Fairhaven's military history is rich with stories of sacrifice

Posted on 20th May 2012 in The monuments of world
Buy This Photo

jack iddon/The standard-Times, file Among the cannons at Fort Phoenix are these large Civil War-era pieces. The town and the fort have played key military roles since the Revolution.

By WILLIAM A. MONIZ

May 20, 2012 12:00 AM

Long before its 1812 incorporation, and for the 200 years since, Fairhaven has generously given of its men and women to America’s wars.

In July of 1675, the territory known as Dartmouth, which included present day Fairhaven, New Bedford, and Acushnet, was attacked by Wampanoag warriors. Under the leadership of their Sachem, or leader, Metacomet, known to the English as King Phillip, the Native Americans destroyed all 30 homes in the settlement, killing William Palmer, Jacob and Susannah Mitchell and John Pope in the process.

The town would remain abandoned until King Phillip’s War ended with the signing of the Casco Bay, Maine treaty in April, 1678. The following June, Dartmouth would hold its first town meeting in three years.

Almost a century later, on April 21, 1775, only two days after “the shot heard round the world,” Dartmouth mustered three companies of militia to join the minutemen laying siege to the Redcoats in the town of Boston. Three weeks later, under the command of Captains Daniel Egery and Nathaniel Pope, the 40-ton sloop Success carrying 25 minutemen, set out from Fairhaven to recapture two Colonial merchantmen recently seized by the British Sloop of War HMS Falcon.

After shadowing the British prizes under light winds on the foggy night of May 13, the Success, with Pope at the helm, surprised one anchored sloop at sunrise, overwhelming the British watch before they could cut free from their mooring. Pope, one minuteman, and the ship’s drummer then sailed the recaptured vessel and its British prize crew off to anchor at Fairhaven.

Success, now under Egery’s command, soon spotted the second sloop raising sail off West Island and gave pursuit. Approaching within musket range, Egery ordered his sharpshooter to take aim on an officer in British livery. “The shot felled the officer, more shooting followed, and the Englishmen struck their colors.” (Logs of the Dead Pirates Society, R. S. Peffer, Sheridan House, 2000)

The action resulted in the recapture of both Yankee sloops and the detention of 15 British prisoners including HMS Falcon’s gunner and ship’s surgeon. The first naval battle of the Revolutionary War had ended in an American victory. The wounded British officer who had taken a buckshot pellet to the skull, survived. According to Peffer’s account, the officer was quoted as saying that his family had been called “a hard-headed lot.”

On June 18, 1812, only four months after Fairhaven’s incorporation, President James Madison would sign a declaration of war against Great Britain. According to “Old-Time Fairhaven”, by Charles A. Harris, “In 1812 [ Ft. Phoenix] was again made serviceable, in anticipation of war, being refurbished with a new barracks. During that war the garrison repulsed an attempt to land barges from the British Sloop of War, Nimrod.”

Records provided by Fairhaven Director of Veteran’s Services Jim Cochran show that 14 town men served in “Mr. Madison’s War,” six in the Army and eight in the Navy. At the war’s end in 1815, the Fairhaven contingent had recorded no casualties.

Some 50 years later, Fairhaven servicemen would not be so lucky. Of the town’s 274 soldiers and sailors fighting for the Union in the Civil War, 31 would die from various causes, including; 9 killed in action, 10 of disease, and 3 while imprisoned by the Confederacy.

William H. Bryant, who died at his Fort Street home in 1929 at the age of 80, was a Civil War survivor. Only 15 years old when he enlisted in 1864, he needed his mother’s written consent to join Company D of the 3rd Massachusetts Cavalry. Bryant served in the Red River Campaign in Louisiana, and later saw action with General William Tecumseh Sherman in the Shenandoah Valley.

Trooper Bryant’s service continued even after the surrender of the Confederacy. In May of 1865, as the country transitioned from the Civil War to the Indian Wars, the 3rd Massachusetts was shipped off to Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. Under General Patrick Connor, Bryant participated in the infamous Powder River Expedition into Wyoming aimed at punishing the Arapaho, Cheyenne, and Sioux for earlier raids on settlers.

Bryant was mustered out of the Army at Boston in September of 1865 and 15 years later the 1880 census listed his occupation as “sailor.” Bryant is buried in Riverside Cemetery.

In 1898, Fairhaven would provide 10 soldiers, 2 sailors and 1 marine, to help “Remember the Maine” in the Spanish American War. All would return home safely.

Twenty years later, World War I would be another story. Of the 328 Fairhaven boys sent “over there” in 1918, 10 would be killed in action and five would die of disease and other causes. In a typical pithy notice, the November 15, 1918 edition of the Fairhaven Star recorded the death of Joseph Perry’s stepson; “Joseph J. Perry of 146 Adams Street received a telegram on Wednesday announcing the death, Oct.8, from broncho pneumonia of Private A. E. Melanson of the 5th Machine Gun Co. Only three days before Mr. Perry received the bad news, Armistice Day had officially ended the war.”

Like William Bryant in the mid-19 Century, Fairhaven’s Luther Pierce would see service in two wars. Commissioned a second lieutenant after graduating the Army Air Corps flying school in Sacramento, Calif. in 1942, Pierce was assigned as a navigator on a B-17 Flying Fortress. During World War II, the 27 year-old Pierce would survive an astonishing 50 bombing missions over Germany.

In 1947, now Captain Pierce was recalled to active duty and in 1950 was back flying combat missions, this time in the skies over Korea. On Oct. 3 of that year Captain Pierce’s luck would run out when his B-26 Invader bomber went missing on a mission over Wonsan.

Captain Pierce was one of seven Fairhaven servicemen to die in the United Nations’ so-called “police action.” A total of 590 Fairhaven men and women served during the Korean Conflict.

The submarine USS Grayback, launched at Groton, Conn. in 1941, compiled an extraordinary record during her 10 separate World War II patrols. At 64,000 tons, the Grayback ranked 20th among all submarines in total tonnage sunk, and 24th in number of ships sunk with 14. The submarine and her crew received two unit commendations and eight battle stars for her extensive Pacific theater service.

Fairhaven’s Carleton Fielding enlisted in the U. S. Navy in February 1943. A three-sport star at Fairhaven High, Fielding, nicknamed “Swede,” was a tenacious two-way lineman in football. At commencement ceremonies, he was the recipient of the coveted Sparrow Cup as the school’s outstanding senior athlete.

After graduating from submarine school at New London, Conn., in the summer of 1943, the 21-year-old Fielding was assigned to the Grayback. The following Jan. 27, a notice in the Fairhaven Star announced, “The engagement of Miss Phyllis E. Jenney … of 726 Washington St. to Seaman Second Class Carleton F. Fielding”»” The brief paragraph ended matter of factly with, “Seaman Fielding is on submarine duty.”

