The National Park System is well endowed to commemorate Hispanic contributions to American society. Some 20 national parklands represent Hispanic heritage in the United States. Some sites remotely display Hispanic contributions to American culture.[1] The National Park System not only preserves the history and contributions of Hispanic Americans, it is also a part of the nation's history. Over the years, the National Park Service has reflected the nation's social history. Among the first Hispanics who influenced the course of the National Parks were:
Biologist
George Melendez Wright was born in California in 1904. In 1927, he was hired at Yosemite National Park as assistant park naturalist. Through his studies and insight, the park service moved away from the destruction of predator to the scientific management of park plants, animals and scenery.
George Wright Society
Fauna of the National Parks of the United States, by George M Wright
Early Superintendents (not fully inclusive)[2]
Julio Marrero-Nunez (San Juan 1962–1970);
Edward C. Rodriquez Jr. (Organ Pipe Cactus 1973–1975, Southern Arizona Group 1989);
Ray G. Martinez Jr. (Organ Pipe Cactus 1975–1979);
Edward C. Rodriquez Jr. (Amistad 1975–89);
Ernest W. Ortega (Pecos 1978–80);
José A. Cisneros (San Antonio Mission 1979–1988, Bandelier 1988–90, Gettysburg 1989–93, Big Bend 1993-99);
Santiago Cruz (San Juan 1980);
Luis Garcia-Curbelo (San Juan 1980–1985);
Robert C. Reyes (Florissant Fossil Beds 1980–83, Great Sand Dunes 1983–1988);
David P. Herrerra (Whitman Mission 1987–1990)
Eddie L. Lopez (Grant-Kohrs Ranch 1988 – c. 1993);
Peter G. Sanchez (act’g Haleakala 1988 – c. 1993);
Construction on the oldest masonryfort in the continental United States was started in 1672 by the Spanish to protect St. Augustine. St. Augustine is the first permanent continually-occupied settlement in the continental United States.
The peaceful settlement of the 99-year boundary dispute between the United States and Mexico is memorialized here. International artists present cultural exchange programs in drama, dance, and music.
The first European exploration of the Southwest is commemorated here at the spot whether the expedition of Francisco Vásquez de Coronado in 1540 entered what is now the United States.
The landing of Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto in 1539 and the first extensive exploration of the southern United States by Europeans are commemorated.
"Inscription Rock" is a soft sandstone monolith on which are carved hundreds of inscriptions. Included are inscriptions of the Spanish explorers and settlers of the American Southwest.
This park preserves and interprets the best remaining examples of 17th-century Spanish Franciscan mission churches and coventos remaining in the United States.
Four Spanish frontier missions, part of a colonization system that stretched across the Spanish Southwest in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries are commemorated here.
These masonry fortifications, oldest in the territorial limits of the United States, were begun by the Spaniards in the 16th century to protect a strategic harbor guarding the sea lanes to the new world.
^NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ALMANAC, Edited and Compiled by Ben Moffett and Vickie Carson, National Park Service, Rocky Mountain Region; Denver, Colorado; 1991, updated 2006
^ a bHistoric Listing of National Park Service Officials, USDI, NPS, May 1, 1991, by Harold Danz. Updates after publication by Public Affairs.