National historic areas in the United States

This article lists historic areas in the United States National Park System: national historical parks, national historic sites, international historic sites, national battlefield parks, national military parks, national battlefields, national battlefield sites, national memorials, national cemeteries, and a few miscellaneous protected areas.

This article doesn't contain all the historic areas in the National Park System. See also United States national monuments, which include some of the most fascinating and important historic sites in the system, as well as United States national parkways and the National Trails System.

The map markers in this article are color-coded, mainly by type of area:


 * Green – National historical parks
 * Blue – National historic sites and international historic sites
 * Black – National memorials
 * Red – National battlefield parks, national military parks, national battlefields, national battlefield sites

New England

 * , Rhode Island and Massachusetts

Connecticut

 * , Wilton &mdash; Former home of noted impressionist painter J. Alden Weir.

Maine

 * , Calais &mdash; A small uninhabited island on the U.S.-Canada border that is shared by the two nations.

Massachusetts

 * , Quincy &mdash; Preserves the homes and birthplaces of Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams.
 * , Beacon Hill, Boston &mdash; Contains a set of buildings dating back to the early 19th century that relate to the history of Boston's African-American community.
 * , Downtown Boston and Charlestown, Boston &mdash; Preserves many sites crucial to the American Revolution, including sites affiliated with the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, the Battle of Bunker Hill, Paul Revere's midnight ride, and a former navy yard that is now home to the USS Constitution, the oldest floating navy vessel in the world.
 * , Brookline &mdash; Former home and office of Frederick Law Olmsted, the founder of American landscape architecture and designer of many of the most noted American parks of the 19th century.
 * , Brookline &mdash; Birthplace of President John F. Kennedy.
 * , Cambridge &mdash; A historic home that served as George Washington's headquarters in the early years of the American Revolution. Later, 19th-century poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow lived here while teaching at Harvard.
 * , Lowell &mdash; Preserves a set of textile mills dating back to the Industrial Revolution.
 * , Concord &mdash; Contains the sites of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the opening battle of the American Revolution.
 * , New Bedford &mdash; A historic wharf district that was once the world's busiest whaling port.
 * , Salem &mdash; Preserves several historic buildings and a replica sailing ship on Salem Harbor, one of the most important ports in the region in colonial times.
 * , Saugus &mdash; Site of one of North America's first ironworks, with several reconstructed buildings and mills.
 * , Springfield &mdash; Site of the primary arsenal of the American Revolutionary War and numerous technological innovations. Today, it holds the world's largest collection of historic American firearms.

New Hampshire

 * , Cornish &mdash; Former home and studios of noted sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens.

Rhode Island

 * , Providence &mdash; Commemorates one of the founders of the Colony of Rhode Island, an advocate for religious freedom.
 * , Newport &mdash; The oldest surviving Jewish synagogue building in North America, dating to the colonial era.

Vermont

 * , Woodstock &mdash; Preserves a nineteenth century managed forest and dairy farm.

Mid-Atlantic

 * (Maryland, Washington, D.C., West Virginia) &mdash; Preserves the remains of much of the historic Chesapeake and Ohio Canal as well as many canal structures.

Maryland

 * , Sharpsburg &mdash; Site of the Battle of Antietam, a major Civil War battle and the bloodiest single-day battle in American history.
 * , Glen Echo &mdash; Former home of Clara Barton, nurse, humanitarian, and founder of the American Red Cross.
 * , Oxon Hill &mdash; Civil War site with two cannons.
 * , Fort Washington &mdash; Washington DC's main defense from naval attack along the Potomac; important for the War of 1812.
 * , Towson &mdash; Preserves a remnant of a huge 18th century estate, including a mansion that was the largest private home in America when it was completed.
 * , Fort Washington &mdash; Historic 18th-century mansion.
 * , Cambridge &mdash; Commemorates the life of Harriet Tubman, the former slave instrumental in the operation of the Underground Railroad, the system of secret routes and safe houses used by fleeing slaves escaping north.
 * , Frederick &mdash; Site of a major Civil War battle that was one of the last fought in Union territory.
 * , Oxon Hill, Prince George's County
 * , Port Tobacco (near La Plata) &mdash; Former home of Thomas Stone, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.