The marriage would never take place. On Feb. 25, 1944, having expended all but two of her torpedoes in sinking three enemy ships and damaging two others, the Grayback was ordered back to base at Midway Island. She would never arrive.

Pieced together from captured Japanese records, the Navy believes it knows the fate of the Grayback. On Feb. 27, 1944, at about the position the Grayback would have been on her way back to base, a Japanese carrier-based aircraft spotted an American submarine running on the surface in the East China Sea. The plane attacked and reported that the submarine “exploded and sank immediately.”

On March 30, 1944, the Grayback was listed as missing and presumed sunk with all 80 of her crew. A full two years later, on May 8, 1946, the Navy Department reported that Carleton Fielding was officially presumed lost. In the 1941 Huttlestonian yearbook, a forever young “Swede” Fielding gazes out over his selected aphorism, “There is always safety in valor.”

Fairhaven’s “Greatest Generation” contributed 1,502 men and women to the Armed Forces during World War II, the most of any war. Including Carleton Fielding, 51 would not return.

In the mid-1950s another Asian war erupted in French Indo-China that, by the mid-1960s would lead to massive American involvement in Vietnam. Of a total of 823 Fairhaven men and women to serve during the Vietnam War, eight would die in service, including four killed in action.

Ironically, one of the town’s highest profile military deaths during the Vietnam Era would occur in Canada. In September 1966, former Fairhaven resident Lt. Commander Richard Oliver, a member of the Navy’s crack Blue Angels aerobatic team, was killed when his F-11 Tiger fighter crashed during a Toronto air show.

Oliver became a town celebrity in 1949 when he rescued a young boy from drowning in the Acushnet River. For his heroics, the 14 year-old Oliver was whisked to New York City where, as a guest of the Boys Clubs of America, he was treated to a Yankees’ baseball game and a private dinner with the team’s iconic star, Joe Dimaggio.

Interviewed a few weeks before his death, the 31 year-old Oliver said, “Vietnam is where I’d like to be next, the more I read about the air war there, the more I wish I were there with those boys helping out.”

In this, its Bicentennial year, the town’s contribution to the nation’s wars continues. According to Veteran’s Services Director Cochran, 182 service men and women have served in the Persian Gulf and Middle East. In 2006, Marine Lance Corporal and Fairhaven native Patrick Gallagher, was killed when the truck in which he was riding rolled over near Asad, Iraq.

The town has over a dozen monuments to its veterans ranging from Revolutionary War plaques at Fort Phoenix, to the Civil War memorial at Bridge Park, to the World War II, Lookout Tower at West Island. Cochran credits the town’s various veterans organizations for their help in maintaining these monuments.

“I couldn’t ask for Fairhaven to be more patriotic,” says Cochran, “veterans’ activities get great support from the town.”



Reader Reaction

We reserve the right to remove any content at any time from this Community, including without limitation if it violates the Community Rules. We ask that you report content that you in good faith believe violates the above rules by clicking the Flag link next to the offending comment or fill out this form. New comments are only accepted for two weeks from the date of publication.
Not sure how to add your comment? Here’s how

Fulton Service Clubs’ Memorial Day Salute – The Meaning of Memorial Day

Posted on 19th May 2012 in The monuments of world

FULTON – The theme for this year’s Memorial Day Salute Parade is “America……..Worth Fighting For.”

Many area individuals, organizations, businesses and industries will try to develop their interpretation of this theme in the vehicles or floats they will enter in the parade on May 26.

The Fulton Memorial Day Salute is a two-day event that is 31 years old this year, started
and carried on by the four Fulton Service Clubs.

The present service clubs working on this year’s events are the Fulton Lions, Kiwanis, Rotary, and the Sunrise Rotary clubs.

The four service clubs have always been assisted by the Fulton Veterans Council in promoting and putting on this event.

In years past, the Optimist and the Fulton JayCees were participants.

These two clubs have since disbanded. Several of the men and women who work on the Memorial Day Salute Steering Committee are veterans.

As we enter the twelfth year of the 21st Century, our thoughts are with the men and
women who protected our freedoms for the 236 years America has existed. During the last century, we had many conflicts.

World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and The Gulf War come to mind. All in all, more than 625,000 brave Americans have died fighting in a U.S. uniform during the 20th century.

In this century, we have experienced two conflicts, one touching our shores on September 11, 2001, which have lead to conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

We must keep these brave men and women, who are serving on active duty, in our
thoughts and prayers as we experience this Memorial Day.

How did Memorial Day come to be?

The actual birthplace of Memorial Day is the nearby village of Waterloo, NY.

Shortly after the Civil War ended, a Waterloo druggist named Henry Welles collaborated with Union General John B. Murray to organize a local tribute for the war dead.

The program included processions to and from the cemeteries, military music, speeches, wreaths, crosses, and bouquets.

Of all the early such remembrances, Waterloo’s 1866 program most closely resembled Memorial Days to come.

The pristine village of about 5,300 located only 40 miles from Fulton, in central New York’s Finger Lakes region, still follows its original Memorial Day model.

In 1966, when Lyndon B. Johnson was President, he proclaimed Waterloo to be the
official birthplace of Memorial Day. On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Memorial
Day, Waterloo opened to the public a 22-room Memorial Day Museum.

Waterloo has the glory of officially holding the “first” Memorial Day Program, but in reality, more than two dozen communities in both the north and the south have claimed to be the birthplace of Memorial Day.

The Memorial Day Salute Committee is very aware of the program they are offering to
the community.

We have never treated it as a celebration, but a program designed to raise the community’s awareness of the importance of this day of remembrance.

The Fulton Veterans Council has a more traditional program on the Monday (the official Memorial Day) of Memorial Day weekend in which they visit the cemeteries and place American flags on all known veteran’s graves, and honor the deceased veterans at the various monuments around our city.

Flowers are set out and a wreath is thrown in the Oswego River to honor those who have died at sea.

Recently, it was published that the World War II veterans are dying at the rate of nearly
1,000 a day.

These men and women are at least 83 years old and most are older.

Many newspapers mark the obituaries of veterans with an American flag. This is a very nice thing to do.

Many years ago, before 1966, Memorial Day was known as Decoration Day.

This name comes from the fact that by the end of May, even in our northern climate, the flowers were in bloom and it was time to decorate the cemeteries.

While the high death rate of the American Civil War (1860-65) was the initial reason for starting Memorial Day, this should not be the only reason for this holiday.

Today, we should remember our deceased loved ones no matter if they are veterans or not.

The Fulton Service Clubs and the Fulton Veterans’ Council have established “Fulton’s”
way to remember this most important holiday.

In the fall of each year, all of the veterans’ organizations in the Fulton area choose a “Veteran of the Year.”

This person is the Grand Marshall of the Memorial Day Parade. This year’s Grand Marshall is World War II veteran Charles Callen.

We have the largest parade in the county, with more than 100 units and many bands, starting at 10 a.m. on May 26.

