. . . . . "Ash Mountain Entrance Sign"@en . . "L'Ash Mountain Entrance Sign est un panneau de signalisation am\u00E9ricain dans le comt\u00E9 de Tulare, en Californie. Situ\u00E9 le long de la Generals Highway, au d\u00E9part de l'Indian Head River Trail, \u00E0 l'entr\u00E9e sud du parc national de Sequoia, il est inscrit au Registre national des lieux historiques depuis le 27 avril 1978. Fabriqu\u00E9 en bois de s\u00E9quoia g\u00E9ant dans le style rustique du National Park Service, il comprend sur son c\u00F4t\u00E9 gauche un profil d'Am\u00E9rindien sculpt\u00E9."@fr . . "1935"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1935"^^ . "20267240"^^ . "-118.8358306884766"^^ . . . . . . "1100263622"^^ . "George Muno, Harold Fowler"@en . . . . "The Ash Mountain Entrance Sign at Sequoia National Park was constructed in 1935 by Civilian Conservation Corps craftsmen. Featuring a carved Native American face, the sign was made from blocks of sequoia wood and fastened with wrought iron brackets."@en . . . . . . . "Ash Mountain Entrance Sign"@en . . "78000367"^^ . . . . . "3698"^^ . . . "1978-04-27"^^ . . . "36.4875 -118.83583333333333" . "L'Ash Mountain Entrance Sign est un panneau de signalisation am\u00E9ricain dans le comt\u00E9 de Tulare, en Californie. Situ\u00E9 le long de la Generals Highway, au d\u00E9part de l'Indian Head River Trail, \u00E0 l'entr\u00E9e sud du parc national de Sequoia, il est inscrit au Registre national des lieux historiques depuis le 27 avril 1978. Fabriqu\u00E9 en bois de s\u00E9quoia g\u00E9ant dans le style rustique du National Park Service, il comprend sur son c\u00F4t\u00E9 gauche un profil d'Am\u00E9rindien sculpt\u00E9."@fr . . "Ash Mountain Entrance Sign"@fr . . . . . . . "California#USA"@en . . . "The Ash Mountain Entrance Sign at Sequoia National Park was constructed in 1935 by Civilian Conservation Corps craftsmen. Featuring a carved Native American face, the sign was made from blocks of sequoia wood and fastened with wrought iron brackets. The design was first proposed by National Park Service architect Merel S. Sager in 1931, who designed a small log sign for the Ash Mountain entrance. In 1935 resident park landscape architect Harold G. Fowler created a much larger design. He recruited CCC worker George W. Muno, who had displayed a talent for woodworking, and they selected a piece of fallen sequoia wood from the Giant Forest. Fowler sketched the profile in blue chalk on the wood using an Indian Head nickel as a guide. Muno carved the wood over a several-month period and the sign was assembled and erected over the winter of 1935-36. It was moved in 1964 to make room for a new park entrance station. The sign is supported by a four-foot-diameter sequoia log rising from a two-tiered masonry platform. The sign panel is ten feet wide by four feet high and one foot thick, carved into a profile reputed to signify Sequoyah, whose Cherokee tribe never inhabited California. The sign was originally unpainted, but assumed its present appearance in the 1950s. As originally built, a matching log pylon stood on the opposite side of the road. The pylon was removed when the sign was relocated."@en . . . . . . . "36.48749923706055"^^ . "POINT(-118.83583068848 36.487499237061)"^^ . . . "Ash Mountain Entrance Sign"@en . . . . "78000367" . .