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•NATIONAL REGISTER•
BULLETIN
Technical information on comprehensive planning, survey of cultural resources, and registration in
the National Register of Historic Places.
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Park Service
Interagency Resources Division
m .
a ~„~
Propernes nominated to the National Register may be
classified in one of the five property classifications listed
above. Those evaluated as meeting the National Register
criteria may be nominated separately or as part of a
multiple property submission.
A multiple property submission includes nominations for
all or a portion of the significant historic properties that
relate to one or a series of established historic contexts,
i.e. properties that share some significant historic or
cultural relationship. A multiple property submission
calls for the development of historic contexts, selection of
related property types, and the identification and docu-
mentation of related significant properties, It may be
based on the results of a comprehensive interdisciplinary
survey for a specific rural area, town, city, section of a
city, county, or region of a state, or it may be based on
an intensive study of the resources illustrative of a
specific type of building or site, a single cultural affilia-
tion, the work of a specific master, or a single or closely
related group of historic events or activities. This
publication is intended to provide guidance on the con-
duct of surveys that may in rum form the basis for multi-
ple property submissions. Further information about
multiple property submissions for nominating properties
What is a survey?
to the National Register is contained in National Register
Bulletin 16, Guidelines for Completing National Register
of Historic Places Forms, available from the National
Park Service.
In this publication survey means a process of
identifying and gathering data on a community's
historic resources. It includes field survey-the
physical search for and recording of historic resources
on the ground-but it also includes planning and
background research before field survey begins,
organization and presentation of survey data as the
survey proceeds, and the development of inventories.
Survey data refers to the raw data produced by the
survey; that is, all the information gathered on each
property and area investigated.
An inventory is one of the basic products of a survey.
An inventory is an organized compilation of informa-
What is a historic resource?
lion on those properties that are evaluated as signifi-
cant.
Evaluation is the process of determining whether iden-
tified properties meet defined criteria of historical, ar-
chitectural, archeological, or cultural significance, In
other words, evaluation involves winnowing the
survey data to produce an inventory.
Survey can be conducted at a variety of scales, pro-
ducing different kinds of survey data applicable to dif-
ferent needs. These will be discussed in detail later in
this publication.
The National Historic Preservation Act defines
historic resource, or historic property, as:
any prehistoric or historic district, site, building,
structure, or abject included in, or eligible far ine(u-
sfon in the Nations! Register (of Historic Places);
such term includes artifacts, records, and remains
which are related to such a district, site, building,
structure, or object.
The National Register, in turn, defines a historic prop-
erty as a district, site, building, structure, or object
significant in American history, architecture, engineer-
ing, archeology, and culture. A historic property may
be a row of stores having cast-iron fronts or Mount
Vernon, a water tower or a city park, a railroad sta-
tion, an ethnic neighborhood, or the archeological re-
mains of a prehistoric Indian village. It may be of
value to the Nation as a whole or important only to
the community in which it is located.
Introduction
Commercial 61ock in South Royalton Historic District. Royalton,
Vermont (Courtney Fisher)
Guidelines For Local Surveys:
A Basis For Preservation Planning
National Register Bulletin 24
Anne Derry
H. Ward Jand]
Carol D. Shul]
Jan Thorman
1977
REVISED, 1985, by Patricia L. Parker
National Register of Historic Places
Interagency Resources Division
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Washington, DC
Acknowledgments
Many professionals in the National Park Service made
valuable contributions to the preparation of the
original, 1977 issue of this publication. William G.
Reeves, the late Carolyn Hamm, and Steven R. Rut-
tenbaum of the National Register and Thomas F. King
of Interagency Archeological Services prepared drafts
for certain sections of this publication, while
Katherine H. Cole, Charles Herrington, and the late
Wilford Cole provided helpful comments on the entire
manuscript. Editorial assistance was provided by
Sarah A. Fackelman. The National Trust for Historic
Preservation, the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, and many private consultants
with considerable survey experience made a number
of useful suggestions during the early stages of this
project.
The 1977 issue was thoroughly revised and updated in
1985 by Patricia L. Parker. The National Alliance of
Preservation Commissions, the National Conference
of State Historic Preservation Officers, and staff of
the Interagency Resources Division of the National
Park Service provided helpful comments on the re-
vised manuscript. Linda McClelland of the National
Register provided editorial assistance in preparing the
revised manuscript for publication.
We are grateful for the assistance of these people in
the preparation of Guidelines for Local Surveys.
Anne Derry H. Ward Jandl Carol D. Shull
Jan Thorman
Foreword
Over the last 80 years, Congress and the President
have given the Department of the Interior major re-
sponsibilities in identifying, registering, and protecting
the Nation's historic resources. With the National
Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the Secretary of the
Interior was called upon to expand and maintain a na-
tional register of historic places and to give maximum
encouragement to State governments to develop state-
wide historic preservation programs of their own. The
Act recognized that one of the prerequisites for an ef-
fective national preservation program was the iden-
tification of historic resources across the country
through comprehensive statewide surveys. Through a
grants-in-aid program established by the Act, limited
funding was made available for survey work at both
the State and local levels.
During the 1970s, stimulated by implementation of
the National Historic Preservation Act and growing
interest in their own historic resources, local govern-
ments across the Nation developed and expanded their
historic preservation programs. When the National
Historic Preservation Act was amended in 1980, Con-
gress recognized this growing interest by mandating
increased assistance to local governments whose pres-
ervation programs are certified by the State Historic
Preservation Officer and the Secretary of the Interior
as meeting high professional standards.
Historic resource surveys and their resulting inven-
tories form an important basis for planning decisions
that affect the quality of our community life. In order
to plan Eor the preservation and enhancement of the
historic environment, it is necessary to determine
what properties make up that environment. It is thus
no surprise that the effectiveness of the National
Register of Historic Places as a planning tool depends
upon the quality and comprehensiveness of survey
activity.
Basic standards and guidelines for historic preserva-
tion surveys have been published by the Department
of the Interior as part of the Secretary of the Interior's
Standards and Guidelines for Archeology and Historic
Preservation. To provide further assistance to com-
munities and local governments in the conduct of high
quality surveys, the National Register has prepared
Guidelines for Local Surveys: A Basis for Preservation
Planning. This bulletin is intended to provide a wide
range of information on identifying, registering, and
protecting historic resources.
The original version of Guidelines for Local Surveys
was published in 1977, and quickly became one of the
National Park Service's most popular historic preser-
vation publications. By 1984 the original version was
out of print, and badly outdated as the result of
changes in laws (notably the 1980 National Historic
Preservation Act amendments), policies, regulations,
the organization of the national historic preservation
program, and the sophistication of many State and
local preservation programs. Accordingly, the Na-
tional Park Service undertook a comprehensive re-
write of the publication in 1985, to produce the pres-
ent volume.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Introduction
How to use this publication 1
What is a survey? 2
What is a historic resource? 2
Why undertake a historic resource survey? 3
What should you know about the National Register before undertaking a survey? 4
Who is the State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO)7 What assistance can the SHPO
provide? 6
What is a certified local government preservation program and how can survey contribute
to certification? 7
What is the value of a historic resource survey and inventory? 8
Who should sponsor a survey? 8
Chapter I: Planning the Survey
Initial Questions
What kinds of resources should the survey seek? 9
What kinds of information should be gathered? 11
What different kinds of surveys are commonly used? 12
How large an area should be included in a survey? 13
How long should a survey take? 13
Elements of Survey Planning
How is the purpose of the survey established? 14
What are historic contexts? 14
How are survey goals and priorities established? 16
How should the storage and use of survey data be considered during survey planning? 16
How can a community involve the public in planning a survey? 17
What form should a survey design take? 18
Mobilizing Resources for the Survey
What qualifications should those supervising a survey have? 18
Where can qualified professionals be located? 19
How is a professional consultant selected? 20
What fees do historic resources consultants charge? 21
How do non-professionals fit into a survey? 23
What kind of training will ensure a consistent and high-quality survey? 24
How much should a survey cost? 27
Where can funding for surveys be obtained? 27
Chapter II: Conducting the Survey
Archival Research
How should archival research be organized? 28
What sources of information should be consulted? 31
Where may primary and secondary information be found? 33
Conducting Field Survey
How is a reconnaissance of above-ground properties carried out? 35
How is a reconnaissance of archeological sites carried out? 36
How is an intensive survey of above-ground properties carried out? 37
How is an intensive survey of archeological sites carried out? 39
How can oral history or ethnography contribute to the survey? 40
What kinds of data will be needed to evaluate historic resources? 41
What additional planning information may be gathered in the survey process? 47
Forms, maps, photographs: How should survey data be recorded? 4S
What equipment will be needed for survey work? 50
Chapter III: Review and Organization of Survey Data
How are survey data reviewed during fieldwork? 52
How and why are resources evaluated? 54
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using numerical and categorical evaluation
systems? 55
What kinds of due process considerations may be required in evaluating properties? 56
What kind of documentation should be included in the inventory files? 56
How can information be stored to permit efficient retrieval at a later date? 57
Chapter IV: Use of Survey Data in Planning
What are the major components of preservation planning? 61
How are survey data used in ongoing identification? 61
How are survey data used in making evaluation decisions? 62
How can survey data contribute to strategies for the preservation and enhancement of
historic resources? 62
How can survey data be used in community development planning? 65
Chapter V: Publications
What should be published once a survey is completed? 69
What are some considerations in production and distribution of survey publication? 70
What are some alternatives to traditional publication? 70
Appendix I: Archeological Surveys 72
Appendix II: Federal Legislation Affecting Historic Preservation 75
Appendix III: Legal and Financial Tools Used to Preserve and Enhance Historic Resources 78
Appendix IV: Bibliography 85
Appendix V: Contacts 100
Introduction
How to use this publication
Guidelines for Local Surveys provides guidance to
communities, organizations, Federal and State agen-
cies, and individuals interested in undertaking surveys
of historic resources. Although it contains information
and recommendations with broad applicability, it is
designed primarily for use by local government of-
ficials and those who undertake surveys of cities and
other communities. Because these guidelines will be
read by people of varied interests-local government
administrators, community-based preservation
organizations, civic groups, preservation profes-
sionals, planners, members of preservation commis-
sions, developers, Federal and State agency officials,
and other interested persons-information is included
that is familiar to some and foreign to others. Some
communities may be interested in doing a survey of
only one neighborhood using volunteer labor, while
other communities may be interested in planning and
conducting a comprehensive survey of every building
within their city limits using professional consultants.
NATIONAL REGISTER RESOURCE CLASSIFICATIONS:
DEFINITIONS
District: A district possesses a significant concentration,
linkage, or continuity of sites, buildings, structures, or
objects united historically or aesthetically by plan or
physical development.
Site: A site is the location of a significant event, a pre-
historic or historic occupation or activity, or a building
or structure, whether standing, ruined, or vanished,
where the location itself possesses historical, cultural, or
archeological value regardless of the value of any existing
structure.
This publication is divided into five chapters: plan-
ning the survey, conducting the survey, review and
organization of survey data, use of survey data in
planning, and publications. Because many of the ac-
tivities within these areas are interrelated, some dupli-
cation of information is necessary. Many complex
procedures, programs, and laws are referred to
throughout the text; brief explanations of these are
provided in the appendices. The index should aid
those readers with specific ideas and questions in
mind.
This edition of Guidelines for Local Surveys has been
thoroughly updated and rewritten based on the
original edition, published in 1977. It will be further
updated periodically; therefore, comments and sugges-
tions for future editions are welcome. They should be
addressed to: Associate Director, Cultural Resources,
and Keeper of the National Register of Historic
Places, U.S. Department of the Interior, National
Park Service, P.O. Box 37127, Washington, DC
20013-7127.
Building: A building, such as a house, barn, church,
hotel, or similar construction is created to shelter any
form of human activity. Building may also be used to
refer to a historically and functionally related unit, such
as a courthouse and jail or a house and barn.
Structure: The term structure is used to distinguish from
buildings those functional constructions made usually for
purposes other than creating shelter.
Object: The term object is used to distinguish from buildings
and stmctures those constructions that are primarily artistic
in nature or are relatively small in scale and simply com
structed. Although it may be, by nature or design, movable.
an object is associated with a specific setting or enviroo-
ment, such as statuary in a designed landscape.
Introduction
Propernes nominated to the National Register may be
classified in one of the five property classifications listed
above. Those evaluated as meeting the National Register
criteria may be nominated separately or as part of a
multiple property submission.
A multiple property submission includes nominations for
all or a portion of the significant historic properties that
relate to one or a series of established historic contexts,
i.e. properties that share some significant historic or
cultural relationship. A multiple property submission
calls for the development of historic contents, selection of
related property types, and the identification and docu-
mentation of related significant properties. It may be
based on the results of a comprehensive interdisciplinary
survey for a specific rural area, town, city, section of a
city, county, or region of a state, or it may be based on
an intensive study of the resources illustrative of a
specific type of building or site, a single cultural affilia-
tion, the work of a specific master, or a single or closely
related group of historic events or activities. This
publication is intended to provide guidance on the con-
duct of surveys that may in cum form the basis for multi-
ple property submissions. Further information about
multiple property submissions for nominating properties
~ m, .~
to the National Register is contained in National Register
Bulletin 16, Guidelines for Completing National Register
of Historic Plates Forms, available from the National
Park Service.
What is a survey?
In this publication survey means a process of
identifying and gathering data on a community's
historic resources. It includes field survey-the
physical search for and recording of historic resources
on the ground-but it also includes planning and
background research before field survey begins,
organization and presentation of survey data as the
survey proceeds, and the development of inventories.
Survey data refers to the raw data produced by the
survey; that is, al] the information gathered on each
property and area investigated.
lion on those properties that are evaluated as signifi-
cant.
Evaluation is the process of determining whether iden
tified properties meet defined criteria of historical, ar-
chitectural, archeological, or cultural significance. In
other words, evaluation involves winnowing the
survey data to produce an inventory.
Survey can be conducted at a variety of scales, pro-
ducing different kinds of survey data applicable to dif-
ferent needs. These will be discussed in detail later in
this publication.