On Friday evening and all day Saturday, there are many activities held at Recreation  ark
on Route 3, West Broadway. Local and nationally recognized groups will be playing music.

The featured band on Friday evening is none other than the area’s own Domicolo & Barlow. This duo packs the house wherever they play. The G. Ray High School Jazz Band and the music of Rick Bush will also be on the Friday evening stage.

On Saturday evening, the main feature is Nik & The Nice Guys, America’s No. 1 Party
Band, performing on the Fulton Savings Bank Stage.

The marching band stand-ins, the Fulton Community Band, the Fulton Dixieland Band, the music of Vince Markowsky and Virgil the Magician will also be performing. The event hours are from 5 to 11 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday.

There will be rides, lots of food, and of course, the ever-popular fireworks display on
Friday evening.

The whole weekend is designed for family fun and entertainment. Everyone is invited to attend. All events are free.

After the parade is completed, about noon on Saturday, several of the bands in the
parade will perform on the Fulton Savings Bank stage in the Community Center in Recreation Park.

For up to date information, visit www.fultonmemorialdaysalute.com

This new website was designed by the staff at Fulton Daily News (Oswego County Today.com) and is sponsored by them.

Come to Fulton for the Memorial Day Salute, but keep our deceased loved ones in your
hearts and prayers.

Turkmenistan claims record with huge wheel

Posted on 18th May 2012 in The monuments of world

ASHGABAT (AFP) – Turkmenistan, an authoritarian ex-Soviet state with a knack for setting peculiar Guinness World Records, on Friday unveiled the planet’s largest Ferris wheel in an enclosed space.

The 47.6-metre (156-foot) structure holds 24 six-seat cabins that spin inside a massive glass and white steel casing decorated with a giant eight-point star.

Called simply The Universe (Alem), the peculiar structure is “the world’s largest Ferris wheel in an enclosed architectural design,” a Guinness World Records representative announced.

It opened on the Central Asian state’s Day of Revival, Unity and Magtymguly Poetry under the watchful eye of President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, who has previously promised to erase his predecessor’s odd personality cult.

The gas-rich nation has instead spent vast resources on erecting unusual monuments in honour of the reclusive government, which strictly controls society and permits no independent media or dissent.

Turkmenistan already brags to have the world’s “largest star-shaped architectural feature,” the tallest flagpole and the longest carpet.

In 2009, it also launched the world’s largest cluster of fountains in a public space and announced plans to build Ashgabat’s answer to the Eiffel Tower or the Statue of Liberty.

The winner was unveiled on the last Day of Revival, Unity and Magtymguly Poetry: a 185-metre pillar celebrating the constitution that comes adorned with five golden carpet ornaments and has two viewing decks.

War crimes charges against Mladic

Posted on 16th May 2012 in The monuments of world

The indictment against Ratko Mladic — who went on trial Wednesday at the U.N. war crimes tribunal in the Hague, Netherlands — holds the former Bosnian Serb army commander “individually criminally responsible for planning, instigating, ordering and/or aiding and abetting the crimes charged in this indictment.” Mladic is charged with 11 counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and violations of the laws and customs of war. The counts below detail the atrocities during the 1992-1995 Bosnian war that Mladic is accused of commanding.

COUNT 1: GENOCIDE

Ratko Mladic, along with other former Serbian and Bosnian Serb leaders is accused of “destroying” entire groups of Muslim and Croat communities in various parts of Bosnia. These include the 3-year relentless shelling of the capital, Sarajevo, and several other small towns such as Foca, where Serbs were particularly brutal, executing local Muslims and throwing them into a river. Some of the remains were only found last year.

COUNT 2: GENOCIDE

This count of genocide refers to the mass killing of over 7,000 men and boys in Srebrenica, in July 1995, which is Europe’s worst bloodshed since World War II. Mladic’s troops executed almost the entire Srebrenica male population in a few days, burying them later in mass graves around the town. Many were later found with their hands tied behind their back and identification of the remains is still ongoing.

COUNT 3: PERSECUTIONS

The count relates to the persecution on political and religious grounds against Bosnia’s Muslims and Croats in the Serb-controlled towns like Banja Luka, in western Bosnia, or Bijeljina in the east. Non-Serbs in these and other towns were evicted from their homes by Serb troops, held in prison camps, tortured, raped and killed. Images or skinny, naked prisoners from the camps in western Bosnia in 1992-93 reminded the world of the Nazi-era camps.

COUNTS 4, 5 and 6: EXTERMINATION, MURDER

These counts of the indictment refer to the widespread killings of non-Serbs that took place in the territories under the Bosnian Serb control, but also on the brutal attacks on the capital, Sarajevo, which prosecutors say were designed to “spread terror.” Mladic’s troops from 1992-95 were constantly sniping and shelling Sarajevo, killing thousands of civilians, the longest siege of a capital city since WWII.

COUNTS 7 AND 8: DEPORTATION, INHUMANE ACTS

Mladic’s troops also used forced deportation and various inhumane acts, such as sexual violence, killing, and destruction of houses and cultural monuments and sacred sites, to rid the Serb-controller territories of non-Serbs. This was started in 1992 in what became known as ethnic cleansing. Entire communities were forcefully displaced and the U.N. Security Council set up so-called safe havens in 1993 to protect those communities from Serb troops. Those included Srebrenica, Zepa , Gorazde and Sarajevo.

COUNTS 9 AND 10: TERROR, UNLAWFUL ATTACKS

The main focus of this count is on the siege of Sarajevo and the campaign of sniping and shelling to spread terror among the civilian population. Mladic’s forces sniped and shelled civilians as they conducted every day civilian activities. People were injured and killed inside their homes. The lack of gas, electricity or running water forced people to leave their homes, where they were targeted. People were also targeted while queuing for water or in the markets. Two mortar attacks on the Markale markets killed more than one hundred people and wounded more than 200.

COUNT 11: TAKING OF HOSTAGES

This separate count refers to the events in 1995, when Mladic’s troops took hostage U.N. peacekeepers in Bosnia to force NATO to prevent attacks on Bosnian Serb positions around Sarajevo. Between approximately 26 May 1995 and 19 June 1995, Bosnian Serb forces detained over 200 U.N. peacekeepers and military observers in various locations, sending out images of peacekeepers tied to antennas or radars in a warning to NATO. Some of the detainees were assaulted or otherwise maltreated during their captivity. They were released in several stages after an intervention from then-Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic.

Professor Sandy Fenton: Scholar of Scottish antiquities

Posted on 14th May 2012 in The monuments of world

Sandy Fenton was among the very greatest scholars of the Ethnology and Antiquities of Scotland of this age – or of any age. For 15 years he was a member of the Ancient Monuments Board for Scotland, from 1979 to 1994.

