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Showing 364 results for CATO ...
Blue Ridge Summit Overlook
- Type: Person

Cato Smith was an enslaved African who was brought to Massachusetts Bay from Ghana in 1761 at the age of 10. In 1775 he was enslaved to the family of Captain William Smith of Lincoln. On April 24, 1775 he enlisted in the Massachusetts Army as a soldier and served until the end of the year. He enlisted again in late summer 1776 and died in service on January 23, 1777
- Type: Article

West-central California has been home to Native populations for many thousands of years. Two of these, the Miwok and the Ohlone were the primary inhabitants of San Francisco Bay's northern and southern peninsulas. Research indicates that both of these tribes recognized gender identities beyond they typical Western conception of male/female.
- Type: Article

San Francisco's Castro neighborhood is known as the oldest LGB enclave in the country. It began to take shape at the end of World War II when United States detention policies had displaced thousands of Japanese Americans, families were flocking to live in suburban developments, and San Francisco's urban neighborhoods were particularly affordable.
Cato’s Freedom Seeking Ad by Philip Syng - May 5, 1748
Schuyler Estate
- Type: Person
Cato Boardman enlisted in Cambridge, Massachusetts into the company of Capt. Capt. Samuel Thatcher, in Col. Thomas Gardner’s regiment and was present at Battle Road.
Cato Fair
- Type: Person
Cato Fair enlisted in Natick, Massachusetts into the company of Capt.James. Mellen, in Col. Jonathan Ward’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill.
Cato Freeman (Liberty)
- Type: Person
Cato Freeman enlisted in Andover, Massachusetts into the company of Capt. Benjamin Farnum’s company, in Col. James Frye’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill in the redoubt.
Cato Green
- Type: Person
Cato Green enlisted in Stoneham, Massachusetts into the company of Capt. Samuel Sprague, in Col. Samuel Gerrish’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill.
Cato Newell
- Type: Person
Cato Newell enlisted in Charlestown, Massachusetts in the company of Capt. Joseph Chadwick, in Col. Richard Gridley’s regiment of artillery, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill.
- Type: Person
Cato Stedman served at Battle Road in Capt. Samuel Thatcher’s company, in Col. Thomas Gardner’s regiment.
Cato Tufts
- Type: Person
Cato Tufts enlisted in Medford, Massachusetts in the company of Capt. Oliver Parker, in Col. William Prescott’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill in the redoubt.
- Type: Person
Cato Wood was present at Battle Road in Col. Thomas Gardner’s regiment. He later enlisted in Charlestown, Massachusetts in the company of Capt. Edward Blake, in Col. Jonathan Brewer’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill at the diagonal.
- Type: Place

After the attack on Pearl Harbor by Japanese forces on December 7, 1941, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 giving the War Department authority to create zones from which Japanese Americans were excluded. The first exclusion area designated was Bainbridge Island. On March 30, 1942 the Japanese Americans living on Bainbridge Island were gathered at Eagledale Ferry Dock and sent to an incarceration camp in Manzanar, CA before being tranferred to Minidoka in Idaho.