An inventory is one of the basic products of a survey.
An inventory is an organized compilation of informa-
What is a historic resource?
The National Historic Preservation Act defines
historic resource, or historic property, as:
any prehistoric or historic district, site, building,
structure, or object included in, or eligible for inclu-
sion in the National Register (of Historic Places);
such term includes artifacts, records, and remains
which are related to such a district, site, building,
structure, or object.
The National Register, in turn, defines a historic prop-
erty as a district, site, building, structure, or object
significant in American history, architecture, engineer-
ing, archeology, and culture. A historic property may
be a row of stores having cast-iron fronts or Mount
Vernon, a water tower or a city park, a railroad sta-
tion, an ethnic neighborhood, or the archeological re-
mains of a prehistoric Indian village. It may be of
value to the Nation as a whole or important only to
the community in which it is located.
am
_. y ,. -~-~`q,
Introduction
Commercial block in South Royalton Historic District, Royalton,
Vermont (Courtney Fisher)
Why undertake a historic resource survey?
The underlying reason for undertaking a survey to
identify a community's historic resources is the grow-
ing recognition, by citizens and governments at all
levels, that such resources have value and should be
retained as functional parts of modern life. The
historic resources of a community or neighborhood
give it its special character and cultural depth. Some
historic resources contain information whose study
can provide unique insights into a community's past,
and help answer broad questions about history and
prehistory. In more utilitarian terms, each historic
building and structure represents an investment that
should not be discarded lightly; maintaining and
rehabilitating older buildings and neighborhoods can
mean savings in energy, time, money, and raw
materials.
To make effective use of historic resources, to respect
their value and extend their lives, it is necessary to in-
tegrate historic preservation into community planning.
This is the immediate reason for undertaking a local
historic resources survey: to gather the information
needed to plan for the wise use of a community's
resources.
A historic resources survey can define the historic
character of a community or a particular area and can
provide the basis for making sound judgements in
community planning. Survey data can be used to con-
struct apreservation plan that helps the community
identify the historic, cultural, aesthetic, and visual
Introduction
relationships that unify and define its component
areas, and to establish policies, procedures, and
strategies For maintaining and enhancing them. It can
lead to an increased understanding and awareness of
the human environment by officials and citizens
within the community and an increased commitment
to preserving it.
An official preservation plan, prepared and adopted
by the community and its planning agency, should
provide a basis for integrating survey information
with other planning data; it should be an important
part of comprehensive community planning, It can
establish priorities for dealing with historic resources
within the framework of existing local planning pro-
grams and present specific recommendations For
meeting these priorities.
A preservation plan may present specific ways to
maintain and enhance the positive character of an
area, identify legal and financial tools-easements, tax
incentives, historic preservation commissions, preser-
vation ordinances, zoning and land use controls, and
revolving funds-that aid in the conservation of
historic resources, and present design standards for
new construction and for the enhancement of environ-
mental amenities. A preservation plan can also il-
lustrate the effect of revitalizing historic resources and
can discuss the application of standards for restora-
tion and rehabilitation.
Older commercial buildings in downtown areas are particulurly vulnerable to decay and demolition yet could be su<cess(ully rehabilitated.
This downtown block. in Kansas City, Missouri, is listed in the National Register of Historic Ala<es as part of the West ,'Jinth
Sfreet/6altimore Avenue Historic Dishi<t. (Paul 5. KivetU
The conduct of historic resources surveys and the de-
velopment of preservation plans can also facilitate co-
operation among local, State, and Federal government
agencies in both preservation and community
development activities. Establishment of a preserva-
tion planning program can help a local government
qualify to participate in Federal historic preservation
grants-in-aid programs, upon certification by the State
Historic Preservation Officer and the Secretary of the
Interior, It can also serve as a basis for the Secretary
of the Interioi s certification of local statutes and
historic districts, which can facilitate the use of
Federal Investment Tax Credits to stimulate rehabilita-
tion of historic buildings. It can help a local govern-
ment carry out the historic preservation review
responsibilities delegated to it by the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development in the ad-
ministration of Community Development Block
Grants and certain other grant programs, and it can
simplify environmental review of Federal agency proj-
ects and assistance programs in the community. Final-
ly, it can provide the basis for designing preservation
projects that can receive funding assistance from the
State Historic Preservation Officer, the Federal
government, and other sources. Further information
on relevant funding programs can be found in Appen-
dix III.
SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR'S STANDARDS FOR PRESERVATION PLANNING, IDENTIFICATION,
EVALUATION. AND REGISTRATION
Standards for Preservation Planning:
Standard I. Preservation planning establishes historic
contexts.
Standard II. Preservation planning uses historic com
texts to develop goals and priorities Eor
the identification, evaluation, registra-
tion, and treatment of historic properties.
Standard III. The results of preservation planning are
made available for integration into
broader planning processes.
Standards for Identification:
Standard I. Identification of historic properties is
undertaken to the degree required to
make decisions.
Standard IL Results of identification activities are in-
tegrated into the preservation planning
process.
Standard III. Identification activities include explicit
procedures for record-keeping and infor-
mation distribution.
Standards for Evaluation:
Standard I. Evaluation of the significance of historic
properties uses established criteria.
Standard II. Evaluation of significance applies the
criteria vv~ithin historic contexts.
Standard III. Evaluation results in a list or inventory
of significant properties that is consulted
in assigning registration and treatment
priorities.
Standard IV. Evaluation results are made available to
[he public.
Standards for Registration:
Standard I. Registration is conducted according to
stated procedures.
Standard IL Registration information locates,
describes, and justifies the significance
and physical integrity of a historic prop-
erty.
Standard III. Registration information is accessible to
the public.
What should you know about the National Register before undertaking a survey?
The National Register, authorized under the 1935
Historic Sites Act and expanded under the National
Historic Preservation Act of 1966, was designed to be
an authoritative guide to be used by Federal, State,
and local governments, private groups, and citizens in
identifying the Nation's historic resources of local,
State, and national significance and to indicate what
properties are worthy of preservation and considera-
tion in the planning process. The National Register is
maintained by the National Park Service, U.S.
Department of the Interior, located in Washington, DC
The primary way that properties are listed in the Na-
tional Register is through nominations by the State
Historic Preservation Officers. Potential entries to the
National Register are reviewed against established
criteria for evaluation which are worded in a flexible
manner to provide for the diversity of resources
across the country. These criteria are listed below.
The National Register has become an important com-
ponent of many State and local historic preservation
programs. Criteria for designating local landmarks
and local historic districts, which by local ordinance
may qualify properties for special tax rates or trigger
special review when changes to the property are pro-
posed, are often modelled after the National Register
criteria. National Register listing often follows and
reinforces State and local designations, extending the
concern for preservation and protection to the Federal
level. The Register is also central to a number of
Federal programs that encourage protection and im-
provement of the manmade environment, which are
discussed in Appendices II and III.
Introduction
Federal agencies, and communities using Community
Developmenk Block Grants and other forms of Federal
assistance, are required to consider the effects o[ their
projects, and projects they license or assist, on prop-
erties included in or eligible for the National Register.
They must also give the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation a reasonable opportunity to comment on
such projects. For further information see Appendix II
and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation's
publication, Working with I06.
Inclusion of a property in the National Register makes
it eligible to be considered for grants-in-aid from the
Historic Preservation Fund. When available, these
grants may be used to acquire a property or to
develop it in a way that preserves its historic and ar-
chitectural character. The State Historic Preservation
Officer can provide advice on the availability of
Historic Preservation Fund grants.
Federal tax law provides incentives for the preserva-
tion of properties listed in the National Register or in-
eluded within registered historic districts. Investment
Tax Credits are provided for the rehabilitation of Na-
tional Register properties qualifying as certified
historic structures when rehabilitation work is cer-
tified by the National Park Service as meeting the
Secretary of the Interior`s Standards for Rehabilita-
tion. Tax deductions are permitted for the charitable
contribution of easements on historic properties to
qualified organizations. Tax incentives are discussed
further in Chapter V, and current information on
Federal tax incentives can be obtained From the State
Historic Preservation Officer or the regional office of
the National Park Service.
When a property listed in or eligible for inclusion in
the National Register must be destroyed or damaged
by an undertaking involving a Federal agency, funds
authorized by the Archeological and Historic Preser-
vation Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-291) may be used
to recover any important historical or archeological
data the property contains.
THE CRITERIA OF THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES
The following criteria are designed to guide the States,
Federal agencies, and the Secretary of the Interior in
evaluating potential entries (other than areas of the Na-
tional Park System and National Historic Landmarks) for
the National Register:
The quality of significance in American history, architec-
ture, archeology, engineering, and culture is present in
districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects that
possess integrity of location, design, setting, materials,
workmanship, feeling, and association, and:
A. that are associated with events that have made a
significant contribution to the broad patterns of our
history; or
B. that are associated with the lives of persons significant
in our past; or
C. that embody the distinctive characteristics of a type,
period, or method of construction, or that represent the
work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or
Introduction
Historic districts take many forms. This rural district, encompassing Silver City, Idaho, and its environs, was surveyed by the Bureau of
Land Managemerct arcd is listed in fhe Nationa112egis[er of Historic Places. (Idaho Historical Society)
[hat represent a significant and distinguishable entity
whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. that have yielded, or may be likely [o yield, informa-
tion important in prehistory or history.
Ordinarily cemeteries, birthplaces, or graves of historical
figures, properties owned by religious institutions or used
for religious purposes, structures that have been moved
from their original locations, reconstructed historic
buildings, properties primarily commemorative in nature,
and properties that have achieved significance within the
past 50 years shall not be considered eligible for the Na-
tional Register. However, such properties will qualify if
they are integral parts of districts that do meet the
criteria or if they fall within the following categories:
A. a religious property deriving primary significance
from architectural or artistic distinction or historical im-
portance; or
B. a building or structure removed from its original loca-
tion but which is significant primarily for architectural
value, or which is the surviving structure most import-
antly associated with a historic person or event; or
C. a birthplace or grave of a historical figure of outstand
ing importance if there is no other appropriate site or
building directly associated with his or her productive
life; or
D. a cemetery [ha[ derives its primary significance from
graves of persons of transcendent importance, from age,
from distinctive design features, or from association with
historic events; or
E. a reconstructed building when accurately executed in a
suitable environment and presented in a dignified manner
as part of a restoration master plan, and when nn other
building or structure with the same association has sur-
vived; or
F. a property primarily commemorative in intent if design,
age, tradition, or symbolic value has invested it with its
own historical significanm; or
G. a property achieving significance within the pas[ 50
years if it is of exceptional importance.
For further information on the National Register criteria
and how to interpret them, contact the National Register
office of the National Park Service,
Who is the State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO)? What assistance can the SHPO provide?
State Historic Preservation Officers, appointed by the
governors of the States, the chief executives of the ter-
ritories, and the Mayor of the District of Columbia,
carry out the historic preservation programs of their
jurisdictions and are given the following respon-
sibilities by the National Historic Preservation Act
and other Federal authorities:
1. Carrying out a comprehensive statewide survey of
historic properties and maintaining inventories of such
properties.
2. Nominating properties to the National Register.
3. Preparing and implementing a statewide historic
preservation planning process.
4. Administering Historic Preservation Fund grants.
5. Advising and assisting Federal and State agencies
and local governments in historic preservation mat-
ters.
6. Working with the Department of the Interior, the
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, and
others to ensure that historic properties are taken into
account in planning.
7. Providing public information, education, and train-
ing in historic preservation.
8. Cooperating with local governments in developing
preservation programs, and assisting them in becom-
ing certified to manage Historic Preservation Fund
grants and otherwise participate actively in the na-
tional program.
9. Reviewing requests for historic preservation cer-
tification and making recommendations to the Na-
tional Park Service, as part of the Federal tax incen-
tives program.
The Comprehensive Statewide Historic Preservation
Plan, which is prepared and implemented by the State
Historic Preservation Officer, is a dynamic planning
process that entails organizing into a logical sequence
information pertaining to the identification, evalua-
tion, registration, and treatment of historic properties.
[t also sets priorities for accomplishing preservation
activities within the State. Generally the plan takes
the format of a series of established historic contexts
that correspond to important aspects of the State's
prehistory and history and characterize its significant
historic resources. A historic rontext is, by definition,
an orgar~izatiortal framework that groups information
aHout related historic properties based ort a theme,
geographical area, and period of time. A knowledge
of statewide historic contexts may help to identify
themes of local as well as State importance and may
strengthen the basis for evaluating the significance of
properties identified during survey. In turn, survey
results may help to augment, refine, and revise
historic contexts and preservation priorities estab-
lished at the State level.
The State Historic Preservation Officer can assist
communities and Federal agencies undertaking historic
resources surveys by:
1. Providing guidelines, standards, forms, and ap-
proaches to survey used in conducting historic
resources surveys on a statewide basis.
lntrodudion
2. Advising about approaches used by other com-
munities and agencies, and providing contacts with
those responsible for survey and planning activities
elsewhere.
3. Providing documentation on what historic re-
sources have already been identified by the State or
others.
4. Advising in the development of high-quality local
surveys.
5. Helping coordinate local surveys with Federally
sponsored surveys and the State survey conducted by
the SHPO.
6. f-Ielping establish systems for survey data mainte-
nanrn that will be most effective in meeting the eom-
munity s needs and most compatible with regional,
statewide, and national data management systems.
7. Nominating properties to the National Register.
8. Passing through funds for survey where a local
government's historic preservation program has been
certified to participate in the national preservation
program.
9. Allocating National Park Service matching grants-
in-aid for survey work.
10. Providing information on other sources of Fund-
ing and assistance for preservation.
What is a certified local government preservation program and how can a survey contribute to
certification?