My wife was one of the Board members, and they had the civilised habit of allowing paying spouses to come on their annual expeditions to those parts of Scotland well endowed with antiquities. Thus I saw at first hand Sandy Fenton’s charming erudition, which was a marvel of serious scholarship to us all. Indelibly etched on my memory is Fenton’s explanation of life at the Black House at 42 Arnol in the north end of the Island of Lewis. His written description, first published in 1978 and reissued in 1989, is the greatest record of a way of life that once dominated so much of the Highlands and Islands.

Sandy Fenton was born in 1929 at Shotts, then a mining town at the heart of the productive North Lanarkshire coalfield. Among family and friends were the Herbisons; Margaret Herbison was later to be the miners’ MP, Chairman of the Labour Party (UK) and Harold Wilson’s first Minister of Pensions. His father, also Alexander Fenton, and his wife Annie Stronach moved north to Turrif, where Sandy Fenton attended the academy and progressed to Aberdeen University.

Aberdeen had the tradition of sending its most talented graduates for further study in Cambridge and Fenton entered and completed the archaeological and anthropological tripos with an optional subject of Norse and medieval language. For archaeology he sat at the feet of Glyn Daniel, who educated us all on television, and at the feet of Meyer Fortes, the great anthropologist and expert on indigenous peoples.

Fenton was grateful for the inspiration of Cambridge before going on to complete a DLit in Edinburgh, which led to his becoming a Senior Assistant Editor of the Scottish National Dictionary between 1955 and 1959 combined with part-time lecturing in English as a foreign language. He became Assistant Keeper of the National Museum of Antiquities in Scotland, progressing to Deputy Keeper and Director. He combined this with being part-time lecturing in the Department of Scottish History at Edinburgh University.

As Rector of the University from 2003 to 2006 I know that the now flourishing Department of Scottish Studies regarded Fenton as one of their founders. Later he was to occupy the Chair of Scottish Ethnology and Director of the School of Scottish Studies.

However, Fenton was no insular, narrow scholar. He was a foreign member of the Royal Gustav Adolf Academy at Uppsala, Sweden, appointed in 1978, and of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters in 1979. He was given the honour of becoming an honorary member of the Volkskundliche Kommision Fur Westfalen in 1980. In 1983 he was made a member of the Hungarian Ethnographical Society and became a jury member in 1975 – and subsequently for 20 years of the Europa Prize for Folk Art.

He was also President of the Permanent International Committee of the International Secretariat for Research on the History of Agricultural Implements. Hearing Fenton on site on some windswept landscape describing the use of a particular agricultural instrument in ancient and medieval times was a revelation. He was also Honorary President of the Scottish Vernacular Buildings Working Group and of the Scottish Country Life Museums Trust. Many modest if interesting buildings owe their survival to Fenton’s work.

Fenton’s writing is characterised by the greatest detail teased out of ancient records. In the 1970s he illuminated the place names of Shetland and his book Scottish Country Life (1976, republished in 1999) won the Scottish Arts Council Book Award. His The Northern Isles, Orkney and Shetland, (1978, republished in 1997) won him the Dag Stromback Award. In 1985 he published an essay under the title “If All The World Were a Blackbird”, which he translated from the Hungarian. Almost as difficult as Hungarian is the language and dialect of Buchan, but Fenton’s 1995 work Craiters – or Twenty Buchan Tales, and Buchan Words and Ways in 2005, really saved a subculture which but for Fenton would have vanished.

Tam Dalyell

Professor Alexander Fenton, ethnologist and scholar of Scottish Studies; born Shotts, Lanarkshire 26 June 1929; Assistant Keeper of the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland 1959-75, Deputy Keeper 1975-78, Director 1978-85; Member of the Ancient Monuments Board for Scotland 1979-94; CBE 1986; married 1956 Evelyn Hunter (two daughters); died Edinburgh 9 May 2012.

New efforts from BLM to guard desert in southern Arizona

Posted on 9th May 2012 in The monuments of world

by Daniel Gonzalez – May. 8, 2012 11:36 PM
The Republic | azcentral.com

Since October, the Bureau of Land Management has expanded its operations at two national monuments in southern Arizona, trying to crack down on smugglers and illegal immigrants who trample and trash the pristine desert on their way north from Mexico.

slideshowBLM efforts to guard against smugglers

The federal agency has brought in more than a dozen law-enforcement rangers from other states to beef up patrols at the Sonoran Desert National Monument, south of Phoenix, where towering saguaro cactuses, wide-open valleys and flat-topped mountains create one of the most iconic vistas in the Sonoran Desert. The operations also have focused on the Ironwood Forest National Monument north of Tucson.

Because of their remote locations and ample hiding places, the monuments have become superhighways for violent smugglers sneaking drugs and illegal immigrants from the Mexican border into Arizona.

The smugglers have cast off acres of trash and created miles of illegal roads by plowing through the desert with disregard for the fragile vegetation, often using stolen vehicles that are driven until they break down and are abandoned, authorities say.

During seven two-week operations, the agency’s rangers have seized more than 27,000 pounds of marijuana and arrested more than 1,200 illegal immigrants, according to the BLM. That is in addition to the thousands of pounds of drugs and thousands of illegal immigrants arrested by law-enforcement authorities.

The agency also has removed 60 abandoned vehicles, 110 bicycles and more than 24 tons of trash, enough to fill 1,239 garbage bags. And the agency has covered up more than 15 miles of illegal roads.

But some of the agency’s work to protect the pristine desert areas from smuggling activity has caused concern among conservation groups.

Last year, the agency began erecting long vehicle barriers made of welded scrap-steel railroad tracks to block smugglers from driving vehicles through wilderness areas inside the Sonoran Desert National Monument. The barriers have been highly effective, BLM officials say. Not a single smuggler has driven into wilderness areas where the barriers have been installed, they say.

Conservation groups say the barriers, although effective, also mar the landscape. However, they view the barriers as the lesser of two evils.

Monuments under pressure

In 2000, President Bill Clinton created the Sonoran Desert and Ironwood Forest national monuments to protect them from urban sprawl extending south from Phoenix and north from Tucson.

The 487,000-acre Sonoran Desert National Monument is located between Gila Bend and Casa Grande, off Interstate 8. The area is the most biologically diverse desert in North America and is known for its abundant forests of saguaros interspersed with paloverde trees, creosote bushes, sage and ironwood trees.

The area also contains many archaeological and historic sites, including remnants of villages that once belonged to the ancestors of the Tohono O’Odham, Quechan, Maricopa and other Native American tribes.

The smaller Ironwood Forest National Monument encompasses 129,000 acres of desert west of Interstate 10 and north of Tucson. The area is known for its concentration of ironwood trees, some more than 800 years old, and its collection of more than 200 ancient Hohokam sites.

The Sonoran Desert National Monument includes the Vekol Valley, where one man was killed and another wounded in April 2011 during a shooting involving drug smugglers.

The smugglers have carved foot trails that spider through the desert and have left behind acres of plastic water bottles, coats, backpacks and other items cast off after trekking for days from the U.S.-Mexican border to rendezvous points 75 miles to the north along I-8, the main highway smugglers use to transport drugs and illegal immigrants to stash houses in the Phoenix area or to California.