New Jersey

 * , Morristown &mdash; Site of a strategic crossroads during the American Revolutionary War, including a fort and one of George Washington's winter quarters.
 * , Paterson &mdash; Contains a beautiful waterfall that was the center of much industrial development in the area, including canals and watermills.
 * , West Orange &mdash; Thomas Edison's home and laboratory, where the motion picture camera, improved sound recordings, and the nickel-iron alkaline electric battery were invented.

New York

 * , Hyde Park &mdash; Former home of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.
 * , Financial District, New York City &mdash; Situated on Wall Street, this was the site of the nation's first capitol building and George Washington's inauguration as the first president.
 * , Upper West Side, New York City &mdash; Grant's Tomb, the final resting place of Civil War general and president Ulysses S. Grant.
 * , Upper Manhattan, New York City &mdash; Preserves the home of founding father Alexander Hamilton.
 * , Hyde Park &mdash; Birthplace, lifelong home, and burial site of the 32nd president, as well as the burial site of his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt.
 * , Troy &mdash; Former home of Kate Mullany, an early female labor leader.
 * , Lower East Side, New York City &mdash; Preserves a brick tenement building with historical exhibits on the American immigrant experience in New York.
 * , Kinderhook &mdash; Former estate and mansion of the 8th president.
 * , Oyster Bay &mdash; Home of Theodore Roosevelt in the later part of his life.
 * , Mount Vernon &mdash; One of New York state's oldest parishes, used as a military hospital in the American Revolution.
 * , Stillwater (near Saratoga Springs) &mdash; Site of the Battles of Saratoga, a major turning point in the American Revolutionary War.
 * , Flatiron, New York City &mdash; Birthplace of President Theodore Roosevelt.
 * , Allentown, Buffalo &mdash; A historic house that was the site where Theodore Roosevelt took the oath of office.
 * , Catskill &mdash; Home and studio of noted landscape painter Thomas Cole.
 * , Hyde Park &mdash; A noted example of country palaces built by wealthy industrialists during the Gilded Age.
 * , Seneca Falls &mdash; Preserves a set of historic sites important to the women's rights movement, including the homes of early activists.

Pennsylvania

 * , Gallitzin (near Altoona) &mdash; The remains of the first railroad built through the Appalachian Mountains.
 * , Franklin Institute, Center City West, Philadelphia &mdash; A colossal statue of the famed inventor and founding father in the rotunda of the Franklin Institute.
 * , North Philly, Philadelphia &mdash; Preserves the only surviving Philadelphia home of the noted author and poet.
 * , Gettysburg &mdash; Former home and farm of President Dwight Eisenhower.
 * , Shanksville &mdash; Site where Flight 93 crashed into a field on September 11, 2001.
 * , Farmington (near Johnstown) &mdash; Site of a battle in the French and Indian War, where George Washington, then a British colonel, surrendered to French and Indian forces.
 * , Point Marion &mdash; Preserves a historic home built in the 1780s.
 * , Gettysburg &mdash; Site of arguably the most important battle in the Civil War. Today you can tour the battlefields, the military cemetery, and the site where Abraham Lincoln gave his famous "Gettysburg Address."
 * , South Philly, Philadelphia &mdash; The oldest church in Pennsylvania and the second-oldest Swedish church in the nation.
 * (USFS), Milford &mdash; A French château-style house that was the home of Gifford Pinchot, the first director of the United States Forest Service.
 * , Elverson &mdash; Preserves a 19th century rural iron plantation, including a furnace and several preserved buildings.
 * (Independence Hall, National Constitution Center, Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial), Old City, Philadelphia &mdash; Preserves a series of sites and icons important to the American Revolution and the nation's founding, including Independence Hall, where the constitution and the Declaration of Independence were debated and adopted, and the home of the Liberty Bell.
 * , Johnstown &mdash; Commemorates the infamous and deadly Johnstown Flood of 1889.
 * , Scranton &mdash; A railroad museum on the site of the historic Scranton railyards, including an operational roundhouse and several preserved steam locomotives.
 * , Valley Forge &mdash; Site of the noted winter encampment during the American Revolution.