The National Historic Preservation Act provides Eor
the certification or approval of local. historic preserva-
tion programs by the SHPO and the Secretary of the
Interior. Certification of a program operated by a
local government makes the program eligible for
grants-in-aid from the Historic Preservation Fund ad-
ministered by the Secretary, passed through the
SHPO. Certification also makes it possible for a local
program to exercise greater autonomy in the nomina-
tion of properties to the National Register and in
other aspects of the national historic preservation pro-
gram. Regulations covering the certification of local
government programs can be found in 36 CFR Part 61
To be certified, a local government program must en-
force appropriate State and local preservation legisla-
tion, establish and maintain a qualified historic preser-
vation review commission, provide for adequate
public participation in its activities, perform other
functions delegated to it by the SHPO under the Na-
tional Historic Preservation Act, and maintain a
system for the survey and inventory of historic prop-
erties, consistent with guidelines provided by the
SHPO. Thus the conduct of a survey is a necessary
basis for the SHPO's and the Secretary's certification
of a community's preservation program for participa-
tion in activities under the National Historic Preserva-
tion Act.
Introduction
The certification of local governmeu fs under the National Historic Preservation Act has made it possible for historic preservation programs
operated by local goae~rnruents, as in Florenre, Arizona, to exercise greater autonom4 in nominating properties to the Na[ionaf Register of
historic Pisces and in other' preservation activities, such as survey and inventory, and cornprehensiue planning. (Harris Sobin)
What is the value of a historic resources survey and inventory?
To summarize, historic resources surveys and the
resulting survey data and inventories can be used to:
1. Identify properties that contribute to the communi-
ty's character, or that of its neighborhoods, or that il-
lustrate its historical and architectural development,
and as a result deserve consideration in planning.
2. Identify properties or areas whose study may pro-
vide information about the community's past, and
contribute to scholarship, which should be preserved
or subjected to scientific investigation.
3. Establish priorities for conservation, restoration
and rehabilitation efforts within the community.
Who should sponsor a survey?
4. Provide the basis for using legal and financial tools
to protect and enhance historic resources.
5. Provide planners with a data base from which to
monitor and channel new development.
6. Increase awareness in the public and private sectors
of the manmade environment and the need Eor preser-
vation efforts.
7. Enable local governments and Federal agencies to
meet their planning and review responsibilities under
existing Federal legislation and procedures.
In order to have the greatest impact on planning deci-
sions within a community, surveys of historic
resources should have the official endorsement of the
local government, although historical societies, profes-
sional groups, and interested individuals can help
compile documentation, undertake research, and par-
ticipate in fieldwork. It is important that, in addition
to official endorsement, an ongoing process for
collecting and evaluating survey data be officially in-
corporated into the community's planning activities to
ensure the availability of current data for community
development and planning agencies, local, State, and
Federal agencies, public service organizations,
developers, and others. Once a process for gathering
data has been organized, a community will be able to
respond expeditiously to requests for information
about a particular building or an entire neighborhood.
It is important that surveys be coordinated with the
State Historic Preservation Officer from the earliest
stages of planning.
A community historic preservation office and commis-
sion established as part of local government can help
to protect the resources identified through survey ac-
tivities and to evaluate proposed development that
may adversely affect the community's special
character. A historic preservation planner in an ex-
isting planning commission or office may provide fur-
ther assistance in carrying out these functions. Other
techniques for protecting the community's historic re-
sources are discussed in Appendix III.
Introduction
Planning the Survey
An effective survey must be carefully planned, taking
into account the community's planning needs, its legal
obligations, the interests of its citizens, available fund-
ing, and the nature of its historic resources.
This chapter describes some of the basic considera-
tions involved in planning a survey. It first addresses
several general questions that those responsible for
planning and funding surveys often ask. It goes on to
discuss approaches to planning a survey and a com-
munity's preservation program in general, and then
turns to practical questions of how to mobilize com-
munity resources to support a survey, how to obtain
professional expertise, and how to obtain funding.
Initial Questions
1Nhat kinds of resources should the survey seek?
As defined by the National Park Service, historic re-
sources fall into the five broad categories-building, site,
structure, object, and district-discussed on page 1. The
following list, although not comprehensive, indicates the
range of resources that fit into these categories and that
communities may wish to survey. A number of the
resources under the categories below may be considered
in a disMct context.
Building (including groups of buildings)
• Notable examples of architectural styles and periods or
methods of constwction, particularly local or regional
types.
• Buildings showing the history and development of such
diverse areas as communications, community planning,
government, conservation, economics, education,
literature, music, and landscape architecture.
• Stores and businesses and other buildings that pro-
vide aphysical record of the experience of particular
ethnic or social groups.
• Complexes of buildings, such as factory complexes,
that comprise a functionally and historically inter-
related whole.
• Markets and commercial structures or blocks.
• Buildings by great architects or master builders and
important works by minor ones.
• Architectural curiosities, one-of-a-kind buildings.
• Sole or rare survivors of an important architectural
style or type.
• Studios of American artists, writers, or musicians
during years of significant activity.
• Institutions that provide evidence of the cultural
history of a community (churches, universities, art
centers, theaters, and entertainment halls).
• Buildings where significant technological advances
or inventories in any field occurred (agricultural ex-
periment stations, laboratories, etc.).
Site
• Archeological sites containing information of
known or potential value in answering scientific
research questions.
• Archeological sites containing information that may
shed light on local, State, or national history.
• Sites of cultural importance to local people or social
or ethnic groups, such as locations of important
events in their history, historic or prehistoric ceme-
teries, or shrines.
Planning the Survey
~ .A ti ., ,
..~
u,
a ..,.
• Sites associated with events important in the history
of the community as a whole (battlefields, trails, etc.).
• Cemeteries associated with important events or peo-
ple, or whose study can provide important informa-
tion about history or prehistory.
• Ruins of historically or archeologically important
buildings or structures.
• Historically important shipwrecks
• Cemeteries important for the architectural or artistic
qualities of their constituent structures and
monuments.
• Constructed landscapes that exemplify principles,
trends, or schools of thought in landscape archi-
tecture, or that represent Eine examples of the land-
scape architect's art,
Structure
• Industrial and engineering structures, including
kilns, aquaducks, weirs, utility or pumping stations,
and dams.
• Transportation structures, including railroads, turn-
pikes, canals, tunnels, bridges, roundhouses,
Lighthouses, and wharves.
• Agricultural structures such as granaries, silos,
corncribs, and apiaries.
• Movable structures associated with important proc-
esses of transportation, industrial development, social
history, recreation, and military history (ships,
locomotives, carousels-, airplanes, artillery pieces, etc.).
Object
• Objects important to historical or art historical
research (petroglyph boulders, bedrock mortars,
statuary, rock carvings, etc.).
'1.0 Planning the Survey
Landscape (ea[ures, both i~pen spaces and t)vnse designed, that are imporkant in defx'ning the character of an area should be documented in
dia survey. st. James-I3elgraa>ia Piistoric District, Lcnnsi~Flla, Kentucky. (Jefferson County Archives)
• Objects important to the cultural life of a com-
munity and related to a specific location (totem poles,
fountains, outdoor sculpture, road markers,
mileposts, monuments, etc.).
District
• Groups of buildings that physically and spatially
comprise a specific environment: groups of related
buildings that represent the standards and tastes of a
community or neighborhood during one period of
history, unrelated structures that represent a progres-
sion of various styles and functions, or cohesive
townscapes or streetscapes that possess an identity of
place.
• Groups of buildings, structures, objects, and/or
sites representative of or associated with a particular
social, ethnic, or economic group during a particular
period.
• Farmlands and related farm structures (silos, barns,
granaries, irrigation canals) that possess an identity of
time and place.
• Groups of structures and buildings that show the
industrial or technological developments of the com-
munity, State, or Nation.
• Groups of buildings representing historical develop-
ment patterns (commercial and trade centers, county
seats, mill towns).
• Groups of sites, structures, and/or buildings con-
taining archeological data and probably representing
an historic or prehistoric settlement system or pattern
of related activities.
• Groups of educational buildings and their
associated spaces (school and university campuses,
etc.).
• Ektensive constructed landscapes, such as large
parks, that represent the work of a master landscape
What kinds of information should be gathered?
The precise kinds of information that should be col-
lected by a survey will depend on its purpose and the
scale at which it is conducted, as discussed below.
Survey planners should also consult with the State
Historic Preservation Officer in determining v,~hat
kinds of information to collect, and the methods and
approaches to use in collecting it. To ensure effective
incorporation of the survey data into the State and
Federal planning processes, survey planners should
strive for consistency with the standards and guide-
lines provided by the State Historic Preservation Of-
ficer, and should relate their research to historic con-
texts established in the State historic preservation
planning process where these are applicable. Many
State Historic Preservation Officers can provide de-
architect or the conmpts and directions of a school of
landscape architecture.
• Landscapes that have been shaped by historical
processes of land use and retain visual and cultural
characteristics indicative of such prornsses.
Although the spatial relationships between component
elements is usually important in the definition of a
district, the elements of a district do not necessarily
have to be contiguous. For example, a number of ar-
cheological sites in a stream valley, representing the
settlement system of a prehistoric group, may be
widely scattered and separated from one another by
highways, housing tracts, and other modern develop-
ments, but still constitute a unified whole that can be
categorized as a district. In a similar way, a series of
canals and related structures and buildings, separated
from one another by the natural bodies of water [hey
connect, may nevertheless constitute an integrated
transportation system that is best viewed as a district.
Engineering structures associated with trarcsportation lines, whether
currently used or oat, should he included in the survey. The Cop-
per Riuer and Northwestern Railway, Chitina vicinity, Alaska, a>as
constructed to gain access to Nye interior topper country and thus,
is closely associated with a major economic activity in this area.
Tha National Register of Historic Plates listing includes 25 nrfles of
railroad bed, sections of track, trestles, and assodated Auildings
(Alaska Division of Parks)
tailed guidance and standard forms for the conduct of
surveys and the recording of different kinds of
resources.
If khe survey is intended to result in nominations to
the National Register, appropriate National Park
Service guidelines should be consulted. The publica-
tion, National Register Bulletin No. 16, Guidelines for
Completing National Register Forms, is khe standard
reference on National Register documentation require-
ments. Others in the National Register Bulletin series
provide supplementary information on such topics as
how to establish property boundaries, how to evalu-
ate relatively modern properties, and how to improve
the quality of property photographs.
Planning the Survey 11
Whak different kinds of surveys are commonly used?
Both the Secretary of the Interior's Guidelines for
Identification and common practice distinguish be-
tween two general levels of survey: reconnaissance
and intensive survey. Both kinds of survey involve
background documentary research into the communi-
ty's history, archeology and architecture, as well as
field work, but they are different in terms of the level
of effort involved.
Reconnaissance may be thought of as a "once over
lightly" inspection of an area, most useful for
characterizing its resources in general and for develop-
ing abasis for deciding how to organize and orient
more detailed survey efforts. In conjunction with a
general review of pertinent literature on the communi-
ty's past, a reconnaissance may involve such activities
as:
• A "windshield survey" of the community-literally
driving around the community and noting the general
distribution of buildings, structures, and neighbor-
hoods representing different architectural styles,
periods, and modes of construction.
• a "walkover" archeological inspection, perhaps
coupled with small-scale test excavations, to get a
general idea of the archeological potential of portions
of the community.
• a study of aerial photographs, historical and recent
maps and city plans, soil surveys, and other sources
of information that help gain a general understanding
of the community's layout and environment at dif-
ferent times in its history.
• detailed inspection. of sample blocks or areas, as the
basis for extrapolation about the resources of the
community as a whole.
An intensive survey, as the name implies, is a close
and careful look at the area being surveyed. It is
designed to identify precisely and completely all
historic resources in the area. It generally involves
detailed background research, and a thorough inspec-
tion and documentation of ail historic properties in
the field. It should produce al] the information needed
to evaluate historic properties and prepare an inven-
tory,
The Secreretary of the Interior's Standards and
Guidelines for Identification provide outlines of the
information that should be documented as the result
of reconnaissance and intensive surveys. Where such
surveys are supported by grants-in-aid funds from the
Department of the Interior, such information must be
recorded as a condition of the grant, and such
documentation is basic to professional practice in the
conduct of any survey, regardless of its source of
funding.
Reconnaissance and intensive survey are often con-
ducted in sequence, with reconnaissance being used in
planning intensive survey. They are also sometimes
12 - Planning the Survey
Prehistoric archeological sites may be preserved beneath a modern city's streets and houses, particularly if the houses were built on slabs or
shallow foundations and the soi! xuas not greatly disturbed. Here in suburban Phoenix, Arizona, the remains of pithouses occupied by the
prehistoric Hohokam Indians are being excavated in the path of a new highway right-of-u+ay. (Arizona State University and Arizona
Department of Transportation)
combined, with intensive survey directed at locations
where background research indicates a likely high
concentration of historic resources and recon-
naissance directed at areas where fewer resources can
be expected. They can also be combined with
reference to different resource types: for example, in a
given area it may be appropriate to conduct an inten-
sive survey of buildings and structures but only a
reconnaissance with reference to archeological sites,
while in another area archeological sites may require
intensive survey while buildings need only a "once
over lightly"' examination.
How large an area should be included in a survey?
City or county limits define the survey area For many
communities. In other cases, decisions about what
part of the community to survey may be based nn
community development project areas or on other
areas with recognized development potential. The
historic contexts relevant to the survey effort may
also affect the size of the areas to be included. For ex-
ample, if the history of ethnic minorities in the com-
munity is an important historic context addressed in
the survey effort, neighborhoods known or thought to
have been occupied by such minority groups in the
past, or occupied by them today, should obviously be
included in the survey. Public interest and support
may also dictate the inclusion of particular
neighborhoods in the survey. Members of the com-
munity knowledgeable about local history or ar-
cheology may be able to suggest areas of potential
historic or archeological significance that should be
considered for inclusion in the survey.
In planning a survey, background research should be
conducted on the community to get an overview of its
development. It also is advisable, as a preliminary
step, to conduct at least a cursory reconnaissance of
the community to identify potential significant areas
or specific properties that might be the target of inten-
sive survey efforts. Where this is done, provision
should be made for adding properties and areasiden-
tified through documentary research and subsequent
field survey, since historically significant places are
not always obvious visually. In cases where the entire
community is to be surveyed, it may be advisable to
undertake these assessments in stages. Decisions about
what areas to survey first may be based on time,
money, or pending projects which may affect
resources within a particular area.
