor. Tours of the inside of the statue are available if you reserve far in advance. Nearby on a separate island is Ellis Island, the famous former immigration station where the ancestors of a significant portion of America's population arrived in the United States.
  • 8 Stonewall National Monument, Greenwich Village, New York City — the Stonewall Inn and surrounding area, site of the Stonewall riots, making this the first national monument dedicated to LGBT history.

Washington, D.C.[edit]

  • 9 Belmont–Paul Women's Equality National Monument, Capitol Hill — One of the most historic buildings in Washington, of great importance in the women's rights movement.

South[edit]

Alabama[edit]

  • 10 Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument, Birmingham — Birmingham saw several key events in the Civil Rights Movement, leaving historic landmarks preserved to this day.
  • 11 Freedom Riders National Monument, Anniston — Two locations important to the Civil Rights Movement: an old Greyhound Bus depot, and the site outside town where a bus was burned.
  • 12 Russell Cave National Monument — A cave system noted for its significant prehistoric archaeological finds; site of the earliest known human settlement in the southeastern United States.

Georgia[edit]

  • 13 Fort Frederica National Monument, St. Simons Island — Preserves the ruins of a British fort and town from the 18th century.
  • 14 Fort Pulaski National Monument, Tybee Island — A masonry fort that was the site of a crucial naval battle during the Civil War.

Kentucky[edit]

  • 15 Camp Nelson National Monument, Nicholasville — a training ground for African-American soldiers in the Civil War.
  • 16 Mill Springs Battlefield National Monument, near Somerset – a Civil War battlefield.

Louisiana[edit]

  • 17 Poverty Point National Monument, Pioneer, Northern Louisiana — Prehistoric earthworks and mounds dating to nearly three thousand years ago.

Mississippi[edit]

  • 18 Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument, Jackson, Mississippi — home of civil rights activist Medgar Evers.

Virginia[edit]

  • 19 Booker T Washington National Monument, Roanoke — Preserves portions of a former tobacco plantation where Booker T. Washington, noted African-American political leader, was born into slavery.
  • 20 Fort Monroe National Monument, Hampton — A former military base that was a strategic site for forts from the first colonists in the area to the Civil War, when it served as a safe haven for freed slaves.
  • 21 George Washington Birthplace National Monument, Westmoreland County — Site of George Washington's birth and burial place of many of Washington's family members. Period buildings and furnishings are on display.

Florida[edit]

  • 22 Castillo de San Marcos National Monument, St. Augustine — Built as a Spanish fort in the 17th century before changing to British and American hands.
  • 23 Fort Matanzas National Monument, St. Augustine — A small Spanish fort dating to the 1740s.

Midwest[edit]

Illinois[edit]

  • 24 Pullman National Monument, Pullman, Chicago — A historic district that was once a company town built for the Pullman sleeping car company and the site of the violent 1894 Pullman labor strike, which played a significant role in U.S. labor and civil rights history.

Iowa[edit]

Minnesota[edit]

  • 26 Grand Portage National Monument — A footpath that bypasses a set of waterfalls and rapids, once used by fur trappers in the area.
  • 27 Pipestone National Monument, Pipestone — Preserves a set of quarries for stone used in traditional Plains Indians culture to create peace pipes.

Missouri[edit]

  • 28 George Washington Carver National Monument, Diamond (near Joplin) — Boyhood home of botanist and inventor George Washington Carver.

Ohio[edit]

  • 29 Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument, Xenia — Commemorates the life of Charles Young, the first African American National Park Service Superintendent and the highest ranking black army officer of his time.

Texas[edit]

  • 30 Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument, Fritch — A quarry site for flint that was distributed throughout the Great Plains in prehistoric times.
  • 31 Waco Mammoth National Monument, Waco — A paleontological site with fossilized mammoths.

Great Plains[edit]

Nebraska[edit]

South Dakota[edit]

Jewel Cave National Monument

Rocky Mountains[edit]

Colorado[edit]

  • 1 Browns Canyon National Monument (BLM & USFS), between Salida and Buena Vista — A section of the Arkansas River popular for whitewater rafting.
  • 2 Canyons of the Ancients National Monument (BLM), near Cortez
  • 1 Chimney Rock National Monument (USFS), near Pagosa Springs — An Ancestral Puebloan archaeological site.
  • 35 Colorado National Monument — Contains Monument Canyon, with spectacular rock formations and desert wildlife.
  • 36 Dinosaur National Monument — Preserves Jurassic fossil beds; a museum in the park displays dinosaur fossils.
  • 37 Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument — Petrified redwoods and detailed fossils of plants and insects from nearly 35 million years ago.
  • 38 Yucca House National Monument, near Cortez — A mostly unexcavated Ancestral Puebloan archaeological site dating to around a thousand years ago.

Idaho[edit]

  • 39 Craters of the Moon National Monument — A large basalt flow with numerous volcanic rock features.
  • 40 Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument, Hagerman — Contains rich fossil beds from prior to the last ice age.