Washington, D.C.

 * &mdash; A set of five historic squares in the Capitol Hill neighborhood: Lincoln Park, Marion Park, Stanton Park, Folger Park, and Seward Square.
 * , Shaw &mdash; Home of Carter G. Woodson, African-American historian and author, and founder of Black History Month.
 * Civil War Defenses of Washington &mdash; The remnants of trenches, forts and batteries that form a circular ring of green space surrounding the capitol.
 * , Anacostia &mdash; Part of the Civil War Defenses of Washington, it has some remnants of earthworks but is now an urban park with trails, sports fields, ice skating, and a popular summer concert series.
 * , Anacostia &mdash; Former home of Frederick Douglass, a leader of the abolitionist movement and the most prominent African-American of the 19th century.
 * , Shaw &mdash; A historic townhouse that was the home of Mary McLeod Bethune, an African-American teacher and civil rights leader.
 * National Mall and Memorial Parks &mdash; An iconic strip of parkland and monuments at the heart of the nation's capital.
 * , Shaw
 * , Capitol Hill
 * &mdash; Honors residents of the capital city who fought in World War I
 * , East End &mdash; Site of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
 * &mdash; Honors a Founding Father who authored the Virginia Declaration of Rights, which inspired Thomas Jefferson as he drafted the Declaration of Independence.
 * &mdash; Honors an engineer who revolutionized naval propulsion
 * (Old Post Office Tower, United States Navy Memorial), East End &mdash; A historic district along Pennsylvania Avenue, the iconic street that runs between the U.S. Capitol and the White House.
 * , Capitol Hill &mdash; A historic house that was the headquarters of the National Woman's Party, with exhibits on the women's suffrage movement.
 * , West End &mdash; The iconic home, offices, and administrative complex of the President of the United States. Tours of the White House are available by advance reservation.
 * (Old Post Office Tower, United States Navy Memorial), East End &mdash; A historic district along Pennsylvania Avenue, the iconic street that runs between the U.S. Capitol and the White House.
 * , Capitol Hill &mdash; A historic house that was the headquarters of the National Woman's Party, with exhibits on the women's suffrage movement.
 * , West End &mdash; The iconic home, offices, and administrative complex of the President of the United States. Tours of the White House are available by advance reservation.
 * (Old Post Office Tower, United States Navy Memorial), East End &mdash; A historic district along Pennsylvania Avenue, the iconic street that runs between the U.S. Capitol and the White House.
 * , Capitol Hill &mdash; A historic house that was the headquarters of the National Woman's Party, with exhibits on the women's suffrage movement.
 * , West End &mdash; The iconic home, offices, and administrative complex of the President of the United States. Tours of the White House are available by advance reservation.
 * , Capitol Hill &mdash; A historic house that was the headquarters of the National Woman's Party, with exhibits on the women's suffrage movement.
 * , West End &mdash; The iconic home, offices, and administrative complex of the President of the United States. Tours of the White House are available by advance reservation.
 * , Capitol Hill &mdash; A historic house that was the headquarters of the National Woman's Party, with exhibits on the women's suffrage movement.
 * , West End &mdash; The iconic home, offices, and administrative complex of the President of the United States. Tours of the White House are available by advance reservation.
 * , Capitol Hill &mdash; A historic house that was the headquarters of the National Woman's Party, with exhibits on the women's suffrage movement.
 * , West End &mdash; The iconic home, offices, and administrative complex of the President of the United States. Tours of the White House are available by advance reservation.

South

 * (Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia) &mdash; Situated in a pass through the Appalachian Mountains that was an important route for settlers moving west.

Alabama

 * , Dadeville &mdash; Site of the final battle of the 1814 Creek War between the U.S. government and the Native American Creek Nation.
 * , Tuskegee &mdash; Training grounds for the Tuskegee Airmen, an all African-American flight squadron during World War II.
 * , Tuskegee &mdash; Campus of Tuskegee University, a private, historically black university founded in 1881. On campus are the graves of Booker T. Washington and George Carver Washington as well as Booker T. Washington's house and a museum devoted to Carver.

