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This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted December 20, 2024. [2] ... Jim Moore Place: March 29, 1978 ... West of Cottonwood
Constable Ainsworth and Teddy Moore arrived at the Wilson Ranch house on the morning of April 7, 1899, sometime after dawn, but before noon. The two lawmen were side by side and approximately forty feet from the front porch of the house when Ainsworth read the arrest warrant aloud and demanded that the Halderman brothers come out peaceably.
The Cottonwood Historic District, in Cottonwood, California in Shasta County, California, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. The listing included four contributing buildings on 9 acres (3.6 ha). [1] It is located off US 99, on the southern boundary of Shasta County, the north side of Cottonwood Creek. [2]
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Cottonwood Canyon State Park, established in 2013, is the second largest state park in Oregon, encompassing 8,000 acres (3,200 ha) on the lower John Day River. [1] The largest is Silver Falls State Park at 9,064 acres (3,668 ha). [1] Park headquarters, about a two-hour drive east of Portland, is adjacent to Oregon Route 206 between Wasco and ...
The Big Cottonwood Regional Park Outer Loop is a 1.2 miles (1.9 km) looping trail, which allows dogs on leashes. [ 2 ] In 2020, it was one of three Salt Lake City parks included in the Salt Lake County Animal Services' Good Dog awareness campaign, which aimed to educate dog owners about safety, laws, and ordinances concerning pets.
The Grant–Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site, created in 1972, commemorates the Western cattle industry from its 1850s inception through recent times. The original ranch was established in 1862 by a Canadian fur trader, Johnny Grant, at Cottonwood Creek, Montana (future site of Deer Lodge, Montana), along the banks of the Clark Fork river.
Cottonwood County's now-dry Mountain Lake was the site of Native American villages and encampments over the course of 3,000 years. The area has provided clues—some of the oldest evidence of human habitation in present-day Minnesota—about the lives of a group of people who remained relatively isolated from Upper Mississippi River trade networks.