Montana[edit]

Wyoming[edit]

  • 42 Devils Tower National Monument — A towering stone monolith that rises dramatically above the surrounding landscape, perhaps most famous today as the setting of the climax of the film Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
  • 43 Fossil Butte National Monument — Contains 50 million year old fossil beds.

Southwest[edit]

Arizona[edit]

Montezuma Castle National Monument
The Wave in Vermilion Cliffs National Monument

Nevada[edit]

  • 10 Basin and Range National Monument – Vast, rugged wilderness.
  • 11 Gold Butte National Monument (BLM) — desert landscapes including rock art and the ghost town of Gold Butte.
  • 57 Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument, near North Las Vegas — Preserves a landscape containing Ice Age fossil beds.

New Mexico[edit]

La Ventana arch in El Malpais National Monument
  • 58 Aztec Ruins National Monument, Farmington — Ruins of a large Ancestral Puebloan village, including a restored kiva.
  • 59 Bandelier National Monument — A set of ancient and scenic cliff dwellings carved out of the volcanic rock of local canyons.
  • 60 Capulin Volcano National Monument, northeast New Mexico between Raton and Clayton — An extinct volcanic cinder cone that rises out of the surrounding plains.
  • 61 El Malpais National Monument — A basin covered in a large lava rock field that abruptly ends at the base of a sandstone bluff.
  • 62 El Morro National Monument, near El Malpais National Monument — A sandstone formation with ancient petroglyphs and inscriptions carved from European explorers into the walls.
  • 63 Fort Union National Monument, near Las Vegas — A former frontier post and military fort once situated on the Santa Fe Trail.
  • 64 Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument, near Silver City — A set of cliff dwellings perched on a high canyon wall.
  • 12 Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument (BLM), central New Mexico near Santa Fe — A small monument preserving a set of tent-shaped volcanic rock formations and a short but scenic stretch of slot canyon accessible to hikers.
  • 13 Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument (BLM), Las Cruces
  • 65 Petroglyph National Monument, Albuquerque — Preserves a collection of ancient petroglyphs carved on volcanic rock on a mesa overlooking Albuquerque.
  • 14 Prehistoric Trackways National Monument (BLM), Las Cruces
  • 15 Rio Grande del Norte National Monument (BLM), near Taos — A long and scenic stretch of gorge along the Rio Grande that's popular for hiking and whitewater rafting.
  • 66 Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument, Mountainair — Preserves the ruins of several pueblo villages and striking Spanish Colonial missions.

Utah[edit]

California[edit]

  • 2 Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument (BLM and USFS) — An area of mountain ranges in northern California.
  • 73 Cabrillo National Monument, Point Loma, San Diego — Perched on a high coastal bluff with views over San Diego Bay, with a historic lighthouse and a monument commemorating the Spanish explorer Cabrillo, the first European to land on what became the west coast of America.
  • California Coastal National Monument (BLM) — Consists of the entire coast of California.
  • 18 Carrizo Plain National Monument (BLM)
  • 74 Castle Mountains National Monument — next to Mojave National Preserve in the Mojave Desert.
  • 75 Cesar E. Chavez National Monument, Keene — Home and burial place of Cesar Chavez, civil rights activist and founder of United Farm Workers.
  • 76 Devils Postpile National Monument — Basalt cliffs and a 100-foot high waterfall.
  • 19 Fort Ord National Monument (BLM), Marina
  • 3 Giant Sequoia National Monument
  • 77 Lava Beds National Monument — The largest concentration of lava tube caves in North America.
  • 20 Mojave Trails National Monument (BLM), next to Mojave National Preserve in the Mojave Desert.
  • 78 Muir Woods National Monument, Marin County – A beautiful place to see endangered coastal redwoods, the tallest trees on the planet
  • 79 San Gabriel Mountains National Monument (USFS), Angeles National Forest, Los Angeles
  • 21 Sand to Snow National Monument (BLM and NFS) — Mountain and desert habitats, mainly in San Bernardino County.
  • 22 Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument (BLM and USFS), Palm Desert
  • 4 St. Francis Dam Disaster National Monument
  • 80 Tule Lake National Monument, Newell — Site of a large Japanese internment camp during WWII.

Pacific Northwest[edit]

Oregon[edit]

John Day Fossil Beds National Monument

Washington[edit]

  • 1 Hanford Reach National Monument (FWS), near Richland — A free-flowing stretch of the Columbia River near a historic nuclear weapons facility created during the Manhattan Project.
  • 24 San Juan Islands National Monument (BLM), San Juan Islands — Rugged islands in the Puget Sound with historic lighthouses and habitats for orcas, eagles, and seals.
  • 6 Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument (USFS)— Site of a major volcanic eruption in 1980

Alaska[edit]

Hawaii[edit]

  • 3 Honouliuli National Monument — Site of a Japanese internment camp during WWII. Not yet open to the public (as of 2021).

U.S. Virgin Islands[edit]

  • 1 Buck Island Reef National Monument, Christiansted — Preserves a small island and surrounding coral reef ecosystem.
  • 2 Virgin Islands Coral Reef National Monument

Other territories[edit]