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El Monte Legion Stadium, originally a combined auditorium and gymnasium, was the final component added to a complex of school buildings housing El Monte Union High School. [7] [8] The contract for $62,991 for the construction of the facility was publicly announced on September 30, 1927. [9] By April 1, 1928, when construction was nearly ...
Los Angeles County. / 34.08611°N 118.03472°W / 34.08611; -118.03472. San Gabriel Valley Airport ( formerly El Monte Airport) ( IATA: EMT, ICAO: KEMT, FAA LID: EMT) is a public airport 1 mile (1.6 km) north of El Monte, in Los Angeles County, California, United States. In November 2014, its name was changed from El Monte Airport to San ...
El Monte Station. / 34.07167°N 118.04333°W / 34.07167; -118.04333. El Monte Station is a large regional bus station in the city of El Monte, California, United States, adjacent to Interstate 10, serving the Metro J Line, Foothill Transit, Greyhound Lines, and El Monte Transit. It is the Metro J Line's eastern terminus.
06-72996. GNIS feature ID. 1656635. Website. www .ci .south-el-monte .ca .us. South El Monte is a city in the San Gabriel Valley, in Los Angeles County, California, United States. At the 2010 census, the city had a population of 20,116, down from 21,144 at the 2000 census .
El Monte (Spanish for "the Mountain", also in archaic Spanish for "the wood") may refer to: El Monte, California, United States, a city. El Monte, Chile, a city. Category: Place name disambiguation pages.
t. e. On August 2, 1995, 72 Thai nationals were found working in conditions of slavery in a makeshift garment factory consisting of a row of residential duplexes in El Monte, California, just east of Los Angeles. [1] This case is considered the first recognized case of modern-day slavery in the United States since the abolition of slavery. [2]
Gay's Lion Farm. Gay's Lion Farm was a public selective breeding facility and tourist attraction just west of the south-east junction of Peck Road and Valley Boulevard in El Monte, California. It operated from 1925 through 1942, when it was closed temporarily due to wartime meat shortages. It never reopened.
The El Monte Chamber of Commerce had a vested interest in keeping Mexican workers non-unionized and used tactics such as red-baiting to turn public opinion against the strikers. [3] The month-long strike ended on July 6, 1933, with field workers declaring victory even if they were no better off than they were before the strike with a slight ...