20210501 金門公園中日本茶園里盛開的櫻花 必應(yīng)壁紙

金門公園 金門公園中日本茶園里盛開的櫻花 今天,隨著亞裔美國人和太平洋島民遺產(chǎn)月的開始,我們將參觀位于舊金山金門公園的日本茶園。這個(gè)花園最初是在1894年的世界博覽會(huì)上作為臨時(shí)展覽而設(shè)計(jì)的,后來在景觀設(shè)計(jì)師Hagiwara的監(jiān)督下成為了金門公園中的永久性設(shè)施。萩原花了大量的錢、熱情和才華,讓游客們可以真正體驗(yàn)到日本園藝的味道。過去和今天的游客會(huì)在錦鯉池塘上過橋,在滿是日本本土植物和樹木的寶塔和花園中漫步。萩原于1925年去世,但他的家人一直住在他在這片土地上建造的房子里,直到二戰(zhàn)期間他們被送進(jìn)了拘留營,花園也被更名為“東方花園”。戰(zhàn)爭(zhēng)一結(jié)束,原來的名字又回來了,但家族卻沒有。萩原的愿景在花園中流傳,他是數(shù)以百萬計(jì)幫助建設(shè)和美化這個(gè)國家的亞裔和太平洋島民之一。
原文:
With Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month kicking off today, we're visiting the Japanese Tea Garden in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. Originally designed as a temporary exhibit in the 1894 World's Fair, the gardens became a permanent fixture in the park, overseen by landscape designer Makoto Hagiwara.Hagiwara poured his money, passion, and talents into giving visitors to the garden an authentic taste of Japanese horticulture. Visitors then and today cross bridges over koi ponds and wander through pagodas and gardens full of native Japanese plants and trees. Hagiwara died in 1925, but his family remained in the house he built on the property until they were sent to an internment camp during World War II and the gardens were renamed 'Oriental Garden.' Once the war was over, the original name returned, but the family did not. Hagiwara's vision lives on in the gardens, and as one example of the millions of Asian and Pacific Islander Americans who've helped build and beautify our nation.
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