National Park Service Hispanic Heritage Sites

There are over 50 National Park Service sites that have Hispanic connections. Explore 20 of these sites in this exhibit.

San Cristobal by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

American Latino Heritage in U.S. National Parks

The histories of Latino and Latinas in America are diverse. They include experiences of peoples with cultural, religious, and linguistic traditions from many nations in Latin America and Iberia. The selected National Park Service sites shown here celebrate this rich heritage.

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Cabrillo National Monument

The park tells the story of Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, the first European to set foot on what is now the West Coast of the United States. In addition to telling the story of 16th century exploration, the park is home to a wealth of cultural and natural resources.

San Pablo Bastion at Castillo de San Marcos National Monument by Joan Bacharach, National Park ServiceNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Castillo de San Marcos National Monument

Built by the Spanish in St. Augustine to defend Florida and the Atlantic trade route, Castillo de San Marcos National Monument preserves the oldest masonry fortification in the continental United States and interprets more than 450 years of cultural intersections.

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César E. Chávez National Monument

The park celebrates the life of César E. Chávez and others such as Dolores Huerta and Larry Itliong.  Widely recognized as the most important Latino leader in the United States during the twentieth century, César E. Chávez led farm workers and supporters in the establishment of the country's first permanent agricultural union

César Chávez's OfficeNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

César Chávez's Office

César Chávez's office is carefully preserved and can be seen in the monument's exhibit hall.

Chamizal Commemoration CeremonyNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Chamizal National Memorial

The park memorializes the harmonious settlement of a 100-year boundary dispute between the United States and Mexico. It celebrates the cultures of the borderlands to promote the same mutual respect that helped to diplomatically resolve an international disagreement.

Coronado National Memorial by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Coronado National Memorial

Coronado National Memorial was established to interpret the Coronado Expedition led by commander and captain general Francisco Vázquez de Coronado. Their arrival in northwest Mexico and the American Southwest irrevocably changed the lives and cultures of the indigenous peoples of the region, some who had lived here for centuries. 

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Dry Tortugas National Park

Dry Tortugas was established to protect the island and marine ecosystems of the Dry Tortugas, to preserve Fort Jefferson and submerged cultural resources such as shipwrecks, and to allow for public access in a regulated manner.

View of the "Point" of El Morro by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

El Morro National Monument

This park preserves the over 2,000 signatures, dates, messages, and petroglyphs carved by Ancestral Puebloans, Spanish and American travelers. Over the centuries, those who traveled this trail stopped to camp at the shaded oasis beneath these cliffs.  They left the carved evidence of their passing -- symbols, names, dates, and fragments of their stories that register the cultures and history intermingled on the rock.

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Fort Matanzas National Monument

Fort Matanzas National Monument preserves the fortified coquina watchtower, completed in 1742, which defended the southern approach to the Spanish military settlement of St. Augustine.

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Fort Union National Monument

The park preserves the largest 19th century military fort in the Santa Fe Trail, one of the most important overland trade routes serving North America since the early 1820s.

The Bull Pen by Elbridge Ayer BurbankNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site

The park preserves one of the oldest operating trading posts in the American Southwest, where the differing cultures of the Indians, Spanish, and Anglo-Americans have come together for mutual benefit. For almost 90 years, the Hubbell family welcomed traders and notable visitors to trade with the Navajo. The Spanish roots and character of this family not only influenced the lives of the Navajo, but also of the visitors that they encountered.

Mojave Road, California by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Old Spanish National Historic Trail

The trail preserves the routes of mule pack trains across the Southwest on the Old Spanish National Historic Trail between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Los Angeles, California. In 1776, during the Spanish period, priests Francisco Atanasio Dominguez and Silvestre Velez de Escalante left Santa Fe and explored far and wide through northern New Mexico, western Colorado, and southern Utah. Much of this county would later be part of the Old Spanish Trail.

Soldados and US Light Infantry by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Palo Alto Battlefield National Historical Park

The park commemorates the site where United States and Mexican troops clashed on the prairie of Palo Alto on May 8, 1846. The battle was the first in a two-year long war that changed the map of North America. Palo Alto Battlefield National Historical Park preserves the site of this notable battle and provides an understanding of the causes, events, and consequences of the U.S.-Mexican War.

Mission Church by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Pecos National Historical Park

The park preserves thousands of years of rich history, from Pueblo and Plains Indians, Spanish conquerors and missionaries, Mexican and Anglo armies, Santa Fe Trail settlers and adventurers, to tourists on the railroad, Route 66 and Interstate 25.

Old Coast Guard Station and Golden Gate BridgeNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Presidio of San Francisco

The Presidio has a rich history spanning back to the time of the native Ohlone people. The Spanish arrived in 1776 to establish the northernmost outpost of their empire in western North America. The Presidio fell under Mexican rule for 24 years before the U.S. took control in 1846. The U.S. Army transformed the Presidio grounds from mostly windswept dunes and scrub to a verdant, preeminent military post.

Abo Ruins by David HalpernNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument

The park preserves three distinct sites, Abó, Quarai, and Gran Quivira, that continue to stand as reminders of the Spanish and Pueblo peoples’ early encounters and prompt exploration of today’s interactions among different people.

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San Antonio Missions National Historical Park

The park, the first and only World Heritage Site in Texas, preserves four Spanish colonial missions and their associated features. In the early 1700s, many Native people of South Texas foreswore their traditional life to become Spanish, accepting a new religion and agrarian lifestyle in hopes of survival.

Paseo del Morro by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

San Juan National Historic Site

The park preserves the more than 500 years of European history embedded in the walls of Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. Countries fought for control of this tiny yet strategic island for centuries. Generations of soldiers have lived and worked within the forts. Visitors today are as inspired by these stories as they are by the beauty of the architecture and the ingenuity of design and engineering of this World Heritage Site.

Timucuan HutNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve

The park preserves over 6,000 years of history and culture, from the life stories of the native people who survived in Florida's environment prior to European contact, to the clash of cultures that occurred as nations converged in the New World, from Europeans attempts at colonization to the struggles of enslaved African peoples.

Tumacacori mission church with flowers in foreground by National Park Service PhotoNational Park Service, Museum Management Program

Tumacácori National Historical Park

Tumacácori sits at a cultural crossroads in the Santa Cruz River valley. O’odham, Yaqui, and Apache people met and mingled with European Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries, settlers, and soldiers, sometimes in conflict and sometimes in cooperation.

La Fiesta de Tumacácori - Folklórico Dancers (2016)National Park Service, Museum Management Program

American Latino Heritage

The breadth of Latino/a experience is a vital aspect of America's rich and diverse past. The places explored here barely begin to hint at the varied ways their lives intersected with one another.  Discover these remarkable stories preserved in our national parks and historic places.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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