How long should a survey take?
In planning a survey, a timetable should be worked
out to establish deadlines for each stage of the project.
The timetable should reflect not only community
development planning needs but also the nature and
scope of the survey project itself. In addition to
deadlines, it should establish periodic evaluation ses-
sions to review data gathered and overall progress to
date. These sessions could provide the basis for on-
going publicity.
The length of time in which the survey project can be
successfully completed depends on the size and com-
plexity of the area(s) to be covered, the number of
surveyors and researchers, and the amount of infor-
mation to be gathered. Some localities have found it
effective to approach the survey on an area-by-area
basis, completing an inventory of one area before
moving nn to the next. This method has the advan-
tage of letting the community build on past experience
in each successive survey and of allowing Eor feedback
on the usefulness of the material gathered in the plan-
ning process. It has the disadvantage of providing no
data on substantial portions of the community until
late in the overall survey process. A phased survey, in
which background research and reconnaissance of
most or all of the community is conducted first,
followed by intensive survey where needed, is an
SURVEY DOCUMENTATION
The Serretnry of the Interior's Standards and Guidelines
far Identification specify the kinds of information that
should be collected as a result of field survey:
A reconnaissance survey should document:
]. The kinds of properties looked for;
2. The boundaries of the area surveyed;
3. The method of survey, including the extent of
survey coverage;
4. The kinds of historic properties present in the
survey area;
5. Specific properties that were identified, and the
categories of information collected; and
6. Places examined that did not contain historic prop-
erties.
An intensive survey should document:
1. The kinds of properties looked for;
2. The boundaries of the area surveyed;
3. The method of survey, including an estimate of the
extent of survey coverage:
4. A record of the precise location of all properties
identified; and
5. Information on the appearance, significance, integri-
ty, and boundaries of each property sufficient to
permit an evaluation of its significance.
Planning the Survey 13
alternative to area-by-area survey. A combination of
approaches, as noted above, may also fit a particular
community's planning needs. Decisions about what
kind of survey to conduct, and how it may be
phased, naturally define how long the survey will
take.
Communities planning to hire professional consultants
to conduct the survey should include a rough
timetable as part of the general work prospectus that
they present to potential consultants (see section on
selecting a professional consultant). A detailed
timetable or work schedule can then be developed in
conjunction with the consultant hired. Deadlines
scheduled well before those called for by procedural
or other obligations will ensure timely completion of
the project. It may be appropriate to establish
separate timetables for the conduct of background
research, reconnaissance, and intensive surveys, for
the organization of survey data, Eor evaluation, for
publication, and for development of preservation plans.
Elements of Survey Planning
How is the purpose of the survey established?
It is fair to say that any historic resources survey of a
community has as one of its main purposes, iE not its
sole purpose, the development of a complete, fully
documented, comprehensive inventory of the com-
munity's historic properties. It is important to
recognize, however, that a survey need no[ be com-
plete and comprehensive in order to be useful.
• If background knowledge of a community's history
suggests that particularly important historic properties
may be concentrated in particular areas, it may be
cost-effective to survey such areas first, giving lower
priority to areas where historic properties are less like-
ly to be found, or may be found in lower densities.
• Conversely, if not much is known about a com-
munity's historic resources, it may be appropriate to
concentrate initially on background research and
broad-scale reconnaissance (as defined on p.12) to
obtain an initial idea of the community's resource
base before designing more intensive surveys.
• if a particular part of the community may be sub-
ject to substantial development in the near future, or
is the target for use of Federal assistance, triggering
the need for historic preservation review, it may be
appropriate to concentrate survey in that part of the
community before other areas are addressed.
• If there is a considerable potential for rehabilitation
of historic commercial buildings in the community,
stimulated by the availability of tax advantages at the
Federal or State level, it may be appropriate to give
the identification of commercial buildings priority
over the identification of other types of historic prop-
erties.
• If the residents of a particular neighborhood, or
property owners in a particular commercial area of
the community, have expressed interest in maintaining
and enhancing their historic properties, it may be a
prudent investment to give survey in such area priori-
ty over survey in areas where there is less immediate
potential for use of the resulting survey data.
In short, a survey can be done at many different
scales, with many different emphases, and using many
different techniques at different levels of refinement.
The kind of survey undertaken depends nn the needs
of the community.
What are historic contexts?
Together with the community's planning and develop-
ment priorities, and its available personnel and finan-
cial resources, historic contexts are the most influen-
tial factors in defining the structure of a survey effort.
A historic context is a broad pattern of historical
development in a community or its region, that may
be represented by historic resources.
For example, if a community began as a port village
in the early 18th century, its functions as such may be
reflected in its street plan, in the character of some
neighborhoods, in some particular buildings or groups
of buildings, or in archeological remains buried
beneath more recent development. The operation of
the early 18th century port is thus one historic context
that influences the nature and distribution of the com-
munity's resources, and should influence survey ef-
forts designed to find and document such resources. If
the community underwent a commercial boom in the
1890x, was burned during the Civil War, received im-
migrant ethnic groups in the early 20th century,
received the attention of a particular school of ar-
chitecture, or was the probable location of a
prehistoric American Indian village, each of these
historic contexts should be considered in planning the
survey.
The importance of taking historic contexts into ac-
count cannot be overemphasized. Failure to do so can
14 Planning the Survey
lead to the application of survey methods that are not
cost-effective, that fail to identify significank
resources, or that contain uncontrolled biases.
The establishment of historic contexts is vital to
targeting survey work effectively, and to the effective
use of personnel. For example, if representatives of an
important school of architecture designed a number of
buildings in the community's central business district,
knowledge of this historic context will lead survey
planners to focus the attention of qualified architec-
tural historians on this section of the community,
while if prehistoric Indians in the area typically
established their villages at the confluence of streams,
knowledge of this historic context may lead surveyors
to use information on old stream patterns within the
community to identify locations For archeological
survey and testing.
Historic contexts are developed on the basis of
background data on the community's history and
prehistory, or on such data from the surrounding
area. To mobilize such data, survey planners should
conduct initial research into the community's history
and the history and prehistory of the region in which
it lies, and should consult knowledgeable authorities.
Local historical organizations and academic history
departments, professional and avocational ar-
cheologists and archeological organizations, profes-
sional architects and landscape architects, and local
chapters of the American Institute of Architects are al]
likely sources of useful advice. The State Historic
Preservation Officer can often suggest knowledgeable
local sources, as well as provide information on what
surveys have already been done in the area and sug-
gest possible topics of inquiry. Generally, establishing
historic contexts involves reviewing the known history
and prehistory of the State and region in which the
community lies, seeking to define important patterns
in the development of the area through time that may
be represented by historic properties.
Historic contexts may be unique to a community, but
often are reflected in, or related to, the surrounding
region or to other communities. For this reason, it is
important to coordinate the development of a com-
munity's historic contexts with the State Historic
Preservation Officer's statewide planning efforts. Most
statewide preservation plans developed by State
Historic Preservation Officers establish at least broad,
general historic contexts which may be directly or in-
directly applicable at the local level. Furthermore, the
State Historic Preservation Officer is likely ko be
aware of historic contexts developed through the plan-
ning efforts of other communities and Federal and
State agencies,
Historic contexts are almost always refined, modified,
added to, and elaborated on as the survey itself pro-
ceeds. At the point of planning the survey, it may be
feasible to define them only in broad, general terms;
sufficient flexibility should always be maintained to
allow changes to take place as the survey progresses.
An initial statement of historic contexts should be
developed during the earliest stages of planning to
guide development of the actual survey design.
planning [he Survey 15
Comprehensive rommunity surveys should not be limited to architecturally significant buildings: but should include all tangible links with
th¢ past. These stockyards played an important role in the history and the development of Furf Worth, Texas, and are included in a Na-
tional Register historic district. (Steve Smith, Texas Historical Commission)
How are survey goals and priorities established?
Ideally, survey goals should be based on historic con-
texts. For example, suppose that a community (a) was
the probable location of a prehistoric Indian village
near the confluence of two streams; (b) was a port
during the 18th century; (c) experienced substantial
commercial development in the late 19th century, dur-
ing which many buildings designed by practitioners of
an important school of architecture were constructed
in the central business district; and (d) experienced
growth in the early 20th century as Italian, German,
Hispanic, and rural Black immigrants established row
house neighborhoods ringing the center city. Goals for
a first-stage, reconnaissance-level survey effort might
be (a) to determine whether soil strata that might con-
tain the archeological remains of the Indian village
still exist under the modern streets and houses that
overlie the old stream confluence; (b) to determine the
boundaries of the 18th century port, identify major
buildings still standing Erom the period, identify
buildings requiring further study to determine whether
they represent repeatedly modernized 18th century
buildings, and determine locations of likely ar-
cheological interest; (c) to identify major surviving
concentrations of 19th century commercial buildings;
and (d) to identify ethnic neighborhoods that retain
their architectural and cultural integrity.
The means to achieving these goals can then be
assigned priorities based on such factors as work
already conducted, available funding, planning and
development constraints, and survey opportunities.
If some data are available on a given historic context
as the result of prior work, it may be appropriate to
assign relatively low priority to investigating that con-
text, emphasizing instead those that are less well
known; alternatively, the existence of information on
a particular historic context may be taken as an op-
portunity to be built upon, thus giving investigation
of that context higher priority.
Historical resea_ch and archeological testing to iden-
tify the boundaries of the 18th century port might be
more expensive than a program of interviews and
windshield survey to locate ethnic neighborhoods,Eor
example, so the former might be assigned a lower
priority than the latter, or divided into phases that
could be implemented over time to reduce expense.
Planning needs are often the major bases for setting
priorities. For example, if our hypothetical communi-
ty's business people are interested in taking advantage
of tax incentives to rehabilitate commercial buildings,
it may be appropriate to facilitate this effort by giving
high priority to the goal of documenting the com-
munity's downtown commercial districts in sufficient
details to prepare complete National Register nomina-
tions. If the Army Corps of Engineers is planning a
project to channelize streams flowing through the
community, this may create both the need to give
high priority to identifying the remains of the Indian
village and the opportunity to use Federal assistance
from the Corps of Engineers to do so. If a city
government intends to target a particular area for
rehabilitation of older buildings using Community
Development Slock Grant funds, this may justify giv-
ing priority to survey of the target area to identify
historic properties that should be protected from inap-
propriate construction activities.
Finally, opportunities provide a basis for setting
priorities. If a local university is interested in
establishing a field school in historic archeology, the
opportunity may exist to use the university's efforts to
study the 18th century port area. If a neighborhood
group is interested in documenting its social history in
the community, this may present an opportunity to
mobi]ize neighborhood support for the survey effort
and suggest that the interested neighborhood should
be assigned high priority.
It should be recognized that, as the survey progresses,
it will almost certainly be necessary to adjust goals
and priorities. The survey will probably identify new
historic contexts and refine others. New opportunities
and constraints will arise. Work will be completed
sufficiently with respect to some goals to allow atten-
tion to shift to others. Finally, it may be necessary to
correct distortions created by the pursuit of previous
priorities. After a few years of response to the needs
generated by tax incentives for commercial rehabilita-
tion, for example, a community may have exhaustive
documentation on its commercial districts but very lit-
tle data on its residential neighborhoods, public
buildings, or archeological resources. It may then be
appropriate to adjust the survey to give higher priori-
ty to areas and resources earlier given short shrift.
How should the storage and use of survey data be considered during survey planning?
Chapter III discusses the review and organization of
survey data, and should be considered during survey
planning. It is important to consider how survey data
will be stored, organized, and used before the survey
itself begins, because many decisions about how to
record information will depend on how the data are
to be used and in what form they will be maintained.
For example, if an important reason for the survey is
to provide information to the city planning office,
which maintains its data base on computer, it is im-
76 Planning the Survey
portant that the survey data be collected in a form
that is compatible with that computer's operating
system. Similarly, if there is a historic preservation
ordinance calling for the review of proposed changes
to historic properties, survey data should be stored in
a form and location that are accessible and useful to
the local historic preservation commission. At the
same time, partiadary if the survey is being supported
by the State Historic Preservation Officer as part of
the statewide comprehensive survey, it is important
that the data be collected in a form that can be easily
put into the SHPO's data base, and if nominations to
the National Register are being considered, the com-
munity will want to design its forms and records to
ensure that collected data are compatible with Na-
tional Register categories and documentation re-
quirements. As another example, if the community
feels that developing an extensive, high-quality photo
archive of its significant architecture is an important
goal, this will influence decisions about the kinds of
cameras to provide to each survey team, the kind of
training to provide, and the amount and kinds of film
to budget for.
This aspect of planning will involve consulting with
those who are likely to be important users of the
survey data to determine the form of information that
will be most useful and accessible. Recording forms,
systems for translating raw survey data into
computer-compatible Formats, and archiving systems
should then be designed with these considerations in
mind, and surveyors should be trained in their use.
How can a community involve the public in planning a survey?
The success of planning a community survey, as well
as conducting it and using the results, will depend on
a broad base of local interest and involvement. Vital
support for the survey, and for historic preservation
in general, can be generated if a carefully planned
campaign is mounted to involve the public and obtain
their participation. Such a campaign can also identify
valuable local sources of information and special ex-
pertise. Public involvement should begin at the
earliest stages of survey planning.
Means of stimulating interest might include
neighborhood meetings; displays at libraries, public
schools, and museums; walking tours; lectures and
discussions by preservation specialists; and newspaper
articles about the survey, about preservation activities
in other communities or about the history, ar-
cheology, or architecture of the community. Local
newspapers may also be used to solicit historical data,
reminiscences, old photographs, and other informa-
tion. Community newspapers could, for example,
carry atear-out survey Form to encourage readers to
submit information on properties and on sources of
unpublished documentary material with which they
are familiar.