“There is quite a bit of damage done by smugglers,” said Thom Hulen, executive director of the Friends of the Sonoran Desert National Monument, a group that advocates for the monument’s protection. “In addition to all the damage and all the trash, (the smuggling activity) scares people away. They get spooked.”

Signs of smuggling

During a tour of the Sonoran Desert National Monument one recent afternoon, Jon Young, the BLM’s chief ranger in Arizona, pulled his pickup truck off I-8 and stopped next to Mile Marker 157.

He told his passengers to wait in the truck while he got out to make sure there weren’t any drug smugglers hiding in the brush. Young poked around in the brush for a few moments and then gave a thumbs up.

The ground was littered with fresh signs of smuggling activity. Young picked up a boot made of carpeting used by smugglers to conceal their footprints. Strewn nearby were several burlap sacks, remnants of homemade backpacks used for hauling marijuana through the desert.

There were also several mud-caked jackets and lots of empty half-gallon plastic water bottles, colored black to make them less conspicuous in the sunlight.

Young pointed to the ground beneath the bushes, which had been matted down from the weight of smugglers. A well-worn path leading south toward the border also was clearly visible.

Young said smugglers typically hike four or five days through the desert with backpacks loaded with about 45 pounds of marijuana. They usually travel in groups of 10 to 15 but sometimes break into smaller groups.

They also are typically accompanied by a scout who, instead of drugs, carries a backpack full of food, water, radios and cellphones, Young said. Depending on how far the group is traveling, the smugglers may have several support people hiking with heavy packs full of food and extra water, he said.

Once they reach I-8, they hide until other members of the smuggling organization arrive to pick up their loads of drugs. The marijuana is then loaded into pickup trucks and driven to stash houses in nearby towns or the Phoenix area, Young said.

Smuggling has become so prevalent, the BLM has posted signs on roads leading into the monuments that warn the few remaining visitors to travel with caution. The agency doesn’t track visitors, but rangers and conservation groups have seen a decline in the number of hikers and campers who use the monuments, and many now carry guns for protection.

“Smuggling and illegal immigration may be encountered in this area,” the signs say.

Ranger teams

During operations at the monuments, the BLM transfers about 12 to 16 rangers from other states to Arizona. They work with the 10 rangers assigned to the BLM’s Phoenix district, which manages the Sonoran Desert monument, and 12 rangers assigned to the BLM’s Gila district, which oversees the Ironwood monument.

To combat smuggling inside the two monuments, the BLM rangers work with other law-enforcement officers who are part of the Alliance to Combat Transnational Threats, a group of law-enforcement agencies that includes the Border Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Pinal County and Maricopa County sheriff’s offices.

The most recent operation ended last week, resulting in the collection of 219 bags of trash, the seizure of 6,000 pounds of marijuana and the discovery of the body of one migrant.

On a recent Saturday, Joe Nardinger, 38, a BLM ranger from the Upper Missouri Breaks National Monument in Montana, found 46 bundles of marijuana weighing 1,000 pounds while patrolling a wash on the Sonoran Desert National Monument.

Nardinger, who was sent to Arizona for two weeks, had been following some fresh tire tracks when he found the marijuana. It was hidden in the bank of the wash, covered by branches the smugglers had cut from nearby paloverde and mesquite trees.

“I smelled it before I saw it. I got a whiff, a big dose of it,” Nardinger said.

Installing barriers

In addition to beefed up patrols, the BLM has been cleaning up trash and getting rid of illegal roads and foot trails created by smugglers.

Despite the efforts, drug smuggling continues to increase in the area, although illegal-immigrant traffic is down, Young said.

Their cleanup and restoration work has been applauded by conservation groups. But conservationists are less enthusiastic about the vehicle barriers the BLM has been installing inside the Sonoran Desert National Monument.

Last fall, the BLM erected 1.3 miles of vehicle barriers at the southern end of the Sonoran monument abutting the border of the Tohono O’odham Reservation. They were intended to prevent smugglers from driving north from the reservation through the heart of the monument’s designated wilderness area.

Last week, the agency finished erecting about a quarter-mile of vehicle barriers northwest of the Table Top Mountain Range.

Those barriers are designed to prevent smugglers from driving south from I-8 to rendezvous points inside the monument.

The BLM plans to install more barriers in other parts of the Sonoran monument, Young said.

Known as Normandy barriers, after the coastal barriers used in Nazi-occupied France during World War II, the 2-foot-high barriers have proved effective in preventing smugglers from driving through wilderness areas and creating illegal roads,Young said.

The Border Patrol has installed miles of barriers along the Arizona border with Mexico.

But this is the first time Normandy barriers have been used away from the border, said Matt Skroch, executive director of the Arizona Wilderness Coalition, a conservation group.

The barriers mar the landscape, and conservationists are concerned that those being used inside the Sonoran monument will open the door to more in other pristine desert areas throughout the state, Skroch said.

“We certainly don’t want to see a scenario where we keep installing more and more vehicle barriers,” he said.

But the group isn’t opposed to the barriers outright, Skroch said, because so far, they have been effective in stopping smugglers from creating roads and destroying more of the desert landscape.

“This is the lesser of two evils,” Skroch said.

“But it’s not something we are particularly happy about.”

From POW to VIP: Genoa man part of Freedom Honor Flight

Posted on 4th May 2012 in The monuments of world

GENOA — Cliff Armgard weighed only 78 pounds when he was liberated from a prisoner of war camp in Germany on April 2, 1945, months after being captured during the Battle of the Bulge.

Today the spry 86-year-old Genoa resident looks forward to joining other World War II veterans on the Freedom Honor Flight organization’s ninth trip from La Crosse to Washington, D.C.

“I’m excited about it,” Armgard said of the May 12 trip. “I think it’s great what they’re (Freedom Honor Flight) doing. This thing is so well planned out.” It will be unlike the chaos Armgard saw as German tanks surrounded his unit in the Battle of the Bulge. It was the last major offensive by the Nazi army.

Armgard, who was an anti-tank gunner, was captured on Dec. 19, 1944.

“We were so mad,” said Armgard, who was a private first class in the Army’s 106th Division. “We felt like we had failed our country by getting captured.” He had been drafted in December 1943 during his senior year of high school in La Grange, Ill., and after training was sent to Europe in fall 1944.

Armgard and other POWs were herded into railroad boxcars and taken to a prisoner camp near Bad Orb, Germany. One day, Allied airplanes spotted the train, not knowing it was carrying POWs, and bombed it. Some of the prisoners died in the attack.

“We arrived at Bad Orb on Christmas day,” Armgard recalled. The little food the POWs had was bad, and he eventually lost nearly half his body weight.

“We would have soup made out of beet tops,” Armgard said, and occasionally would be treated to barley soup. “They would give us a loaf of bread; six men had to share it.”