Arkansas

 * , Gillet &mdash; Site of a French trading post that was the first European settlement in the lower Mississippi River valley.
 * , Fort Smith &mdash; A historic military fort located along the Trail of Tears.
 * , Little Rock &mdash; A public high school that was the site of a forced school integration that became a watershed moment in the civil rights movement.
 * , Pea Ridge &mdash; Site of a Civil War battle that helped the Union cement control over Missouri and northern Arkansas.
 * , Hope &mdash; Birthplace of President Bill Clinton.

Georgia

 * , Andersonville (Plantation Midlands) &mdash; Preserves Camp Sumter, a Confederate prisoner of war camp during the Civil War.
 * , Plains (Plantation Midlands) &mdash; Preserves a set of sites related to the life of President Jimmy Carter.
 * , Kennesaw &mdash; Site of a major battle of General Sherman's Atlanta Campaign during the Civil War.
 * , Atlanta &mdash; Birthplace of the famous civil rights leader.
 * , Macon &mdash; Preserves a set of prehistoric earthworks dating over a thousand years old, including burial and ceremonial mounds.

Kentucky

 * , Hodgenville &mdash; Preserves the birthplace and boyhood home of Abraham Lincoln, as well as a memorial with a symbolic log cabin meant to resemble the one Lincoln was born in.

Louisiana

 * , Natchitoches &mdash; Preserves the site of two plantations.
 * , Chalmette, Lafayette, visitor's center in French Quarter, New Orleans &mdash; Preserves a set of historic sites related to the Cajun culture of the area and a Civil War battlefield, as well as a natural preserve of forests and swamps.
 * , French Quarter and Tremé, New Orleans &mdash; Contains a set of sites affiliated with the creation and development of jazz in New Orleans.

Mississippi

 * , Baldwyn &mdash; Site of a major Civil War battle in which Confederate forces defeated a much larger Union force.
 * , Natchez &mdash; Contains a pair of sites that illustrate antebellum life in the area, including a historic Natchez estate.
 * , Tupelo &mdash; Site of a Civil War battle where Confederate forces tried to cut Union supply lines.
 * , Vicksburg &mdash; Site of a major Civil War battle that was the culmination of the Union's Vicksburg Campaign, which gave the Union control over the Mississippi River.

North Carolina

 * , Flat Rock &mdash; Preserves the home of noted author and poet Carl Sandburg.
 * , Manteo &mdash; Site of the Roanoke Colony, the first English settlement in the Americas.
 * , Greensboro &mdash; Site of a battle in the American Revolution that contributed to ultimate British surrender at the end of the war.
 * , Currie &mdash; Commemorates an early battle in the American Revolution in which American soldiers routed British forces from North Carolina.
 * , Kill Devil Hills &mdash; Commemorates the site of the first successful sustained flight by the Wright Brothers.

South Carolina

 * , Mount Pleasant &mdash; Farm of Charles Pinckney, a principal framer of the U.S. Constitution.
 * , Chesnee &mdash; Site of a decisive victory in the American Revolution against British forces in the South.
 * , Camden &mdash; Preserves a set of colonial-era sites with artifacts from the American Revolution.
 * , Blacksburg &mdash; Site of a battle during the American Revolution that was a decisive victory against British forces in the South.
 * , Ninety Six &mdash; Site of a colonial-era village that was the location of a battle during the American Revolution.
 * — several historic sites in Beaufort County

Tennessee

 * , Greeneville &mdash; Home and burial place of Andrew Johnson, the 17th president.
 * , Chattanooga &mdash; Preserves several sites around Chattanooga that commemorate a major Civil War battle in the area that ended Confederate control of Tennessee.
 * , Dover &mdash; Site of a major Civil War battle in which Union forces secured control of the area, the first major successes for the Union in the war.
 * , Oak Ridge — The headquarters of the Manhattan Project can be toured through the American Museum of Science and Energy. Another component of the park is in Washington state (the related component in New Mexico isn't open to the public).
 * , Shiloh &mdash; Site of an early major battle in the Civil War that was one of the bloodiest in the war.
 * , Murfreesboro &mdash; Site of a strategic Union victory in the Civil War.

