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Architecture

Architecture, Art, Architecture, Body Adornment, Music and Food, Heritage Sites, Historic Eras of Guam, Historic Structures, Spanish Era, Villages, Heritage Sites and Island Life

San Dionisio Catholic Church, Humåtak

Construction of the first San Dionisio Catholic Church in Umatac/Humåtak began on November 12, 1680. On that same day a strong typhoon struck the island. The typhoon hit the southern part of the island producing a storm surge, which caused severe flooding to the islet where Don Joseph de Quiroga and the militia had been cutting wood to build the church of San Dionisio el Areopagita of Humåtak.

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Architecture, Art, Architecture, Body Adornment, Music and Food, Heritage Sites, Historic Eras of Guam, Historic Structures, US Naval Era, Villages, Heritage Sites and Island Life

Lujan House

The Jose P. Lujan 1911 house in Hagåtña is listed on both the Guam and National Registers of Historic Sites. With so few prewar homes left standing, particularly in Hagåtña, it was important that this structure was restored, according to the Guam Preservation Trust. The two story structure is located on the corner of Hesler and Padre Palomo Streets.

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Architecture, Art, Architecture, Body Adornment, Music and Food, Heritage Sites, Historic Eras of Guam, Historic Structures, Spanish Era, Villages, Heritage Sites and Island Life

Fort Soledad

Fort Nuestra Señora de la Soledåd, or Fort Soledad, the last of four Spanish fortifications built in the village of Humåtak/Umatac, is located atop a steep bluff called Chalan Aniti, or Path of the Ancestors. The fort provides a superior view of the village, the bay, the rugged coastline, and the imposing southern mountain range.

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Architecture, Art, Architecture, Body Adornment, Music and Food, Heritage Sites, Historic Eras of Guam, Historic Structures, Spanish Era, Villages, Heritage Sites and Island Life

Fort Santiago

Fort Santiago was the second of three Spanish forts built to defend the anchorage at Apra Harbor. The fort was constructed at the tip of Orote Peninsula on the southwestern coastline of Guam. Its location, atop a sheer cliffline overlooking the entrance to the harbor, made it a formidable defensive force.

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Architecture, Art, Architecture, Body Adornment, Music and Food, Heritage Sites, Historic Eras of Guam, Historic Structures, Spanish Era, Villages, Heritage Sites and Island Life

Fort Santa Agueda

Fort Santa Agueda, the only surviving Spanish fort in Hagåtña, sits atop Apugan Hill on the western coast of Guam. The fort, now commonly called Fort Apugan, provides a commanding view of the capital village of Hagåtña, the Philippine Sea, and the sheer northern clifflines of Oka Point and Urunao Point.

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Architecture, Art, Architecture, Body Adornment, Music and Food, Heritage Sites, Historic Eras of Guam, Historic Structures, Spanish Era, Villages, Heritage Sites and Island Life

Spanish Forts of Guam Overview

In order to protect Spain’s interests in Guam and its Pacific trade routes, several fortifications were constructed to defend the island. Beginning with the first stockade in Hagåtña in 1671 and ending with the semi-reductos (half-enclosed parapets) in 1835, the Spanish administration built fourteen fortifications of various types and dimensions on Guam.

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