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Harvest Christian Academy (Guam)

1975 establishments in GuamAmerican school stubsBarrigada, GuamChristian schools in GuamEducational institutions established in 1975
Elementary schools in GuamGuamanian building and structure stubsMiddle schools in GuamOceanian school stubsPrivate K–12 schools in the United StatesPrivate high schools in Guam

Harvest Christian Academy (HCA) is a private Christian school in Barrigada, Guam. The school offers open enrollment for grades K3-12. HCA is administrated by and closely associated with Harvest Baptist Church (HBC). HBC was started in 1975 as a missionary church. The school was started the same year for the children of the congregation members. Over the years, the school's enrollment was opened to the community of Guam and now enrolls nearly 1,000 students each year in K3-12th grade. Harvest Ministries, Guam now also owns and operates KHMG radio station. The campus is spread out on 12 acres (49,000 m2) consisting of classrooms for kindergarten, elementary, junior and senior high. HCA also offers two computer labs, science lab, and library to their students. The school has an outdoor basketball court, soccer field, art room and piano lab for extracurricular activities. Also available to the school and public is a bookstore and cafe. In April 2009, the Family Life Center, also known as the FLC, was added to Harvest's list of buildings. This is the main site of Harvest's wrestling and American football games for the junior high and high school. Harvest's middle school soccer team has won the championship four times in a row, while the high school team has won it once. Harvest's sports' teams are called the HCA Eagles and Lady Hawks.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Harvest Christian Academy (Guam) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Harvest Christian Academy (Guam)
Canada Toto Road,

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N 13.4695 ° E 144.7848 °
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Harvest Christian Academy

Canada Toto Road
96921
Guam, United States
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Agana Historic District
Agana Historic District

The Agana Historic District in Hagåtña (formerly Agana), Guam is a 2-acre (0.81 ha) historic district that was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1985. It includes five contributing buildings: the Calvo-Torres, Rosario, Martinez-Notley, Lujan and Leon Guerrero houses. The area is roughly bounded by 2nd S., 3rd S., and 9th W., Santa Cruz and Legaspi Sts. in Agana. The Calvo-Torres and Martinez-Notley houses are the oldest surviving private residences in Guam. The set of structures are Guam's oldest concrete buildings. And the set is the only surviving group of pre-World War II houses in Agana, "the only fragment left of old Agana's urban space." While a few scattered other individual structures survive, all else has been destroyed by World War II, termites, typhoons Karen of 1962 and Pamela of 1976, and other causes. They are also significant for tie to the Spanish colonial era and the use of ifil wood prior to Guam's deforestation.: 3  The Calvo-Torres House is the oldest, with its oldest part dating about 1800. It is approximately 16.6 by 17.6 metres (54 ft × 58 ft) in plan, has ifil framing, and is roofed by original Spanish tile plus later metal roofing. The oldest part, built of manposteria (coral mixed with lime mortar), once hosted a silversmith. A kitchen was added, and, in the 1920s, a concrete addition. The Rosario House is believed to have been built in the late 1800s. It is a 8.8 by 11.3 metres (29 ft × 37 ft) south-facing "one-and-a-half bodega type" structure.: 6  Part of the Martinez-Notley House was built in 1826. William H. Notley married into the Martinez family. The house is 20.9 by 15.5 metres (69 ft × 51 ft). It is described as having massing and overall character with "strong Spanish overtones"; it is largely surrounded by manposteria walls.: 6–7  The Leon Guerrero House is a 17.7-by-12-metre (58 ft × 39 ft) house started in 1939 but halted by rumors of war, then used as barracks by Japanese personnel during the war, with storage of rice in its lower level. It would have been destroyed after the war but its owner, Leon Guerrero, refused to vacate.: 7  The Lujan House is separately listed on the National Register as Guam Institute.: 7