Virginia



 * , Appomattox &mdash; Site of the surrender of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, thus ending the Civil War.
 * , Arlington &mdash; In the midst of the noted military cemetery overlooking Washington, D.C. is the former home of Robert E. Lee, now open for tours.
 * , Middletown and Strasburg &mdash; Preserves several historic sites in the Shenandoah Valley, including a Civil War battlefield and a plantation.
 * (Cape Henry Memorial, Colonial Parkway, Jamestown National Historic Site, Yorktown Battlefield), Williamsburg area &mdash; Preserves a set of sites related to the Virginia Colony, including the site of Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in the Americas, and the Yorktown Battlefield, site of the final battle of the American Revolution.
 * , Fredericksburg &mdash; Preserves the site of four major battles in the Civil War.
 * , Arlington &mdash; A scenic grove on the banks of the Potomac River honoring the 36th president.
 * , Richmond &mdash; Former home of Maggie Walker, the first female bank president in the nation.
 * , Manassas &mdash; Site of two major battles in the Civil War, including the war's first major battle and the site where Confederate general "Stonewall" Jackson earned his nickname.
 * , Arlington &mdash; Adjacent to Arlington National Cemetery is this iconic memorial, based on the famous WWII picture taken at Iwo Jima.
 * , Petersburg &mdash; Preserves sites from the Civil War siege of Petersburg.
 * , Brookneal &mdash; Preserves the home and plantation of Patrick Henry, a famed orator and legislator during the American Revolution.
 * , Richmond &mdash; A set of Civil War sites surrounding Richmond, including battlefields and former defensive fortifications.
 * , Arlington &mdash; Overlooking Arlington National Cemetery and the Pentagon is this monument to the Air Force, comprised of a statue with three curving spires signifying the Thunderbird's signature bomb-burst formation.
 * , Vienna

West Virginia

 * , Harpers Ferry &mdash; Contains much of the historic town of Harpers Ferry, an important industrial center in the 19th century and site of John Brown's raid that helped trigger the Civil War.

Florida

 * , Bradenton &mdash; Commemorates the landing of Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto, who led the first European expedition of the southern United States.
 * , Jacksonville &mdash; Site of the first French colony in what would become the United States.

Illinois

 * , Chicago &mdash; A water gap connecting the Great Lakes to the Mississippi River, the importance of which led to Chicago becoming the most prominent city in the region.
 * , Springfield &mdash; The Illinois home of Abraham Lincoln, where he lived before becoming president.
 * , Pike County, Western Illinois &mdash; Remains of the first town in the United States legally founded by an African American.
 * , Pullman, Chicago &mdash; A historic district that was once a company town built for the Pullman sleeping car company and the site of the violent 1894 Pullman labor strike, which played a significant role in U.S. labor and civil rights history.

Indiana

 * , Vincennes &mdash; Contains a memorial to George Rogers Clark, who led a successful campaign against British forces in the area during the American Revolution.
 * , Lincoln City (Southwestern Indiana) &mdash; Preserves the site where Abraham Lincoln spent most of his upbringing. A living history farm is located in the park.

Iowa

 * , West Branch (near Iowa City) &mdash; Birthplace, boyhood home, and burial site of President Herbert Hoover.

Michigan

 * , St Ignace &mdash; Commemorates Jacques Marquette, a French priest and explorer who established the first European settlements in Michigan.
 * , Calumet &mdash; Preserves a set of historic copper mines as well as many associated structures.
 * , Monroe &mdash; Site of a major battle in the War of 1812.

Missouri

 * , Independence and Grandview &mdash; Longtime home of President Harry Truman.
 * , Ste. Genevieve &mdash; the first permanent European settlement in Missouri.
 * , St. Louis &mdash; Home of the family of President Ulysses S. Grant.
 * , Republic (near Springfield) &mdash; Site of the first major Civil War battle west of the Mississippi River.