Special efforh should be made to involve those in the
community with particular interests in historic prop-
erties or community development Local historical
organizations, neighborhood groups, and archeo-
logical societies should be contacted. Historians,
architects, landscape architects, archeologists,
folklorists, sociologists, and anthropologists should be
sought out. Interviews with such organizations and in-
dividuals should seek to identify ways the survey can
serve their interests, and how their expertise can con-
tribute to the survey effort
Potential users of survey information, including com-
munity planners, historic preservation commissions,
business leaders, tourism offices, libraries, schools,
and the Chamber of Commerce should be informed of
the survey effort and asked how the survey can be
designed to be of greatest value to them.
Where the survey will take place in neighborhoods
whose residents do not speak English as their First
language, or where social customs are not those of
mainstream Anglo-American society, efforts to in-
volve the public should be carried out in the language
of the neighborhood's residents as much as possible,
and should be sensitive to their cultural values and
systems of communication. In some societies, for ex-
ample, it is very disrespectful for young people to talk
about history in the presence of their elders; in such a
context, an open public meeting to seek information
on the community's history may not only be ineffec-
tive, but may endanger the support that prominent
older members of the community would otherwise
have for the survey. Neighborhood leaders should be
consulted to design public involvement efforts that are
consistent with local values and expectations. If pro-
fessionals knowledgeable about the neighborhoods in
which surveys will take place-for example,
sociologists, anthropologists, and social workers-are
available, they also should be consulted during early
survey planning.
Community enthusiasm for the survey project can
generate volunteer support and assistance for various
aspects of the survey, such as historical research and
field survey work. Survey planning should be coor-
dinated with local historical commissions and
societies, civic groups, archeological societies, and
other professional organizations. These organizations
are usually knowledgeable about their community's
historic resources and often can provide useful
Planning the Survey 77
documentation as well as volunteer assistance in con-
ducting the survey. The following community groups
are also potential sources of volunteers for the survey:
Chamber of Commerce, Jaycees, Junior League,
fraternal organizations (Rotarians, Elks, Kiwanis,
etc.), youth organizations (YMCA, YWCA, high
school dubs, service organizations, etc.), men's and
women's clubs, universities and colleges, and religious
groups.
Before initiating fieldwork, it is important that the
What form should a survey design take?
public be given adequate notice of the appearance of
surveyors in their neighborhoods and be informed of
the kind of documentation they will be gathering.
Newspaper articles providing such information, as
well as posters in supermarkets, schools, churches,
etc., can allay unnecessary suspicions, and help assure
a positive reception for the surveyors. It may also be
useful for surveyors to carry a letter of introduction
explaining the survey project, its goals, and its
methods.
Based on initial background research, minor recon-
naissance, consultation with the State Historic Preser-
vation Officer and others, and public participation, it
should be possible to draft a general scope of work
for the survey. The scope of work should outline the
purpose of the survey, survey goals at least for the
First phase of work, and priorities as appropriate. It
should specify the objectives of each phase of work,
and identify the methods to be used (for example,
background research, field study, supervision of
volunteer survey teams). It should establish approx-
imate time frames for the conduct of the work, or for
the conduct of particular phases of work, and it
should include or be supported by a brief description
of the historic contexts to be investigated. To the ex-
tent possible, it should describe the expected results of
the investigation of each context-that is, what kinds
of historic resources may be expected, what their
general nature and numbers may be, and what condi-
tion they may be in. Finally, it should specify the pur-
poses to which it is expected that the survey data will
be put, and how these purposes will structure the col-
lection and recording of data.
Survey planners should consult the State Historic
Preservation Officer when preparing a survey design.
State Historic Preservation Officers have considerable
experience in designing and implementing surveys,
and can provide valuable advice and models, as well
as help ensure that the design is consistent with
statewide survey standards.
Mobilizing Resources for the Survey
What qualifications should those supervising a survey have?
The usefulness of the survey as a planning tool will
depend in large part on its overall accuracy and pro-
fessional quality. It is important, therefore, for com-
munities to obtain the advice and involvement of
qualified professional personnel in all phases of the
survey project. Typically, a historic resources survey
should make use of professional historians, architec-
tural historians, archeologists, and other specialists, in
the supervision of both historical research and field
inspection. Minimum qualifications for these profes-
sional personnel, as defined by the National Park
Service, are given in the box on page 22. Other
professionals, such as historical architects, planners,
social and cultural anthropologists, and landscape ar-
chitects, may be helpful in gathering survey data.
Familiarity with the National Register program and
the application of its criteria for evaluation is extreme-
ly helpful.
Professionals should be responsible for all major deci-
sions affecting the survey effort, including providing
guidance to inexperienced surveyors, defining districts
and properties of potential significance within the
overall survey areas, evaluating and interpreting data
gathered in the survey, and producing or overseeing
the production of photographic and other graphic
documentation.
Some professionals within the community may be
willing to volunteer their time to undertake survey
work. In most cases, however, communities will find
it necessary to hire professionals. Where volunteer
labor is relied upon, it is advisable to appoint or hire
at least one professional who can administer or
oversee survey activities, coordinate the work being
done, and make program decisions. Ideally, such a
person-referred to in this publication as a survey
coordinator-should have the ability to organize
survey teams, budget time and money wisely, and
assembly and interpret raw data.
Ig Planning the Survey
Where can qualified professionals be located?
The State Historic Preservation Officer (see Appendix
V for addresses) should always be consulted Eor ad-
vice when seeking professionals for participation in a
survey. Responsible for the statewide comprehensive
survey, the State Historic Preservation Officer is
usually familiar with the State's historic preservation
professionals. National Park Service Regional Offices
(see Appendix V for addresses) can also often provide
knowledgeable advice about potential professional
assistance. In addition to the State Historic Preserva-
tion Officer, and the National Park Service, the
following individuals and organizations can often be
helpful in finding professional assistance.
State Archeologist, whose office in some States is
separate Erom that of the State Historic Preservation
Officer (addresses available from the National Park
Service).
National Conference of State Historic Preservation
Officers (444 North Capitol Street, Suite 332,
Washington, DC 20001). The NCSHPO is the
organization that represents the State Historic Preser-
vation Officers in Washington. It can assist in making
contact with State Historic Preservation Officers
about sources of professional assistance.
National Alliance of Preservation Commissions (444
North Capitol Street, Suite 332, Washington, DC
20001). The NAPC is a membership organization that
seeks to coordinate local preservation programs and
provide them with national representation. It can put
local officials and survey planners in touch with other
communities and statewide alliances that have under-
taken similar projects and can provide first-hand ad-
vice about consultants and other matters.
National Trust Eor Historic Preservation (1785
Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036).
The Trust also has regional offices which can provide
advice about qualified professionals, institutions, and
firms. It also includes a placement service in Preserua-
tion News, its monthly newspaper.
State and regional archeological councils and societies
(addresses available from the State Historic Preserva-
tion Officer).
Local colleges and universities, especially history, ar-
chitecture, and anthropology departments.
American Anthropological Association (1703 New
Hampshire Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20009).
The AAA may be able to advise about locating ar-
cheologists and cultural anthropologists.
American Institute of Architects (1735 New York
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20006). Each State has
an AIA Preservation Coordinator to oversee and ad-
vise on preservation activities. The AIA has a Com-
mittee on Historic Resources, and publishes a direc-
tory of its members.
American Association for State and Local History
(172 Second Avenue North, Suite 102, Nashville, TN
37201). AASLH publishes a Directory of Historical
Societies and Agencies in the United States and
Canada, and provides a variety of other services to
communities seeking consultants and planning
surveys.
American Folklore Society (1703 New Hampshire
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20009) can advise on
folklorists and anthropologists qualified to participate
in oral historical and ethnographic survey work.
American Planning Association (1313 East 60th Street,
Chicago, IL 60637) and its Historic Preservation Divi-
sion (1776 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20036), can put communities in touch with preser-
vation planners and community planners with ex-
perience in preservation.
American Society of Landscape Architects, Historic
Preservation Committee (1733 Connecticut Avenue,
NW, Washington, DC 20009) can offer advice about
landscape architects with experience in preservation.
The Society publishes a National Directory of Land-
scape Architecture Firms.
Association for Preservation Technology (Box 2487,
Station D, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1PSW6). This
is a joint Canadian-U.S. organization that can put
communities into contact with architects and architec-
tural conservationists experienced in preservation and
restoration work.
National Coordinating Committee for the Promotion
of History (400 A Street, SE, Washington, DC 20003).
This committee publishes a Directory of Historical
Consultants.
National Council for Public History (Department of
History, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV
26506). This organization seeks to coordinate the ac-
tivities of professional historians in non-academic
work.
Organization of American Historians (112 North
Bryan Street, Bloomington, IN 47401). The OAH pro-
vides aprofessional placement service for its
members.
Society of Professional Archeologists. SOPA does not
maintain a permament business office, but is
represented by its Secretary-Treasurer, an elected of-
ficial. SOPA's current address should be available
from the State Historic Preservation Officer. SOPA
Planning the Survey ]9
publishes an annual Directory of Professional Ar-
cheologists, which lists archeologists who have agreed
to comply with a Code of Ethics and other profes-
sional standards, and who have been certified by
SOPA to meet specified professional qualifications.
Society for American Archaeology (1511 K Street,
NW, Suite 714, Washington, DC 20005). A member-
ship organization of professional and avocational ar-
cheologists, the SAA runs a placement service at its
annual national meeting.
Society for Applied Anthropology (1001 Connecticut
Avenue, NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036). The
SEAA can advise about cultural anthropologists who
can provide assistance in oral historical and
ethnographic work, and about archeologists.
How is a professional consultant selected?
The following steps are suggested as a guide for select
ing a professional consultant:
1. Define the nature of the work carefully, in order to
have a clear idea of ho~~ many and what kind of con-
sultants to look for. This is an important reason for
developing a thorough scope of work.
Z. Send the scope of work to a number of firms, in-
stitutions, organizations, or qualified individuals with
the requests that they submit written proposals.
3. Consider the general qualifications of those who
submit proposals. References should be required and
investigated carefully.
4. Evaluate the written proposals provided. Ascertain
how well each consultant appears to understand the
reasons For and nature of the work, and evaluate the
methods and approach that each intends to use in
undertaking the project. (Look Eor a consultant who
seems to understand what he or she is doing and has
a good idea of how to do it.)
5. Choose for interviews one or more consultants that
appear to be the best qualified. Interviews with more
than three consultants may not be productive.
6. Interview selected consultants separately, explain-
ing the work that has to be done and the selection
procedures you are using. Enough time should be
scheduled Eor each interview to allow for a careful ex-
amination of qualifications and thorough discussion of
the survey project. ]n addition to the professional
qualifications listed on page 22 the following are
particularly important criteria to consider:
(a) Experience and reputation. Consult the State
Historic Preservation Officer and relevant organiza-
tions listed in the preceding section to determine
where qualified professionals may be located and how
to evaluate survey experience.
Society of Architectural Historians (1700 Walnut
Street, Room 716, Philadelphia, PA 19103). SAH runs
a placement service at its Philadelphia headquarters.
Society for Historical Archeology (1703 New Hamp-
shire Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20009) may be
able to provide information on archeologists who
specialize in the study of archeological remains
representing periods since the arrival of Europeans in
America.
Society for Industrial Archeology (c/o National
Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institu-
tion, Room 5020, Washington, DC 20560) can pro-
vide information on archeologists who specialize in
the study of industrial sites and structures.
(bl Workload. Try to determine whether the con-
sultant will be able to accomplish the project within
the time frame that you have established. The consul-
tant sreputation Eor meeting deadlines will be a good
indication of this.
(c) Access to all fields of expertise needed to meet
the requirements of the project. Whether the consul-
tant has such expertise personally, on his or her staff,
or through cooperative arrangements with others, it is
important to ensure that he or she understands what
expertise is needed to pursue the survey goals and can
mobilize that expertise when it is needed. Although
the kinds of expertise needed will vary, historic
resources surveys are typically interdisciplinary, re-
quiring the expertise of historians, architectural
historians, archeologists, and other specialists.
(d) Ability to work with the public. The survey
will be a very public activity in the community, so at
a minimum the selected consultant should have the
ability to interact well with people. The social values
of the neighborhoods in which the survey will take
place should be considered; it is vital that those
responsible for the survey be able to work well with
the people of the community. If the survey will in-
volve the substantial use of volunteers, the consultant
should have the clear ability to inspire, organize, and
supervise them,
7. Make a list of consultants interviewed in order of
desirability, based on apparent ability to accomplish
the project.
8. Contact the first choice and agree on a precise
outline of responsibilities and a fee.
9. IE you cannot agree on responsibilities, fee, or con-
tract details, notify the consultant in writing that
negotiations are being discontinued. Then begin
negotiations with the next consultant.
20 Planning the Survey
Consultation with the State Historic Preservation Of-
ficer and, in some cases, with the National Park Serv-
ice Regional Office, is recommended during selection
of consultants. Establishment of a review panel in-
cluding appropriate professionals and representatives
of the community may be appropriate.
Selection of a consultant simply on the basis of a bid
is not recommended. A historic resources survey is a
complicated professional activity that requires the ex-
ercise of careful subjective judgement Simply obtain-
ing the cheapest services, without full consideration of
the quality of work offered, will almost certainly
result in poor work and wasted time, money, and
public enthusiasm. For consultants who can provide
the necessary services within the established budget
range, competition should be on the basis of profes-
sional competence, experience, and quality of pro-
posal .
Additional considerations:
I. Limit the number of consultants interviewed.
Careful preinterview selection will enable you to inter-
view afew consultants in depth and should provide
sufficient information for a sound choice. This pre-
interview process will provide consultants an oppor-
tunity to submit information explaining their
qualifications and the nature and extent of their ex-
perience.
2. Establish financial parameters and explain
budgetary restrictions, if any, at the outset, but avoid
competitive bidding for the reasons given above.
3. Avoid nonwritten agreements. For the protection
of both client and consultant, the client should always
execute a written contract with the consultant.
