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・ Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority
・ Cuyahoga River
・ Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy
・ Cuyahoga Valley National Park
・ Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad
・ Cuyama River
・ Cuyama Valley
・ Cuyama, California
・ Cuyamaca College
・ Cuyamaca complex
・ Cuyamaca Mountains
・ Cuyamaca Outdoor School
・ Cuyamaca Peak
・ Cuyamaca Rancho State Park
・ Cuyamaca Water Company
Cuyamaca, California
・ Cuyamacamelus
・ Cuyamecalco Mixtec
・ Cuyamecalco Villa de Zaragoza
・ Cuyamel Fruit Company
・ Cuyamungue, New Mexico
・ Cuyania
・ Cuyapaipe Mountain
・ Cuyapo, Nueva Ecija
・ Cuyen
・ Cuyler
・ Cuyler and Woodburn Railroad
・ Cuyler baronets
・ Cuyler Presbyterian Church
・ Cuyler, New York


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Cuyamaca, California : ウィキペディア英語版
Cuyamaca, California

Cuyamaca (Kumeyaay: 'Ekwiiyemak) is a region of eastern San Diego County. It lies east of the Capitan Grande Indian Reservation in the western Laguna Mountains, north of Descanso and south of Julian. Named for the 1845 Rancho Cuyamaca Mexican land grant, the region is now dominated by the Cuyamaca Rancho State Park. Within the park is the prominent Cuyamaca Peak, the second-highest mountain in San Diego County at .
The name is a Spanish corruption of the Kumeyaay phrase "'Ekwiiyemak", which means, according to Margaret Langdon's translation, "Behind the clouds".〔.〕 It has also been translated as "the place where it rains", a reference to the region's higher average precipitation than San Diego County's low coastal areas. Cuyamaca is a popular toponym lending its name to streets, businesses and a community college in the San Diego area.
==History==
During the Julian Gold Rush, a quartz gold mine the Stonewall Mine, was found on the south side of what is now Lake Cuyamaca. First a mining camp called Stonewall (1873–1876), then the mining company town of Stratton (1887–1888), renamed Cuyamaca City (1888–1906),〔Frickstad, Walter N., A Century of California Post Offices 1848-1954, Philatelic Research Society, Oakland, CA. 1955, pp. 147–158〕 at its peak had a population of 500 and served the Stonewall Mine.
In 1906 the post office was closed and service moved to Descanso. The town was abandoned after mining operations ceased, and few traces of it exist.〔(Pourade, Richard, ''The History of San Diego'', Chapter 4, ''The Mountain that Sprouted Gold'' )〕 The site of the town now lies within Cuyamaca Rancho State Park〔(Sampson, Michael, ''Recent Archaeological Investigations at the Stonewall Mine Site'' )〕 at .
The modern community of Cuyamaca, later developed on the north side of the lake. Before the Cedar Fire of 2003 the community of Cuyamaca consisted of approximately 145 homes on a mountain (North Peak) north of the reservoir.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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