The POWs slept on a straw mattress, with no blankets. There were two men in each bunk, and the bunks were stacked three high, Armgard said. The POWs would pick lice off each other.

Armgard and the other POWs didn’t know they were about to be liberated until Allied tanks came crashing into the camp.

“The guards who had treated us halfway decent stayed,” Armgard recalled, and the others fled.

After being freed, Armgard was stationed at Fort Sheridan, Ill., before leaving the Army in 1945.

He and his wife, Rose, were married in 1946 and lived in Chicago suburbs until 1993, when they moved to Genoa. Armgard was a route salesman for a Brookfield, Ill., dry cleaning and carpet cleaning business for 40 years until he retired.

“We used to vacation in the Dells and loved it up here,” he said of the couple’s decision to move to Genoa.

Armgard, whose wife died in June, has three children, seven grandchildren and soon will have 13 great-grandchildren.

He and Rose had traveled to Washington, where they saw the World War II memorial.

He said he waited to apply for the Freedom Honor Flight until other veterans who haven’t seen the memorial could make the trip. Friends and family members encouraged him to apply for one of the upcoming journeys, saying it would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

Armgard will be among about 100 veterans on the 162-passenger Freedom Honor Flight jet flight May 12, organization President Bill Hoel said. The airplane also will carry volunteer guardians and a medical crew.

Most of the veterans served in World War II, although a few Korean War veterans will be on the upcoming flight.

Donations fund the chartered jet trips to Washington, where veterans see the National World War II Memorial and other monuments. The 10th trip will be this fall, Hoel said, but the date hasn’t been announced.

The eight previous flights have taken 786 veterans who lived in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa to the nation’s capital. The first flight was in October 2008.

The Nuances of Hanoi

Posted on 2nd May 2012 in The monuments of world

WOULD Hanoi have you at hello? Perhaps. If you’re a war history buff, the city dedicates itself to memorials and monuments of the most infamous war of the 20th century.

When food is your preference, Hanoi is fast becoming one of the culinary hot spots in the world. If art appeals to you, the city nurtures an exciting contemporary market. And when shopping’s your thing, the haggling scene is most vibrant in the Vietnamese capital.

Hanoi, on my mind, is mostly about Jane Fonda as Hanoi Jane, or Catherine Deneuve in Indochine, the 1992 Oscar Best Foreign Language Film where she earned her only Oscar nomination to date. I have caught snippets of Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now, Oliver Stone’s Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July. The last three Vietnam War films were partly shot here.

Such are the striking similarities between the two countries that the Philippines can credibly stand in for Vietnam. The affinity goes further, of course, via Miss Saigon, the musical that catapulted Lea Salonga and Monique Wilson as world-class thespians portraying a lovestruck Vietnamese girl, and has since cast Filipino artists in the major roles in current productions around the globe.

Hie off to Hanoi

Fortunately for the wanderlust, as well as a blessing to the budget traveler, Cebu Pacific Air (CEB) has resumed its direct flights to Hanoi. Now anyone can experience first-hand every facet of the city’s religious, historical, artistic, gustatory and commercial character.

“The addition of Hanoi to our international network means that we will now be able to cater to the air-travel needs of a broader Filipino and Vietnamese market. Cebu Pacific becomes the only Philippine carrier to serve both the northern and southern areas of Vietnam, providing more access for Vietnamese residents to enjoy the shopping, eco-adventure and entertainment attractions the Philippines has to offer. This will also open more avenues for business collaboration as well as trade and investment opportunities,” Lance Gokongwei, CEB president and CEO, said in the press conference held at the Hanoi Opera House that was also attended by Philippine Ambassador Jerril Santos, Intramuros Administrator Jose Capistrano and Vietnam Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism Director Dr. Nguyen Van Tinh.

Marking the resumed flights to Hanoi, Gokongwei led a contingent that included media, tourism officials, CEB personnel, the Vietnamese Ambassador to the Philippines Nguyen Vu Tu, and President Aquino’s sisters. The CEB Manila-to-Hanoi flights are on Tuesdays and Saturdays, while the Hanoi-to-Manila flights are on Wednesdays and Sundays. The lowest possible year-round Go Lite fare is P2,499. Manila is an hour behind Hanoi, and P1 equals VND 487.26; $1 equals P20,822.74.

“The return to Hanoi is significant because it’s a manifestation of the friendship between the Philippines and Vietnam. It can spur exchanges in culture and tourism, among other things, because people can now directly fly to the two cities,” Ambassador Santos said.

The OFW profile in Vietnam is very good, Santos added with pride. There are more than 5,000 professionals, such as engineers, hotel and restaurant managers and English teachers, who mostly work in Ho Chi Minh, the country’s biggest city. Jollibee has several branches in Vietnam. Fifty-plus Filipino companies are investing there like San Miguel, Universal Robina Corp. and United Pharma.  “Vietnam is probably the most attractive country in the Asean, investment-wise. We have bigger malls, but have you seen any beggars on the streets? It’s hard to measure Vietnam’s progress compared to the Philippines. They are getting their act together. We are slower. Our democratic system is open to debate. In their socialist system, once they decide [on something], it’s there. For them, their socialist system works.

“For us, we’re not ready to give up our individual liberties. Their system is entrenched. It’s basically stable, with no threats to it even if all government officials are abroad,” Santos explained. “It’s a nice, beautiful country. They can learn a thing or two from us, and us from them. It’s mutual.”

Legends, literature, lakes

Hanoi has survived several wars against the Mongols, French and Americans. But the city has steadfastly held on to its heritage structures.

Hanoi’s name literally means the “city inside the river.” Hoan Kiem Lake is its “Central Park,” where the Thap Rua (Tortoise) Tower is the centerpiece. It sits on a small island in the middle of the lake and has become as symbolic as the Eiffel Tower, the Rizal Monument and the Statue of Liberty. Turtles as old as 50 can be seen biding their time at the temple’s base.

According to the legend, Emperor Lê Lôi handed a magic sword called Heaven’s Will, which helped him win his revolt against the Chinese Ming Dynasty, back to the Golden Turtle God (Kim Qui) in the lake. Thus, the lake got its present name, which means “Lake of the Returned Sword,” replacing its former name of Luc Thuy, or “Green Water.”

The Ngoc Son (or “Jade Mountain”) Temple is on an island at the northern end of the lake. The 14th-century temple is dedicated to the hero Tran Hung Dao, who defeated an army of 300,000 sent to invade Vietnam by the Mongol Emperor Kublai Khan. Linking the island is a red wooden bridge called The Huc, meaning “Flood of Morning Sunlight,” which is best marvelled at during a night crawl through the French-influenced boulevards surrounding “the lungs of the city.”

A tour of Hanoi wouldn’t be complete without paying respects to the country’s liberator, Ho Chi Minh. The founding father lies embalmed and clad in his favorite khaki suit inside a severe, gray and granite edifice akin to Lenin’s tomb. However, the mausoleum is open only in the mornings. Long lines should be expected, too.