If the survey is funded using agrants-in-aid from the
Historic Preservation Fund administered by the Na-
tional Park Service, the contract should specify that
the survey (whether at a reconnaissance or intensive
level) will collect and document the information re-
quired by the Secretary of the Interior's Standards and
Guidelines for Identification. Similarly, if the purpose
of the survey is to obtain documentation for National
Register nominations or determinations of eligibility,
the contract should specify that the consultant is
responsible for compiling sufficient documentation,
consistent with the Secretary of the Interior's Stand-
ards and Guidelines for 6aaluation and Registration
and other relevant National Park Service guidelines,
to permit the necessary professional review. Although
special demands of the consultant may arise during
the course of the survey project, the consultant cannot
be expected to do work outside of the contract, unless
the contract and fee are amended accordingly.
Guidance in drawing up contracts for survey work
may be obtained from the State Historic Preservation
Officer and from the Regional Offices of the National
Park Service.
4. Avoid possible conflict of interest situations. Con-
sultants may offer to provide services at low rates in
anticipation of securing future contracts for other
types of professional services (restoration work, ex-
cavation of archeological sites, etc.). The prime task
of the consultant should be the completion of the
survey and inventory project. If a long-term
cooperative relationship between the consultant and
the client is in the best interests of both, it should be
explicitly negotiated as such.
What fees do historic resources consultants charge?
Fees charged by professional consultants are generally
based on the scope and complexity of the work as
measured by the time or professional personnel re-
quired to complete it; experience, education, training,
and reputation of the personnel involved; and the
quality of service the consultant is prepared to pro-
vide. ')-here are five basic kinds of financial ar-
rangements used for consultant services:
1. Lump Sum Fee for all Contracted Seroiees. This
arrangement may be advantageous to the client due to
its relative ease of budgeting. It can, however, be a
problem for both the client and the consultant because
it is difficult to anticipate unknown Factors that could
be involved. In fairness to both parties, there should
be a definite statement of time limits and a provision
for the adjustment of the fee. Of course, it is impor-
tant that the program and responsibilities of the con-
sultants be carefully specified in enough detail to
preclude mutual misunderstanding.
2. Fixed Fee for Professional Services-Plus Actual
Amount of Other Expenses. Beyond a fixed fee, the
firm or individual is paid the cost incurred in connec-
tion with the work based upon the actual costs in-
curred. Such costs would include, in addition to
payroll and general office overhead, materials, prin-
ting, and other out-of-pocket costs directly chargeable
to the job. It is usual to set a limit of reimbursable
costs in the contract providing Eor this type of finan-
cial arrangements, or to provide that such costs shall
not be incurred without prior approval of the client.
3. Fee as Fixed Percentage of Expenses. Compensa-
tion is based upon the consultant's technical payroll,
multiplied by an agreed-upon factor, to arrive at the
total compensation. This method may be combined
with a fixed fee or per diem compensation Eor the per-
sonal services of the consultant's staff if considerable
time of such staff is required. It is difficult for the
client to budget unless a maximum compensation is
Planning the Survey 21
included. This arrangement has the advantage of
removing the greater part of uncertainty from the
consultant's calculations in a large undertaking while
offering the client a simply method of determining
and auditing fees as well as maximum feasibility in
establishing the scope of services that he or she needs.
4. Per Diem Fees. This method may apply to any of
the consultant's personnel, including its principals. It
always requires explicit understanding as to what con-
stitutes a "day" and how travel time and expenses are
to be allocated. This arrangement is especially advan-
tageous for irregular or indefinite assignments, such as
providing testimony concerning a survey"s results to a
preservation review board.
5. Contingency Fee. This method involves work by
the consultant on the basis of compensation to be
determined later and measured by the benefits accru-
ing from the service. This is a difficult method for use
in planning studies. It requires contractual agreements
that will clearly disclose the basis upon which the
contingency fees will ultimately be computed. This
method would be unethical in all cases where the con-
sultant offers expert testimony or where he or she is
required to appear as an impartial expert rather than
as an advocate.
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
The following definitions have been developed by the
National Park Service to help States, communities,
Federal agencies, and others identify qualified profes-
sionals in the disciplines o[ history, archeology, architec-
tural history, and historic architecture. In some cases, ad-
ditional areas or levels of expertise may be needed,
depending on the complexity of the tasks involved and
the nature of the historic properties. It should be noted
that 1 year of full-time professional experience when
stipulated below need not consist of a continuous year of
full-time work, but may be made up of discontinuous
periods of full-time or part-time work that add up to the
equivalent of a year of full-Lime experiences.
A. History
C. Architectural history
The minimum professional qualifications are a graduate
degree in architectural history, art history, historic
preservation, or a closely related field, with course work
in American architectural history; or a bachelor's degree
in architectural history with concentration in American
architecture; or a bachelor's degree in architectural
history, art history, historic preservation, or a closely
related field plus one of the following (1) at least 2 years
of full-time experience in research, writing, or teaching in
American architectural history or restoration architecture
with an academic institution, historical organization or
agency, museum, or other professional institution; or (2)
substantial contribution through research and publication
to the body of scholarly knowledge in the field of
American architectural history.
The minimum professional qualifications are a graduate
degree in history or a closely related field; or a bachelor's
degree in history or a closely related field plus one nE the
following: (7) at least 2 years of full-time experience in
research, writing, teaching, interpretation, or other
demonstrable professional activity with an academic in-
stitution, historical organization or agency, museum, or
other professional institution; or (2) substantial contribu-
tion through research and publica lion to the body of
scholarly knowledge in the Field of history.
B. Archeology
The minimum professional qualifications are a graduate
degree in archeology, anthropology, or closely related
field plus (1) at least 1 year of full-time professional ex-
perience or equivalent specialized [raining in ar-
cheological research, administration, or management; (2)
a[ least 4 months of supervised field and analytic ex-
perience in general North American archeology; and (3)
demonstrated ability [o carry research [o completion. In
addition to these minimum qualifications, aprofessional
in prehistoric archeology shall have at least 1 year of full-
time professional experience at a supervisory level in the
study of archeological resources of the prehistoric period.
A professional in historic archeology shall have at leas[ 1
year of full-time professional experience at a supervisory
level in the study of archeological resources of [he
historic period.
D. Architecture
The minimum professional qualifications in architecture
are a professional degree in architecture plus at least two
years of full-time practice in architecture; or a State
license to practice architecture.
E. Historical architecture
The minimum professional qualifications area profes-
sional degree in architecture or a State license [o practice
architecture, plus one of the following: (1) at least 1 year
of graduate study in architectural preservation, American
architectural history, preservation planning, or a closely
related field and at least 1 year of Eull-time professional
experience on preservation and restoration projects; or
(2) at least 2 years of full-time professional experience on
preservation and restoration projects. Experience on
preservation and restoration projects shall include de-
tailed investigation of historic structures, preparation of
historic structures research reports, and preparation of
plans and specifications for preservation projects.
No official standards have been established by the
Secretary of the Interior For such preservation-related
professions as landscape architecture and cultural an-
thropology. In reviewing the qualifications of such pro-
fessionals, approximate equivalences to the qualifications
listed above should be looked for, and professional
organizations in the specialties involved should be con-
sulted.
22 Planning [he Survey
How do non-professionals fit into a survey?
Although a survey should be supervised by profes-
sionals, there is no reason that volunteers and others
without professional training in the preservation
disciplines cannot carry out much of the survey work.
The use of volunteers from the community is impor-
tant because it can bring to the survey people with
specific knowledge of the community's history and
resources, help ensure public support for the project,
and reduce costs.
Ways in which community volunteers can participate
fruitfully in survey include the following:
Historical Research
People with avocational interests in local history may
have already gathered much of the primary data need-
ed to interpret the community's history and establish
historic contexts. People with training or skill in
library work will be highly efficient historical
reseachers. People with background or interests in en-
vironmental studies or soil science can be helpful in
reconstructing the community's past environments,
which is often of vital concern in identifying likely ar-
cheological site locations. If recording oral histories
will be part of the project, personable people who are
able to carry on a good conversation, listen well, and
record what they hear will be welcome members of
the survey team, whatever their background.
Field Survey
Field survey work can be carried out by people from
any kind of background, provided they are ap-
propriately supervised and trained. The only major
prerequisites are the abilities to understand and follow
instructions, to be reasonably observant, and to be
able to fill out recording forms and take other notes
clearly, accurately, and completely. Naturally, the
more observant, thoughtful, and interested in historic
resources a field surveyor is, the better the product is
likely to be. Specific skills that can be tapped among
volunteers that are of great use in field survey include
cartography, drafting, photography, operation of such
excavation equipment as power augers and backhoes
for archeological testing, and first-hand knowledge of
local architectural styles. Simply knowing the com-
munity and its people, of course, and being known by
them, can be of great value to the survey effort,
simplifying communication about the survey and its
purposes, making possible access to properties where
study is needed, and opening up sources of historical
information.
Handling Survey Data
Evaluations of properties to determine their historic
value should be done by professionals, or under direct
professional supervision, but non-professionals can
participate in the evaluation process in many ways.
Evaluation is a subjective activity, and should be
responsive to community values, particularly where
the value of resources may lie in the contribution they
make to the cultural integrity of the community or its
neighborhoods. Community leaders and residents can
and should work with professionals to define the
resources that they perceive to be important to the
history and character of the community, and the same
sort of consultation with the people of individual
neighborhoods can make vital contributions to the
definition of particular historic districts.
Volunteers and other non-specialists in the preserva-
tion disciplines can also help work with the survey
data in other, less subjective but equally important
ways: carrying out the clerical work of organizing the
data, coding data for computer storage and manipula-
tion, and preparing publications. Specific useful skills
include typing, word processor operation, general
clerical skills, knowledge of computer science, use of
darkroom equipment, editing, and design and layout.
If a community's efforts at public involvement in
survey planning are successful, volunteer participants
in the survey may be recruited from a diversity of
sources. Civic and fraternal organizations and
organizations representing particular interested profes-
sional groups (e.g. building contractors) may make
the survey an activity to which their members donate
their time. College and secondary school history, an-
thropology, and social science students may be en-
couraged to participate. Members of neighborhood
organizations and organizations representing par-
ticular social or ethnic groups in the community may
donate their time. Local historical and archeological
societies may provide the backbone of the survey
work force.
Organization and supervision of volunteers may be
one of the major jobs of the survey leaders and
should be carefully considered in preparing scopes of
work and negotiating contracts. It may be appropriate
to organize volunteer coordinating committees in
various neighborhoods or other survey areas, or com-
mittees of people interested in different aspects of the
survey process. To the extent such groups can be
organized during survey planning, coordination of ac-
tual volunteer work on the survey will be facilitated.
Professional-Volunteer Relations
Volunteers' work should be reviewed at regular inter-
vals during the survey process and periodic meetings
should be held to discuss and evaluate progress. In
this regard, it is vital that there be a clear understand-
Planning the Survey 23
ing of the relationship between volunteers and profes-
sionals from the outset. To avoid wasted effort and ill
feelings, it is necessary for each participant in the
survey, whether volunteer or professional, to under-
stand and respect the work of the other participants.
The more thoroughly volunteers are trained, the
greater their contribution to the survey will be. The
precise nature of the training program undertaken will
depend on the particular situation, but every program
should emphasize the need for thoroughness, con-
sistency, and accuracy. Because the usefulness of the
survey will depend in large part on the reliability of
information gathered, the need for careful training
and close supervision of volunteers cannot be over-
emphasized.
For guidelines and assistance in locating and organiz-
ing volunteers, a community may Eind it useful to
contact Volunteer: The National Center for Citizen In-
volvement, 1111 North 19th Street, Suite 500, Ar-
lington, VA 22209, or Post Office Box 4179, Boulder,
CO. A good general reference work on the use of
volunteers is Adams' Inuesting in Volunteers (see
Bibliography).
What kind of training will ensure a consistent and high-quality survey?
The amount and type of training necessary will de-
pend on the previous experience of those who are to
conduct the survey, and on the aspect of the survey in
which those being trained will participate. Although
training will be needed primarily by volunteers and
other non-professionals in the preservation disciplines,
professionals too may need at least a brief orientation
to the specific problems of the survey and the com-
munity.
Training should emphasize the need for thoroughness,
consistency, and accuracy in all aspects of the survey,
including historical research, field survey, and
organization of survey data.
Training should be designed to:
• Convey the goals and objectives of the survey
• Convey the interrelatedness of historical research
and field survey work and a sense of how each con-
tributes to the quality and usefulness of the survey.
• Acquaint researchers and field surveyors with the
historical development of the survey area and its pres-
ent physical character.
• Give a clear idea of the specific historical and
cultural information relevant to the survey.
• Indicate the location of source material.
• Teach the skills of visual analysis, an awareness of
environmental and architedura] elements.
• Teach recording and mapping techniques.
Training sessions should familiarize both historical
researchers and field surveyors with the broad
physical and historical development of the area.
Everyone involved in the survey effort should, in ad-
dition, have an opportunity to visit and become
familiar with the survey area. Training sessions and
on-site orientation sessions may be supervised by the
survey coordinator or a trained professional familiar
with the survey area.
On-site orientation as part of training can make clear
which properties or areas researchers and surveyors
will be responsible for and how these will be covered
during the intensive survey. This overview of the
character of the area and distribution of kinds of
resources in it will help surveyors identify areas and
isolated buildings that will require considerable atten-
tion, plan their method of approach, and budget their
time. During the actual field survey, of course, the
surveyor will be able to return for a careful examina-
tion of buildings, structures, sites, and districts.
Training for Archival Researchers
Archival research involves the development and
refinement of historic contexts and the acquisition of
information that can aid in the identification and
evaluation of resources. Training should enable
historical researchers to recognize the kind of
historical data relevant to the survey project. The
researchers should also understand how research in-
formation fits into the project as a whole, how it is to
be recorded, and how it will be organized later.
Careful coordination between research and field
survey can be effected only if researchers understand
both the nature of the research required and the way
research and field survey efforts will be coordinated.
When conducting archival research, it is very easy to
become overwhelmed by the sheer volume of informa-
tion available, and to become so involved in tracing
minutiae that one loses track of the main points of the
research. Supervision is important to keep reseachers
on track: researchers should begin with a clear under-
standing of the questions the research is designed to
answer, the patterns or trends it is seeking to identify,
and the results it is the expected to produce.
