
Angel Island Immigration Station: This facility on Angel Island in San Francisco Bay was the main entry point for immigration from Asia after it opened in 1910. Today it serves as a museum dedicated to the history of immigration in the United States. Click through the gallery for 12 more places:

Iolani Palace: This palace in Honolulu housed Hawaiian monarchs, including the Hawaiian Kingdom's last two rulers, King Kalakaua and Queen Liliuokalani.

South Asia Institute: Located in Chicago, the South Asia Institute fosters South Asian Art and culture in the United States through exhibitions and events.

Korean Bell of Friendship: This enormous bell in San Pedro, California, was a gift to the United States from South Korea in 1976 to celebrate the friendship between the two countries and the bicentennial of US independence.

Watt Munisotaram: This Cambodian temple in Hampton, Minnesota, was dedicated in 2007. Minnesota is home to some 10,000 Cambodians.

Paolo Agbayani Retirement Village: Filipino farmers played a significant role in the farm worker movement in the 1960s and the Paolo Agbayani Retirement Village was built via volunteer labor to support elderly Filipino farm workers in 1974.

Latte Stone Park: Located in Guam, Latte Stone Park features unique stone structures devised by the Chamorro, Guam's indigenous people.

Hakone Estate and Gardens: This beautiful spot in Saratoga, California, was created by Japanese imperial gardener Naoharu Aihara, architect Tsunematsu Shintani and numerous artisans in the early 1900s.

Wing Luke Museum: This Seattle museum tells stories of Asian Pacific American history, culture and identity.

Locke Historic District: The Chinese American agricultural community of Locke, California, was founded in 1915. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990.

Pu'uhonua O Hónaunau National Historical Park: Located on the island of Hawaii, this park contains more than 400 years of native Hawaiian history.

Wat Nawamintararachutis: The largest Thai Buddhist temple in the United States is in Raynham, Massachusetts, close to the Cambridge birthplace of Thailand's former King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Wakamatsu Farm: Established in 1869, the 272-acre Wakamatsu Farm in Placerville, California, was the site of the first Japanese settlement in the United States.