Behind the mausoleum is the One-Pillar Pagoda, the iconic Buddhist pillar in the middle of a lotus pond built by Emperor Lý Thái Tông, who ruled from 1028 to 1054. He was childless and dreamt that he met the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, who handed him a baby son while seated on a lotus flower. He then married a peasant girl, who bore him a son. The emperor constructed the temple in gratitude for this blessing in 1049.

Confucius was also influential in Vietnam’s early years. This is evident in the reverential tribute to the Chinese philosopher, The Temple of Literature, of which there are two structures: Van Mieu, built in 1070 to worship Confucius; and Quoc Tu Giam, or the “Temple of the King Who Distinguished Literature,” built in 1076 to teach the doctrines of Confucius and his disciples. Stone diplomas carried on the backs of turtles can be found at the temple, bearing the names and birthplaces of more than a thousand doctor laureates who remarkably survived the elite institution.

Pho and coffee

WE never ate the way the Vietnamese do—on stools in sidewalks unmindful of traffic. Come to think of it, I never saw any obese or overweight Vietnamese. Is it because of their national dish called pho, or rice noodles in flavorful broth mixed with meat and herbs?

How can they not gain weight after eating Hanoi spring rolls, Ngu Xa noodle rolled with beef and salad, sticky rice with grilled squid pie, banana flower salad with chicken, stewed pork with cinnamon sticks, or Old Hanoi-style steamed rice pancake with pork and shiitake? Then finish off the meal with the fabled Vietnamese coffee?

Maybe the Vietnamese are just naturally lean. Maybe that’s why their buildings and houses are built like tubes, the better to fit their slender frames.

Limited Facebook, unlimited traffic

I wondered aloud at one point during the trip why I couldn’t log in to Facebook in most areas in Hanoi. But I did grasp a wayward Wi-Fi connection at the Hanoi Opera House before the Philippines-Vietnam Friendship Concert, which featured pianist Raul Sunico, theatrical singer Joanna Ampil, soprano Rachelle Gerodias, violinist Bui Cong Duy and Vietnamese pop idol Duc Tuan.

The Philippine contingent was dressed in the finest Filipiniana. Then I saw a Vietnamese girl clad, quite disrespectfully, in shorts and sneakers. I wished right then and there that the Vietcong of old would magically appear and whisk this girl off to the Hanoi Hilton for some jail time for crimes against proper attire.

Just like Ho Chi Minh, Hanoi has its fair share of mad, suicidal motorcyclists. Traffic aides or traffic lights are practically ignored or otherwise non-existent. Crossing the street is like playing a deadly game of patintero with the scooters.

The quaint Old Quarter

WE almost didn’t get to stroll down the side streets and back alleys of the Old Quarter, which brings the city its charm and character. Good thing we still had free time to navigate its labyrinthine rows of stalls, shops and restaurants.

Each street in the Old Quarter is said to be named after a type of artisan, like a shoemaker, clothesmaker, silk trader, jewelry maker or blacksmith.

To this day, the tourist-bait area has retained most of the original clusters. Knockoffs of Kipling luggage, Samsonite messenger bags and NorthFace backpacks are in abundance here.

Asean invasion

“HAVING the most flights within the Philippines and from the Philippines to the Asean has allowed us to witness an exciting development. Cebu Pacific’s trademark lowest fares grow the market, stimulate the demand for travel and increase tourism and trade,” the modern-day Marco Polo, Lance Gokongwei, declared. “We look forward to doing the same with our new Manila-Hanoi service through our affordable fares and unparalleled Asean to North Asian network. The Philippines is truly more accessible now to more foreign travelers because of the extensive network that only Cebu Pacific offers.”


In Photo: The Temple of Literature and Iconic Hanoi: Hoan Kiem Lake, mad motorcyclists and the Tortoise Temple.


1982 World's Fair: 30 years later

Posted on 1st May 2012 in The monuments of world

KNOXVILLE, Tenn.(WVLT)–It was looked upon as Knoxville’s biggest challenge.

Transform an old railroad yard, foundry and depot into a world’s fair.

The city’s cost, 46 million and many skeptics. The most hurtful, the Wall Street Journal, calling Knoxville the “scruffy little city by the river”.

Local 8 News’ Walter Lambert was Vice President of the event.
“It was going to be disruptive, you were not going to be able to go anywhere, have all these things and didn’t have clue as to what a world’s fair was about.”

Local banker Jake Butcher led the way as the driving force, Bo Roberts was the Executive Director.

A year after the fair closed, Butcher’s bank failed with an ensuing scandal sending him to jail.

Despite its detractors, people came, 87,000 the first day. 387,000 for the first week. .

Bill Schmidt told Local 8 News, “It was just the reality, how could this small city of a couple hundred thousand people put on a world class exhibit?’ And we did. We did.”

Everything from rides to exhibits gave visitors insight into 22 cultures from all over the world, with the center piece a golden sphere with the theme of energy.

President Ronald Reagan gave it a thumbs up. Knoxville Mayor Randy Tyree called it a defining moment in the history of the city.

Former UT athlete, Bill Schmidt had the job as Director of Sports.
“We were able to generate from no budget, a surplus of $300,000, and the fair put it up in fireworks. Literally, they spent it on fireworks. It was fun. It was a blast”

The fair also took care of Knoxville’s infamous I-40 gridlock.
Lambert said, “That in an of itself was worth doing, all those worries about traffic just didn’t materialize they rebuilt malfunction!”

Now, thirty years later the site is now called World’s Fair Park.

The amphitheater is still there, the foundry still stands, as does the iconic Sunsphere soon to be transformed into a nightclub. Even the Rubik’s cube is still around.

All continue to stand as monuments of a time when this “scruffy little city” had something to prove to the world.

Presidential Proclamation — Establishment of the Fort Ord National Monument

Posted on 20th April 2012 in The monuments of world

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release

April 20, 2012

ESTABLISHMENT OF THE FORT ORD NATIONAL MONUMENT
- – - – - – -
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION

In the heart of California’s Central Coast, the former Fort Ord encompasses a sweeping landscape of vivid beauty and rich natural diversity. One of the few remaining expanses of large, contiguous open space in the increasingly developed Monterey Bay area, this area is a rolling landscape long treasured for recreation, scientific research, outdoor education, and historical significance. Originating in the Pleistocene Epoch, ancient dunes provide the foundation for this landscape’s unique array of plant and wildlife communities. The area is also notable for its historical significance, including its role in the Spanish settlement of California and in the military training of generations of American soldiers.