Depending on the size of the group and experience of
the researchers, training might ideally consist of
several lectures and field or lab sessions designed to
familiarize trainees with the sources of information
available and specific assig.iments to provide practice
24 Planning the Survey
in actual research. Lectures could provide research
trainees with an understanding of the kinds of infor-
mation they will be gathering.
Researchers should be given a thorough understanding
of the historic contexts that have already been estab-
lished during survey planning, and oriented toward
seeking information about how each historic context
might be expressed in the actual distribution and
nature of historic resources. This will involve under-
standing and studying such topics as:
1. the time range and geographic limits of the historic
context;
2. the social, cultural, economic, environmental, and
other characteristics of the historic context;
3. the physical resources that might represent the con-
text, for example, the kinds of structures that were
built during a particular period of the community's
growth, and the parts of the community in which
they were concentrated; and
4. the changes that have occurred in the community
and its environment that might reveal or obscure the
physical record of the historic context, for example,
periods of modernization when older buildings were
covered with new siding, episodes of natural or ar-
tificial landfilling that might have buried prehistoric
sites, and areas in which erosion or human excavation
may have revealed such buried sites.
Researchers should also be instructed in the develop-
ment of new historic contexts, organizing their re-
search around such topics as:
1. trends in the settlement and development of the
community and its region;
2. major events, significant groups, and leading in-
dividuals in the community's history;
3. aesthetic and artistic values that may be repre-
sented in the architecture, landscape architecture, con
struction technology, or craftsmanship of the com-
munity;
4. cultural values and characteristics of the communi-
ty's social and ethnic groups; and
5. research questions of concern to scholars in the
humanities or social sciences who have studied the
community, its region, similar areas, or relevant prob-
lems in history, prehistory, geography, sociology, and
other disciplines.
Field or lab sessions should be scheduled to familiarize
researchers with the physical layout of the survey area
and to give them an understanding of how to corre-
late their activities with those of the Eield surveyors.
There should be specific discussion and practice in
how to use Eield survey or special research Eorms.
Researchers should be made familiar with the types of
historical information already known to be available
in local and regional libraries, archives, and other
sources, and through State and Federal agencies and
organizations. Sessions might be scheduled at the local
library to ]earn about types of general information
and special collections such as manuscript, rare book,
and photographic collections, and at the city or coun-
ty courthouse where research on tax lists, building
permits, plot maps, wills and deeds, etc. could be ex-
plained. Avisit to the local historical society may
familiarize trainees with another important source of
information. Attendance at local preservation com-
mission meetings and familiarity with the local review
process, criteria, and design guidelines may supple-
ment the trainees' understanding of the local needs
and uses for survey data.
Individual assignments may be made to provide the
group of researchers with more specific information
and enable them to practice their research skills. They
might be assigned specific practice tasks pursuing a
small scale research topic already well enough known
to the trainer to permit evaluation of the researcher's
techniques and results.
Training for Field Surveyors: Architecture
Specific training sessions should be designed to ac-
quaint field surveyors with (1) appropriate architec-
tural terminology, (2) construction techniques and
practices peculiar to the area, (3) local architectural
features or styles, (4) survey techniques that will be
used, (5) photographic coverage and equipment, and
(6) actual maps and survey forms that will be used.
Slide talks or films, with particular attention to local
architecture, reading assignments, and the completion
of practice forms, are all appropriate training
methods. Familiarity with building styles should
enable the surveyors to identify approximate ages of
buildings in the survey areas and to describe them ac-
curately. Inevitably, there will be regional variations
in styles and buildings that cannot be described using
standard terms, but as much as possible, standard
architectural historical terms rather than more inter-
pretive or creative terminology should be. used. Par-
ticularly in rural areas or small towns, efforts should
be made to make surveyors familiar with vernacular
(as opposed to highstyle) building forms. They should
be familiar with local styles and with plan and
building types found in the area.
Many State Historic Preservation Officers have pre-
pared identification guides to historic building types
that are common in their States, and will be able to
assist in using or adapting these in the training of field
surveyors.
Some familiarity with building materials and methods
is also important. Surveyors should be able to identify
various building materials and know something about
construction techniques.
Planning the Survey ZS
Surveyors should also be acquainted with the ter-
minology for detailed parts of buildings. Harley
McKee's Amateur's Guide to Terms Commonly Used
in Describing Historic Buildings and similar guides
(see Bibliography) should assist surveyors in develop-
ing avocabulary of architectural terms.
Identification and description of historic districts re-
quire special skills and may better be left to surveyors
with specific experience and training. Training ses-
sions, however, should attempt to make laymen
aware of the qualities (visual, architectural, physical,
spatial, social, etc.) that may make an area recog-
nizable as an historic district. Surveyors should be
taught to see how buildings, open spaces, natural
features, roads, and other aspects of the environment
interact to create particular urban or rural configura-
tions, and how to conduct a precise visual analysis of
those elements and their interrelationships. An effort
should be made to convey an appreciation for the
ways in which the cultural characteristics of a social
group or period in a community's history may be re-
flected in itsbuildings and the organization of its
spaces. Readings drawn from the literature of urban
design, urban geography, anthropology, and environ-
mental design, in addition to practice sessions in the
field, should provide surveyors with a general ap-
proach and models of analysis (see Bibliography).
Surveyors should be taught to be alert to the archeo-
logical value of buildings and their contents-that is,
their potential for producing information useful in im-
portant historical, anthropological, or sociological re-
search. Particularly if the survey will involve the in-
spection of building interiors, surveyors should be
taught to be on the lookout for such building contents
as furniture, collections of papers, wallpaper, grafitti,
industrial equipment, tools, and the organization of
objects in buildings and structures that may reveal
aspects of the lives of those who built, lived in, or
used the space in the past.
Where landscape architecture is a concern of the
survey, surveyors will need training in the kinds of
landscape features to be recorded. If the primary
focus of this aspect of the survey is on designed and
constructed landscapes (e.g., parks, parkways, and
landscaped housing tracts), background information
on the design characteristics and concepts used by the
landscape architects responsible for them should be
provided to surveyors, so they can recognize and in-
terpret such features when they see them. The
American Society of Landscape Architects' Historic
Preservation Committee (see address on p. 19) has
developed forms that may be used in recording
designed landscapes. Where non-designed cultural
landscapes are the focus of attention-e.g., well-
preserved agricultural areas-fewer guidelines are
available, but training should be provided in the
natural geography of the study area and in the
historical land uses that have shaped it. An excellent
example of a study of such an area, which might
usefully be studied during training, is Allen D.
Stovall's preservation study of the Sautee and
Nacoochee Valleys in Georgia (see Bibliography).
Training for Field Surveyors: Oral history
Where the collection of oral historical information is
important to the project, researchers should be given
specific training in interview techniques, use of ques-
tionnaires (if used), use of recording equipment,
and-very importantly-ways to avoid giving offence
to those interviewed. Where the collection of oral
data will take place in an ethnic neighborhood, re-
searchers should be made aware of and sensitive to
the social and cultural values of the neighborhood's
residents.
Training for Field Surveyors: Archeology
Where the identification of prehistoric archeological
sites is a focus of the survey, since such sites are
almost always substantially underground, surveyors
should be trained to look for surface indications of
their presense and for conditions under which buried
material may be exposed. Depending on local condi-
tions, prehistoric sites may be marked on the surface
by soil discolorations, fire-fractured rocks, scatters of
pottery, flaked stone, and other debris, and concen-
trations of marine or freshwater shell. Stream cuts,
drainage ditches, utility trenches, road cuts, and base-
ment excavations may reveal buried sites. Surveyors
should be trained to recognize typical local ar-
cheological phenomena (housepits, burials, middens,
hearths, etc.) in such buried contexts, and should be
taught basic concepts of stratigraphy and soil forma-
tion. They should be taught to recognize common
prehistoric artifacts of the area, and to understand, in
general, their functional, temporal, and cultural con-
texts.
Where the identification of archeological sites of more
recent periods is involved, surveyors should be given
training similar to that appropriate for prehistoric ar-
cheology, but with special attention given to the
recognition of artifacts, construction techniques,
building styles, and other features specific to the
periods under study. They should be taught to be
alert to such features as filled-in basements, wells, and
privies, which are often important sources of ar-
cheological data.
An excellent handbook on the identification of
prehistoric and historic archeological sites, oriented to
the lay reader, is Archeological Resources and Land
Development by Paul Brace (see Bibliography).
Where the archeological value of standing structures is
important to the survey, surveyors should be trained
in the recognition of architectural features, contents of
structures, and spatial relationships within structures
26 Planning the Survey
that may reveal aspects of their use, their history, and
the social organization, economy, values, perceptions,
and activities of their builders, residents, or users.
Close interaction between archeological surveyors and
historical researchers should be stressed, because
How much should a survey cost?
Communities should draw up a detailed budget of
survey expenses before undertaking any phase of the
project. Some of the factors affecting the size of the
budget-time, available Funding, size of survey area
type and depth of information to be gathered-have
already been discussed. Other factors, including
salaries for personnel, administrative expenses, and
publications, will be discussed in later chapters.
Survey costs can be reduced by using large numbers
Where can funding for surveys be obtained?
Because of the usefulness of survey data to com-
munity planning, and because of the economic
stimulus that the rehabilitation of historic buildings
can provide a community, Financing a survey may be
a good investment for local government. A variety of
Federal, State, and non-governmental programs pro-
vide funding assistance to survey projects, however.
Many local governments allocate Community Devel-
opment Block Grant funds to the conduct of surveys.
Historic preservation grants-in-aid passed through by
State Historic Preservation Officers to certified local
government preservation programs or allocated direct-
ly to survey projects are also frequently used sources
of assistance. Other Federal agencies from time to
time make funding available to support surveys, often
in the context of specific development projects. Some
State governments provide financial assistance to
survey efforts, either through the State Historic
Preservation Officer or in connection with economic
development and planning assistance programs.
Funding for specific projects can often be obtained
from such Federal granting agencies as the National
Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment
for the Humanities. Support for particular projects
and programs may also be obtainable from such non-
Federal sources as the National Trust for Historic
Preservation, the American Association for State and
Local History, and private foundations that support
research in the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
The State Historic Preservation Officer will be able to
provide current information on potential sources of
historical study of the community and its environment
is vital in allowing archeologists to focus their efforts
in areas most likely to produce results, and because
archeological discoveries in the field may suggest
fruitful lines of historical inquiry.
of volunteers, by reducing the level of professional
supervision, by eliminating publication of survey
results, or by simply cutting the size of the survey
area. Such cuts, however, can affect the quality of the
data gathered and undermine the usefulness of the
results. Professional advice and assistance from the
State Historic Preservation Officer in the initial stages
of the survey project can help a community draw up
a budget that is both accurate and reasonable.
financial assistance. Other good sources of informa-
tion include economic development officials in local
and State governments, National Park Service
Regional Offices, and grants and contracts offices in
local colleges and universities.
The following publications, which are updated
regularly, may be helpful in locating sources of funds:
Annual Register of Grant Support. Edited by Alvin
Renetzsky and others. Orange, NJ: Academic Media.
The Brown Book: A Directory of Preservation Infor-
mation. Prepared by the National Trust for Historic
Preservation. Washington, DC: The Preservation
Press.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. Washington,
DC: Government Printing Office.
Federal Funding Guide. Arlington, VA: Government
Information Service.
Foundation Directory. Prepared by the Foundation
Center. New York: Columbia University Press.
A Guide to Federal Programs. Prepared by the Na-
tional Trust for Historic Preservation. Washington,
DC: The Preservation Press.
National Directory of Arts Support by Private Foun-
dations. Washington, DC: Washington International
Arts Letter.
Planning the Survey 27
z,
Conducting the Survey
Conducting a survey involves three sets of activities: ar-
chival reseazch, field survey, and recording of informa-
tion. Although archival research begins before fieldwork,
and much information is recorded as the result of
fieldwork, all three activities will normally be going on at
once; those conducting them should interact and provide
each other with advice and suggestions. Archival research
will indicate what to look for and what to record, and
fieldwork and recordation will identify information needs
--_ -
Archival Research
Archival research-the study and organization of infor-
mation on the history, prehistory, and historic resources
of the community-is a vital part of the survey. It is on
the basis of archival research that historic contexts are
established and refined, providing basic direction to the
field survey. Archival research makes it possible to
predict where different kinds of historic resources will or
cur and what their characteristics may be. Archival
research provides the information needed to place historic
How should azchival research be organized?
The mass of archival data relevant to the history of a
community is likely to be voluminous, and can easily be
overwhelming. It is vital to keep the archival research ef-
fort clearly focused on data relevant to the survey goals.
The concept of historic context-that is an organizational
framework of information based on theme, geographical
area, and period of time-is recommended as the basis
for organizing information pertinent to the research design
and survey results. A survey may focus on a single or
several historic contexts and may identify properties
relating to a single, several, or many property types
depending on the goals of the survey. Historic contexts
may be based on the physical development and character,
trends and major events, or important individuals and
to be pursued in archival research. Survey leaders will be
responsible for ensuring that all facets of the survey are
effectively integrated.
This chapter will discuss each of the major aspects of
survey in turn, and will also present recommendations
about such practical matters as how to equip a survey
team.
resources in their historical and cultural contexts, as a
basis for evaluafion. Archival research probably will have
been carried on during survey planning, but in most cases
it will be necessary to continue it during the survey
operation itself, to follow up on issues identified during
planning, to flesh out historic contexts, to explore new
contexts, and to provide input to the field survey process
as questions develop about specific areas and properties.
groups that occurred at various times in the history or
prehistory of a community or other geographical unit.
It is wise to develop a written research design at the
outset, that establishes goals and directions for the re-
search.ln preparing the research design, survey
leaders should consult the Secretary of the Interior"s
Standards and Guidelines concerning development of
historic contexts, archival research, and historical
documentation. Several major principles should be
kept in mind:
• Historical research and survey work already done
should be incorporated into the new project and com-
plemented, not duplicated unless there is a need to
check its accuracy, refine it, or revise it.