Ohio

 * , Cleveland Heights &mdash; Honors David Berger, an American citizen who was among the Israeli athletes killed at the 1972 Munich Olympics.
 * , Dayton &mdash; Preserves a number of sites related to the Wright brothers of aviation fame.
 * , Canton &mdash; Home of Ida Saxton McKinley, wife of President McKinley.
 * , Toledo &mdash; Site of the remains of a British fort built after the American Revolution.
 * , Chillicothe &mdash; Contains a series of ancient earthworks and burial mounds.
 * , Mentor &mdash; Former home of President James Garfield.
 * , Put-in-Bay &mdash; Commemorates the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812.
 * , Cincinnati &mdash; Birthplace of President William Howard Taft.

Texas

 * , Marfa &mdash; A segregated school until the end of segregation in the 1960s.
 * , El Paso &mdash; A cultural center on the U.S./Mexican border that commemorates the peaceful settlement of a local border dispute.
 * , Fort Davis &mdash; A well-preserved frontier fort dating back to the 1850s.
 * , Johnson City &mdash; Birthplace, home, ranch, and resting place of the former president.
 * , Brownsville &mdash; Site of the first major conflict of the Mexican-American War.
 * , San Antonio &mdash; Preserves several Spanish Colonial missions in the San Antonio area.

Kansas

 * , Topeka &mdash; Site of a segregated elementary school that became the focus for the Supreme Court's landmark decision to end racial segregation in public schools.
 * , Larned &mdash; A frontier fort along the Santa Fe Trail.
 * , Fort Scott &mdash; A fort built in the 1840s and used during the Civil War.
 * , Nicodemus &mdash; The only remaining western settlement established by African Americans during the Reconstruction period after the Civil War.

Nebraska

 * , Bayard &mdash; A prominent rock formation that served as a landmark along several prominent pioneer trails.

North Dakota

 * , Williston &mdash; A partially reconstructed frontier trading post.
 * , Stanton &mdash; Preserves the remnants of Native American villages, including a reconstructed earthen lodge.

Oklahoma

 * , Oklahoma City &mdash; Built to honor the victims and survivors of the Oklahoma City bombing of 1995.
 * , Cheyenne &mdash; Site of a battle between Cheyenne Indians and George Custer's cavalrymen.

South Dakota

 * &mdash; Preserves components of a nuclear missile field that was a significant Cold War facility, with former missile silos and launch control centers open for viewing.
 * &mdash; The iconic American landmark, with the faces of four presidents&mdash;George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt&mdash;carved into the granite cliffs of the Black Hills.

Rocky Mountains

 * (Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington), visitor's center near Lewiston &mdash; Preserves dozens of sites related to the history of the native Nez Perce, including the sites of battles between Chief Joseph and the federal government.

Colorado

 * , near Granada &mdash; one of the sites where Japanese Americans were interned during World War II
 * , La Junta &mdash; A frontier fort and settlement along the Santa Fe Trail.
 * , in the Eastern Plains &mdash; Site of the Sand Creek Massacre, where an American military force destroyed a peaceful Indian village in 1864.

Idaho

 * , Twin Falls &mdash; Site of a major Japanese American internment camp during World War II.

Montana

 * , Wisdom &mdash; Site of a battle between the U.S. government and the native Nez Perce.
 * , Deer Lodge &mdash; A living history museum that preserves a 19th century cattle ranch.
 * , near Billings &mdash; Site of Custer's Last Stand, a battle between Custer's U.S. soldiers and Lakota warriors.

Wyoming

 * , Fort Laramie (near Torrington) &mdash; A 19th century trading post that was a major stop along the Oregon Trail.

Arizona

 * , Sierra Vista &mdash; Situated on the U.S./Mexican border, commemorating the 1540 expedition of Spanish conquistador Coronado, the first European expedition into the American Southwest.
 * , Bowie (near Willcox) &mdash; Preserves the remains of a 19th century Army outpost.
 * , Ganado &mdash; Once a prominent trading post in the Navajo Nation, which has been preserved to look much like it did when it was built in the late 19th century.
 * , Tumacacori &mdash; Contains the ruins of three Spanish Colonial missions, including the remarkably well preserved Mission San José de Tumacácori.

