CABRILLO
Administrative History
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Cover

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Chapter

I.

Mission and Pueblo Lands
Point Loma—The City of San Diego vs. The United States
Point Loma and the Military

II.

The Monument Movement
California-A Rediscovery of the Past
San Diego—1897-1915—Selling the Past
The Order of Panama-Promoting the Image
Carnaval Cabrillo—Great Promises and Grand Expectations

III.

Cabrillo National Monument and the Native Sons of the Golden West
Saving the Lighthouse
Cabrillo Under the National Park Service—Planning a Transfer

IV.

The Reorganization of 1933
Cabrillo—Planning Under the Park Service
Obtaining Funding—The First Step
From Plans to Reality—Beginning the Project
In Commemoration of Cabrillo-The Monument Gets a Plaque
Extending the Boundaries—An Agreement With the Army
The Dedication of the Monument—1935

V.

Forming an Administration for the Monument
Devising a Plan for Interpretation
The Coming of World War II
Military Use of the Monument During the War
The Return of the Monument to the Park Service

VI.

The Park Service Regains Cabrillo
A Statue for the Monument
Extension of the Monuments Boundaries

VII.

Initiating an Interpretive Plan for Cabrillo
Mission 66
Cabrillo and Mission 66
Administration of the Monument Under Donald Robinson
Increases in Personnel—Tom Tucker Becomes Chief Ranger

VIII.

The Cabrillo Festival
Relations With the Community and Special Programs
The Mayor's Committee for the Statue That Never Was

IX.

The Development of Planning Within the Park Service
Master Planning for Cabrillo National Monument
The Monument's Relationship with the Navy—Keeping the Peace
Operations of the Monument in the 1970's
Cabrillo in the 1980's—Doris Omundson
A Look to the Future
In Conclusion

Photographs

Selected Bibliography



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Last Updated: 02-Mar-2005