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  1. The Panama–California Exposition was a world exposition held in San Diego, California, between January 1, 1915, and January 1, 1917. The exposition celebrated the opening of the Panama Canal, and was meant to tout San Diego as the first United States port of call for ships traveling north after passing westward through the canal.

  2. The Panama-California Exposition would be unlike other fairs—smaller, year-round, with an emphasis on gardens and an architectural style of its own. It would promote farming in the region, exhibits would demonstrate rather than display, and the story of man would be told by respected scholars. Spanish Colonial Revival Architecture was chosen ...

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  4. The Panama-California Exposition held in San Diego that year put the small town in the southwest corner of the United States on the map and convinced some people, but not all, that its name was spelled S-a-n D-i-e-g-o and not S-a-n-t-i-a-g-o. After its crowd-packed January 1, 1915 opening the Exposition went into a slump.

  5. After five years of unrelenting effort, San Diego celebrated the official opening of the Panama-California Exposition on January 1, 1915. At midnight, December 31, President Woodrow Wilson, in Washington, D.C., pressed a Western Union telegraph key. The signal turned on every light on the grounds and touched off a display of fireworks.

  6. Here is the loveliness of bountiful Nature, assembled and crystallized at San Diego's Exposition Beautiful. Download Official Views San Diego Panama-California Exposition. Title Official Publication Panama California International Exposition (San Diego 1916) Contents 48 photos. Publication Information The Albertype Company, Brooklyn, NY, 1916.

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  8. The Board of Directors of the Panama-California Exposition Company, on September 10, 1909, elected U. S. Grant, Jr. to be president of the company and John D. Spreckels first vice president. Grant, son of the former U.S. president, was part-owner of the U. S. Grant Hotel. Spreckels, son of sugar king Claus Spreckels, was owner of San Diego real ...

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