New Mexico

 * &mdash; Preserves the ruins of an ancient city that was the heart of the Ancestral Puebloan civilization a thousand years ago.
 * , Pecos &mdash; Contains the ruins of an abandoned Puebloan village and a Spanish mission.

Utah

 * , Brigham City &mdash; Commemorates the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad.

California

 * , Danville &mdash; The hillside home of noted playwright Eugene O'Neill.
 * , Martinez &mdash; Former home of famed naturalist John Muir. His house is now full of artifacts and information about his life, his family's orchards are still operational, and the adjoining hills where he used to hike are open to visitors.
 * , Independence &mdash; The most widely known of the Japanese American internment camps from World War II.
 * , Concord (visit from Martinez) &mdash; Recognizes the Port Chicago disaster, a munitions explosion during WWII that killed hundreds of sailors and civilian workers.
 * , Richmond &mdash; This park preserves a portion of the Richmond Shipyards and associated structures, which churned out an unprecedented number of ships for the war effort.
 * , Fisherman's Wharf, San Francisco &mdash; Contains a maritime museum and a fleet of historic ships open for tours, including a square rigged sailing ship and a ferryboat.

Oregon

 * , Astoria &mdash; Commemorates the location where Lewis and Clark successfully reached the Pacific Ocean.

Washington

 * , Vancouver &mdash; An important 19th century fur trading outpost.
 * , Pioneer Square, Seattle &mdash; A museum and visitor center located in a former Seattle hotel that was a first stop for many prospectors during the Klondike gold rush.
 * , near Richland — Hanford B Reactor, which produced plutonium for nuclear weapons, is visitable on free guided tours. Another component of the park is in Tennessee (the related component in New Mexico isn't open to the public).
 * , San Juan Island &mdash; Preserves the site of the Pig War, a bloodless dispute between the U.S. and the British Empire over the boundary between the U.S. and Canada that was triggered by the shooting of a pig.
 * , Walla Walla &mdash; A site along the Oregon Trail where a group of settlers were slain by Native Americans in 1847.
 * , Walla Walla &mdash; A site along the Oregon Trail where a group of settlers were slain by Native Americans in 1847.

Alaska

 * , Unalaska &mdash; Site of a coastal defense fort built during WWII.
 * , Skagway &mdash; Preserves several historic buildings in Skagway affiliated with the Klondike gold rush of the 1890s.
 * , Sitka &mdash; Preserves the site of a fort built by the native Tlingit people and a collection of totem poles.

Hawaii

 * &mdash; Site of a Japanese internment camp during WWII. Not yet open to the public (as of 2023).
 * &mdash; Preserves the sites of two former leper colonies on the island of Molokai.
 * , Kona &mdash; Contains several sites that demonstrate traditional native Hawaiian culture, including an ancient settlement and a fishpond.
 * , Pearl Harbor, Honolulu &mdash; Covers a section of Pearl Harbor, site of the Japanese surprise attack that caused the U.S. to enter WWII. Several memorials are located here, most notably the USS Arizona Memorial, which straddles the sunken wreck of the USS Arizona battleship.
 * , Honaunau &mdash; Preserves the site of an ancient place of refuge as well as the remains of an ancient coastal village and a reconstructed temple.
 * , Kawaihae &mdash; Preserves the ruins of a major Ancient Hawaiian temple.

Guam

 * , Guam &mdash; Contains former WWII battlefields, trenches, and historic structures.

Northern Mariana Islands

 * , Saipan &mdash; A monument and park honoring the fallen of a WWII campaign on the Marianas.

Puerto Rico

 * , Old San Juan &mdash; Preserves a set of historic sites in Old San Juan, including colonial-era forts, bastions, and the old city wall.

U.S. Virgin Islands

 * , Christiansted &mdash; A set of historic structures dating back to the 18th and 19th centuries, that relate to the development of the Danish colonial economy once present on the island.
 * , Christiansted &mdash; Contains the only known site where Christopher Columbus set foot on what would later be United States territory, as well as a marine and island natural preserve.