Nearly two and a half centuries ago, as Americans fought for independence far to the east, these lands were traversed by a group of settlers led by Spanish Lieutenant Colonel Juan Bautista de Anza. In 1775-1776, Anza established the first overland route from “New Spain,” as Mexico was then known, to San Francisco, opening the way for expanded Spanish settlement of California. The diaries kept on this nearly 2,000-mile journey were used to identify the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail, approximately 6 miles of which pass through the Fort Ord area. Although much of the historic route currently passes through urban areas, the undeveloped expanse of the Fort Ord area is likely quite similar to the open landscape experienced by Anza and by the Costanoan (now commonly referred to as Ohlone) peoples who lived in what is now the Central Coast region of California.

The area’s open, contiguous landscape owes its undeveloped state in large part to its role as a U.S. Army facility. From World War I through the early 1990s, the area’s rugged terrain served as a military training ground and introduced as many as a million and a half American soldiers to the rigors of military service. From its origins in 1917 as a training ground for troops stationed at the nearby Presidio of Monterey, Fort Ord had grown into a major Army installation by the beginning of World War II. During the Vietnam War, it served as a leading training center and deployment staging ground. While the former Fort Ord has few remaining historic structures, today thousands of veterans carry the memory of its dramatic landscape as their first taste of Army life, as a final stop before deploying to war, or as a home base during their military career. These lands are an historical link to the heroism and dedication of the men and women who served our Nation and fought in the major conflicts of the 20th century.

Today, this expansive, historic landscape provides opportunities for solitude and adventure to nearly 100,000 visitors each year. By bicycle, horse, and foot visitors can explore the Fort Ord area’s scenic and natural resources along trails that wind over lush grasslands, between gnarled oaks, and through scrub-lined canyons. Within the boundaries of the Fort Ord area, visitors admire the landscape and scenery and are exposed to wildlife and a diverse group of rare and endemic plants and animals. Because visitors travel from areas near and far, these lands support a growing travel and tourism sector that is a source of economic opportunity for the community, especially businesses in the region. They also help to attract new residents, retirees, and businesses that will further diversify the local economy.

Scientists are also drawn here, seeking out opportunities to better understand once-widespread species and vegetative communities, and their ongoing restoration. The Fort Ord area is significant because of its rich biodiversity and important Central Coast habitats, supporting a diverse group of rare and endemic species of plants and animals that are managed across the base through a multi-agency, community-led management plan. It is one of the few remaining places in the world where large expanses of coastal scrub and live oak woodland and savanna habitat, mixed with rare vernal pools, exist in a contiguous, interconnected landscape.

The protection of the Fort Ord area will maintain its historical and cultural significance, attract tourists and recreationalists from near and far, and enhance its unique natural resources, for the enjoyment of all Americans.

WHEREAS section 2 of the Act of June 8, 1906 (34 Stat. 225, 16 U.S.C. 431) (the “Antiquities Act”), authorizes the President, in his discretion, to declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated upon the lands owned or controlled by the Government of the United States to be national monuments, and to reserve as a part thereof parcels of land, the limits of which in all cases shall be confined to the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected;

WHEREAS the 1991 Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission recommended that Fort Ord cease to be used as an Army installation, and pursuant to the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-510), Fort Ord closed on September 30, 1994;

WHEREAS it is in the public interest to reserve such lands as a national monument to be known as the Fort Ord National Monument;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by the authority vested in me by section 2 of the Antiquities Act, hereby proclaim that all lands and interests in lands owned or controlled by the Government of the United States within the boundaries described on the map entitled “Fort Ord National Monument,” which is attached to and forms a part of this proclamation, are hereby set apart and reserved as the Fort Ord National Monument (monument) for the purpose of protecting and restoring the objects identified above. The reserved Federal lands and interests in lands consist of approximately 14,651 acres, which is the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected and restored.

All Federal lands and interests in lands within the boundaries of this monument are hereby appropriated and withdrawn from all forms of entry, location, selection, sale, leasing, or other disposition under the public lands laws, including withdrawal from location, entry, and patent under the mining laws, and from disposition under all laws relating to mineral and geothermal leasing other than by exchange that furthers the protective purposes of the monument.

The establishment of this monument is subject to valid existing rights. Lands and interests in lands within the monument boundaries not owned or controlled by the United States shall be reserved as part of the monument upon acquisition of ownership or control by the United States.

Of the approximately 14,651 acres of Federal lands and interests in lands reserved by this proclamation, approximately 7,205 acres are currently managed by the Secretary of the Interior through the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and approximately 7,446 acres are currently managed by the Secretary of the Army. The Secretary of the Army, in consultation with the Secretary of the Interior, through the BLM, shall continue to manage the lands and interests in lands under the Secretary’s jurisdiction within the monument boundaries until the Army transfers those lands and interests in lands to the BLM in accordance with the 1995 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the Department of the Army and the BLM, as amended, that describes the responsibilities of each agency related to such lands and interests in lands, the implementing actions required of each agency, the process for transferring administrative jurisdiction over such lands and interests in lands to the Secretary of the Interior, and the processes for resolving interagency disputes. The Secretary of the Interior, through the BLM, shall manage that portion of the monument under the Secretary’s administrative jurisdiction, pursuant to applicable legal authorities and the MOU, to implement the purposes of this proclamation.

For purposes of protecting and restoring the objects identified above, the Secretary of the Interior, through the BLM, shall prepare and maintain a transportation plan, in coordination with the Secretary of the Army and consistent with the MOU, that provides for visitor enjoyment and understanding of the scientific and historic objects on lands within the monument boundaries that are under the administrative jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior.
The transportation plan shall include the designation of roads and trails for bicycling and other purposes. Except for emergency or authorized administrative purposes, under the transportation plan motorized vehicle use shall be permitted only on designated roads, and non-motorized mechanized vehicle use shall be permitted only on designated roads and trails. The plan shall be revised upon the transfer of lands now under the administrative jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Army to the Secretary of the Interior in accordance with the MOU.

Nothing in this proclamation shall be deemed to enlarge or diminish the rights of any Indian tribe.

Nothing in this proclamation shall affect the responsibility of the Department of the Army under applicable environmental laws, including the remediation of hazardous substances or munitions and explosives of concern within the monument boundaries; nor affect the Department of the Army’s statutory authority to control public access or statutory responsibility to make other measures for environmental remediation, monitoring, security, safety, or emergency preparedness purposes; nor affect any Department of the Army activities on lands not included within the monument. Nothing in this proclamation shall affect the implementation of the Installation-Wide Multispecies Habitat Management Plan for the former Fort Ord including interagency agreements implementing that plan.

Nothing in this proclamation shall be deemed to enlarge or diminish the jurisdiction of the State of California with respect to fish and wildlife management.

Nothing in this proclamation shall be deemed to revoke any existing withdrawal, reservation, or appropriation; however, the monument shall be the dominant reservation.

Warning is hereby given to all unauthorized persons not to appropriate, injure, destroy, or remove any feature of this monument and not to locate or settle upon any of the lands thereof.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twentieth day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand twelve, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-sixth.

BARACK OBAMA