Cabrillo National Monument
national monument, San Diego, California
Cabrillo National Monument
Cabrillo National Monument, historical and recreational site in San Diego, Calif., U.S. It lies on the tip of Point Loma, a peninsula separating San Diego Bay from the Pacific Ocean, and covers 160 acres (65 hectares). The monument, founded in 1913, commemorates the arrival of Spanish explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, the first European to visit the West Coast of the United States, who sailed into San Diego Bay in September 1542. A statue of Cabrillo stands in the visitors’ centre.
Panoramic views of the city, harbour, and ocean draw visitors to the site. In winter the monument is a popular spot for watching the migration of gray whales on their way to Mexico from the Arctic. A 2-mile (3.2-km) hiking trail winds through the native habitat of the southern California coast, coastal sage scrub, which is home to lizards, snakes, foxes, coyotes, and birds. Historical aspects of the site include the remains of military facilities built for harbour defense during the first half of the 20th century and an associated exhibit housed in the former military radio station. Old Point Loma Lighthouse, at 422 feet (129 metres) above sea level the monument’s highest point, began operation in 1855; its light was often hidden by fog, however, and it was closed down in 1891 after a new lighthouse was constructed nearby. An annual festival each September re-creates Cabrillo’s landing.
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