Monday, February 11, 2013

From the Los Angeles Times: Working to preserve a patch of Japanese history

The south side of the Furuta family barn, with nopales (Prickly Pear cactus) planted in the field that once held goldfish ponds.  The nopales were planted by Rainbow Environmental Services staff in 2012. (Photo, February 11, 2013)

   Today's Los Angeles Times published a front-page feature on Historic Wintersburg at http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-wintersburg-2-20130211,0,1610762.story

   Thank you to Los Angeles Times reporter Rick Rojas for sharing our story!

Historic Wintersburg Preservation Task Force on Facebook, http://www.facebook.com/pages/Historic-Wintersburg-Preservation-Task-Force/433990979985360

City of Huntington Beach web pagehttp://www.huntingtonbeachca.gov/i_want_to/give/donation-wintersburg.cfm

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The Historic Wintersburg blog focuses on an overlooked history in Huntington Beach, Orange County, California, in the interest of saving a historic property from demolition. The author and publisher reserves the right not to publish comments. Please no promotional or political commentary. Zero tolerance for hate rhetoric. Comments with embedded commercial / advertising links or promoting other projects, books, or publications may not be published. If you have an interesting anecdote, question or comment about one of our features, it will be published.