- Santa Fe National Historic Trail (66)
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Showing 447 results for LEED certified ...
Museum of the Cherokee People
Menokin
- Type: Place

Explore Menokin, a National Historic Landmark where history, architecture, and conservation meet. See the 1769 home of Francis Lightfoot Lee, witness innovative preservation in action, and walk trails through a protected Chesapeake Bay watershed landscape. Engage with exhibits, hands-on activities, and the powerful stories of those who shaped this place. Paddle Cat Point Creek, connect with nature, and uncover the past in a truly unique setting.
Canyon Lodge and Cabins
Port Royal State Historic Park
- Type: Place

“...the people…are moving not from choice to an unknown region not desired by them.” Elijah Hicks wrote these words to Chief John Ross while camped at Port Royal, Tennessee in October 1838. Port Royal was the last place over 10,000 Cherokees slept in Tennessee before crossing into Kentucky. They were travelling along the Great Western Road, part of the Northern Route, which ran from Nashville, Tennessee to Missouri. Visitors can walk about a 1/4 mile of that historic roadbed.
St. Francois County Jail Museum
- Type: Place

The St. Francois County Jail Museum is located in Historic Downtown Farmington, Missouri, along the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail. It was constructed in 1870 and used as a jail until the early 1990's. The building is now used as a history museum and houses artifacts from the Farmington area, as well as interpreting the history of the trail. Find more information on how to plan a visit.
The Legacy of the Port Royal Experiment
Information Panel: Aftermath
- Type: Person

Charles Lee, former British Army officer, became the second highest ranking general of the Continental Army during the American Revolution. On June 28, 1776 he oversaw the victory at the Battle of Sullivan's Island in Charleston, SC. Two years later, his retreat on the field at the Battle of Monmouth Courthouse would result in his court martial and the end of his military career. Learn more about this controversial figure here.
Monument to Gen. Robert E. Lee
Samuel Lee McDonald
- Type: Article

The opening lines of “America the Beautiful” first struck Katharine Lee Bates atop Pikes Peak in the Rocky Mountains. During the summer of 1893, she embarked on a journey across the United States. Originally written as a poem, many of the lines in Bates’ ode to the American landscape refer to geographical features she encountered during her travels.
Boggsville Historic Site
- Type: Place

Boggsville was once a stage stop on the Santa Fe Trail. Key businesses there were trading stores, owned by Thomas O. Boggs (built in 1862) and John W. Prowers (built in 1867). Boggsville became the seat of Bent County in 1870, but the coming of the railroad to nearby Las Animas brought about the town's downfall by 1880.
Eden London
- Type: Person
Eden London enlisted in Fitchburg, Massachusetts in the company of Capt. James Burt in Col. Asa Whitcomb’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill at the rail fence.
Henry Bakeman
- Type: Person

Henry Bakeman enlisted in April 1781, after British and Mohawk troops had destroyed his home village of Stone Arabia in October 1780. Involved first in carrying packages from one Patriot fort to another, resulting in “many skirmishes with the Indiana & Tories,” by late 1782 Bakeman found himself involved in what would be the last engagement of the Revolutionary War. Disaster awaited them. Bakeman’s story was well-documented through his pension record in 1834.
James Huzzey (Huzza/Hussey)
- Type: Person
James Huzzey enlisted in New Marlborough, Massachusetts into the company of Capt. Moses Harvey’s company, in Col. Jonathan Brewer’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill at the diagonal.
Scipio Dodge (Lee)
- Type: Person
Scipio Dodge enlisted in Wenham, Massachusetts into the company of Capt. Richard Dodge, in Col. Samuel Gerrish’s regiment, and was present at the Battle of Bunker Hill.