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Saipan was once the sugar kingdom. The park was built on the basis of the remains of the sugar factory. The park retains the Japanese train transporting sugar cane in Saipan. You can also see a statue of a small Japanese. This person relies on the climate conditions of Saipan to grow sugar cane and develop the sugar industry in Japan. Known as the sugar king, the Japanese have a long history of invaders.
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Saipan was once the sugar kingdom. The park was built on the basis of the remains of the sugar factory. The park retains the Japanese train transporting sugar cane in Saipan. You can also see a statue of a small Japanese. This person relies on the climate conditions of Saipan to grow sugar cane and develop the sugar industry in Japan. Known as the sugar king, the Japanese have a long history of invaders.
Sugar King Park was once the third-ranked sugar kingdom in the world, and Sugar King Park is not large in the south of the city. This is the memorial park built by the Japanese to commemorate the founder of the sugar factory, the park has a bronze statue of Songjiang Chunchi and a shrine, and there are still small trains that the Japanese transported sugar cane from all over Saipan to here. The Sugar King Park is a perfect place for picnics, with beautiful moss-covered trees.
Saipan was once the third largest sugar kingdom in the world. I was thinking about rebirth. It seems that there is brown sugar. Is this related to the Japanese? I was guessed right. The sugar technology and industry here are brought by the Japanese. Once brilliant, there is also a history of blood and tears of the former laborer.
It is located in the south of Galaban. The environment is very good. The historical reason is that the previous saipan island was mainly based on planting sugarcane, so japs also specially repaired the small train for this.
From the T-junction of the church to the west, across a road, is the Sugar King Park. During the occupation of Saipan, Japan found that the climate here is very suitable for sugarcane growth, so it planted a lot of sugarcane on Tianning Island and Saipan Island. At that time, Saipan was the third-ranked sugar kingdom in the world. Japanese Matsugi Chunji made a fortune here, he was called "the sugar king" at the time, in order to commemorate Songjiang Chunji, in 1934 on the site of the sugar factory established the sugar king park. The park still has a red and black locomotive with a history of more than 80 years that transported sugar cane from all over Saipan. The park has a bronze statue of the Japanese sugar king, which is covered with bullet marks from the battle of Saipan. There are many tropical plants planted in the park.