Zg Conducting [he Survey
• The level of detail of archival research should be
matched to the scale of the survey. (For example, if
the survey is an initial reconnaissance of an entire
community, archival research should be oriented
toward the identification and description of general
trends, groups, and events in the community's
history, and their known or likely effects on the com-
munity's development If the survey is an intensive
study of a smaller area, archival study may be a
much more detailed effort to reconstruct the specific
history of particular properties, areas, and groups of
people.)
• The archival research effort should be focused, at
least initially, on developing and refining the historic
contexts established during survey planning.
• The type of study should be matched to the goals
of the survey. (For example, if the survey is concerned
exclusively with standing structures, there may be lit-
tle need for archival research in prehistoric arche-
ol ogy. )
• While encouraging focussed research, survey leaders
should be sure that the archival research project main-
tains sufficient flexibility to recognize and pursue new
historic contexts that may be identified in the course
of the work.
The research design should specify:
• the geographic area(s) of concern;
• the historic context(s) of concern;
• research questions or issues to be addressed with
respect to each historic context;
• previous research known to have been done on
such issues;
• the amount and kind of information expected to be
needed to address the historic context;
• the types of sources to be used;
• the types of methods to be used;
• the types of personnel likely to be needed; and
• where possible, expectations about what will be
learned, or hypothetical answers to major research
questions.
With the research design in hand, it should be possi-
ble to make realistic decisions about assignment of
staff, allocation of fime and budget, and other prac-
tical organizational matters.
As a rule, archival research should be organized into
the following steps with reference to each historic con-
text under investigation:
1. Assemble existing information, including both in-
formation about previous surveys and historic
resources already identified, and more general
primary and secondary data, as discussed below. It is
not necessary to Eerret out every conceivable piece of
available information before taking Further steps, but
beginning to assemble information into an organized
whole, identifying sources and finding the relevant
bodies of data in each, is the first general step in the
archival research process.
2. Assess the reliability of the information as it is
assembled, identifying possible biases and major gaps
in data.
3. Synthesize the information in usable form, with
reference to the issues important to the historic con-
text. Generally such issues will include the reconstruc-
tion of trends in the settlement and development of
the area, the definition of cultural values that may
give significance to historic properties, the definition
of architectural, aesthetic, and artistic values that may
be embodied in such properties, and the pursuit of
research questions in the social and physical sciences
and the humanities.
An understanding of the physical development of the
community will provide researchers with a broad
historical, architectural, archeological, and cultural
context for research undertaken on particular proper-
ties. Evidence of the evolving plan and character of a
community can be seen in the pattern of streets as laid
oat and modified, and in the location of transporta-
tion systems (canals, trolley lines, railroads, etc.), in-
dustries, institutions, commercial and residential
areas, and reserved public spaces and parks. The
kinds, size, and scale of buildings and structures,
methods and materials of construction, and architec-
tural forms and styles should be considered in defin-
ing the character of a community.
The location of natural resources, soil types,
availability of power and fael, and accessibility to
transportation systems were factors that frequently
contributed to the siting and development of towns
and cities. The development of agriculture, mining, or
other activities that shaped the form of rural com-
munities or small towns should be considered.
Events significant in the community's history may be
represented by the existence or location of particular
buildings. Sites of events, such as commemorative oc-
casions, famous battles, historical debates, theatrical
performances, or political speeches, should be iden-
tified. Research should be done not only on properties
associated with familiar figures-leading politicians,
educators, and business persons-but also on groups
or individuals important for their contribution to the
arts, literature, philanthropy, agriculture, engineering,
and other areas. Properties associated with the social,
economic, and ethnic groups that have contributed to
the community's history and cultural diversity should
also be identified. It is of great importance to try to
understand the general trends and patterns of social,
economic, and cultural development that have
Conducting the Survey 29
characterized each period of the community's past and
its resident groups. Properties associated with ac-
tivities important to a community's development and
perhaps distinctive character, such as ethnic settle-
ment, agriculture, transportation, mining, local
government, education, county or local government,
or maritime trade should be identified.
Trends reflected in existing cultural properties may in-
clude emigration, population shifts, changing
economic and labor systems, reform movements,
status of minority groups, development of industrial
and technical processes, and important religious
developments. Research on individual properties in-
cludes such items as architect, engineer, and date and
cost of construction. Depending on the intensity of
the survey effort, researchers may attempt to consider
reasons for the use or introduction of particular
styles, materials, or methods of construction in
specific properties.
4. Identify the types of historic property that may be
associated with the historic context. For example, a
given period may be characterized by the construction
of particular kinds of buildings expressing particular
architectural styles; a particular social or ethnic group
important in the community's history may have
organized its buildings and neighborhoods in par-
ticular ways; a particular cultural group in prehistory
may have had certain kinds of villages, agricultural
stations, and campsites that now are represented by
different kinds of archeological sites.
S. Determine how each type of property is likely to be
distributed within the community. Sometimes this is a
simple matter: for example, historic port facilities will
likely be dose to the water, or it may be well
documented that urban growth followed the develop-
ment of streetcar lines or streets. In other cases deter-
mining lilkely distributions may be more complicated;
for example, predicting the distribution of prehistoric
sites requires knowledge of the prehistoric natural en-
vironment, which may be hard to reconstruct, and at
least general theoretical notions about how prehistoric
peoples would have carried out their activities in that
environment. Historic maps, atlases, and plats may
assist in determining the likely distribution of historic
properties, particularly where subsequent growth has
altered the terrain, plan, or layout of a community or
area. Areas in which particular kinds of historic
resources are expected should be dearly identified and
mapped, so that the expectations can be tested in the
field. Often it will be useful to develop maps or map
overlays showing locations where different kinds of
historic properties are likely to occur, so that these
can be easily checked on the ground.
6. Establish the likely current condition of the prop-
erty types. Were the buildings of one period or style
built of stone and brick, while those of another were
built of wood? Is this likely to have resulted in the
preservation of buildings of the first period and the
loss of those of the second? Did the downtown burn
at some point in the past, destroying all its commer-
cial buildings constructed before the date of the fire?
Is it likely that archeological remains of these
buildings are still in place? Were many older buildings
in town covered with annodized aluminum during
modernizations in the 1950s? What is the likelihood
that their original architectural elements have survived
under their new skins? Have some neighborhoods
been well kept since their establishment? Have others
suffered major deterioration, arson, or spot demoli-
tion? Have some areas, likely to contain prehistoric or
more recent archeological sites, been covered with fill
and low-density housing built on slabs, possibly
preserving the archeological sites beneath? Have other
such areas been the scenes of deep basement excava-
tion, probably destroying all archeological remains?
Here, too, it is often useful to present such informa-
tion on maps or map overlays.
7. Identify information needs to be satisfied by
fieldwork. What should be known about the historic
context and its resources that can be found through
the field survey? These needs should be used to guide
the fieldwork.
PREDICTNE MAPS OF ARCHEOLOGICAL SITES
Predictions of the general location of archeological sites
may be among the most useful products of archival
research, since such resources are often invisible from the
surface of [he ground in urbanized areas. Such predic-
tions are often most conveniently presented in map form.
For example, for a hypothetical example, general environ-
mental data and information on prehistoric and early his
toric settlement patterns suggest that levees along the
banks of streams are good places For prehistoric settle-
ments to have existed, and early explorers' accounts indi-
cate that a village did exist in such a location within what
is now the community being studied. Inter, according to
the towels records, a hotel was built on the same general
location, which became important in the town"s early
political development The hotel survived into the early
20th century, when it burned along with other buildings in
its vicinity; old news accounts indicate that its superstruc-
ture was demolished and pushed into its cellar. The site
was levelled, and was unoccupied until the 1950s, when an
office building, still in use, was constructed with a deep
basement. A few years later, during channelization of the
adjacent creek, newspaper accounts and a local amateur
archeologist s notes report that Indian artifacts were found,
tending to confirm both the early explorers' accounts and
the predictions from environmental data about where In-
dian sites were likely to be. All this information can be
combined to produce a map showing where it is most like-
ly that the remains of the Indian vllage, possible other
prehistoric sites, and the remnants of the hotel may be
found underground.
30 Conducting the Survey
What sources of information should be consulted?
Researchers should use both primary and secondary
sources in compiling historical data for the survey. If
a comprehensive survey is being planned, primary
sources will be consulted frequently; surveys limited
by time and money, however, will rely heavily on
secondary sources. In either case, it is essential that
the sources consulted be reliable and accurate.
Primary, or original, sources include actual material
thak has been preserved from the period of interest;
written or published documents and graphic material,
as well as the artifacts themselves. For an in-depth
survey, original sources will usually provide a more
complete and accurate picture of the community's
hiskory than will secondary sources.
t 1' ~
,. Vor..,G,°,.*.~%"al%!r'daau+.k „rrp l~;~4~'",,Gd wil.,~wi,7M'" ~~
. .,, I:~~~~~~s~w„ „
n
~, ~,
Records of the community's physical development
may be found in:
• back issues of local newspapers and periodicals
• family papers and records
• accounts of travelers
• early ethnographic accounts
+ church histories
• industry and business records
• records on publicly financed construction
• school records
• city and county commercial directories
• census reports
• telephone books
• tax rolls
• deeds and wills
• inkerviews
• keepsakes, letters, and persona] diaries
• ledgers, cancelled checks, and receipts
Researchers should also be on the lookout for graphic
material (plat maps and other historical maps, old
photographs, bird's-eye views, and historical prints)
which can provide information that corroborates or
clarifies the results of field survey work. O]d maps
and insurance atlases, such as those published by the
Sanborn Map Company, Inc., New York City, iden-
tify buildings existing at a certain time and document
changes through subsequent printings. These can pro-
vide the Field team with an initial list of sites and
structures to be investigated.
Old photographs may provide evidence of changes
and additions and allow the field team to cross-check
their own observations, questions, and deductions
Historic drauungs ran be a goad source of information about the
appeararrce o/ graperties and areas at a particular ppint in time.
Magnolia Ranclr, Cowley County, Kansas. (drawing from Everts
Atlas of Kansas, 7&87, Kansas State Historical Society)
about particular properties. Aerial photographs can
also be used in carrying out survey work, in
establishing boundaries of an historic district, in pin-
pointing location and property lines of individual
properties, and in analyzing the street patterns, open-
space development, and growth of the area.
The Agricultural Stabilizing and Conservation Service
(ABCs) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture has
been taking aerial photos of approximately 80% of
the country regularly since 1940; areas are
rephotographed every 6-8 years. Photos are usually
available for viewing at local ASCS offices, which can
also provide ordering information. The National Ar-
chives in Washington, DC, has converted much early
aerial photographic coverage of the Nation to modern
chemically stable film and archived it for viewing.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra-
tion maintain files of more recent aerial photographs
and satellite imagery. The latter, usually available in
forms suitable for computer enhancement and
manipulation, can be particularly useful in identifying
soil contexts and environmental indicators that may
suggest the presense of archeological sites. For infor-
mation on the use and availability oG such remote
sensing data, consult the State Historic Preservation
Officer or the Regional Office of the National Park
Service.
Where subsurface archeological resources are in-
volved, adifferent kind of primary data may be im-
portant as a supplement to the sources discussed
above. Primary archival information relevant to sub-
surface archeological sites may not actually have been
produced during the period of interest (for prehistoric
periods, by definition it could not have been). Instead
such information has usually been produced during
Conducting the Survey Bl
more recent periods, but can be used to reconstruct
important characteristics of the period under study
and its resources. Often useful information sources in-
clude:
• Local soil maps, often available from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service,
through local Soil Conservation Districts or planning
departments, which can be used to identify
characteristics of the prehistoric and early historic
natural environment (e.g. marshes indicated by poorly
drained clay soils) and likely prehistoric site locations
(e.g. well-drained soils near old watercourses where
prehistoric agriculturalists might have had their
villages and fields).
• Ethnographic studies of local Indian groups.
• Reports and Fieldnotes of earlier professional and
amateur archeologists.
• Aerial and satellite imagery that may reveal other-
wise invisible aspects of the prehistoric or historic
natural environment and such early human modifica-
tions of the land as roads, trails, fields, and irrigation
systems.
• 01d newspaper accounts of artifact Einds during
construction, basement excavation, and land levelling
• Construction records of land filling and basement
SPECIALIZED RESEARCH ASSISTANCE
The organizations listed on page 19 as possible sources
of information on professional consultants can often also
provide information on sources of information concern-
ing their areas of interest. In addition, the following
societies and associations may be able to provide
assistance in researching particular aspects of the survey
area:
American Folklore Society, 1703 New Hampshire
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20009 (oral history
sources and methods, vernacular architecture, etc.).
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), 345 East
47th Street, New York, NY 10017 (civil engineering
works).
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 345 East 47th
Street, New York, NY 10017 (industrial features).
Center for Historic Houses, National Trust for Historic
Preservation, ]785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20036 (residential buildings).
Council of American Maritime Museums, c/o The
Mariners" Museum, Museum Drive, Newport News, VA
23606 (ships, harbor Facilities).
Council on America's Military Past (CAMP), P,O. I3ox
1151, Fort Myer, VA 22211 (military posts, battlefields,
etc.)
Friends of Cast-Iron Architecture, 235 East 87th Street,
Room 6C, New York, NY 10028 (cast-iron architecture)
excavation, which can identify areas where subsurface
resources are likely either to have been preserved (by
being filled over) or destroyed (by being excavated).
Secondary sources are those written by individuals
who have studied and interpreted the available
original sources. They generally provide a broad over-
view of the community's history but represent a later
interpretation rather than a contemporary record of
events or reflection of the spirit of the times.
Valuable sources include the following:
The ongoing statewide survey of historic resources
significant in American history, architecture, engineer-
ing, archeology, and culture at the national, State,
and local levels. This and additional State survey data
are available Erom the appropriate State Historic
Preservation Officer.
The historic preservation plan developed and main-
tained by the State Historic Preservation Officer,
which often includes established historic contexts
(sometimes called study units) with extensive organ-
ized and synthesized background data.
Inventories that may be maintained by the local or
State offices of the Bureau of Land Management or
the Forest Service, or by regional planning bodies or
such State agencies as the State coastal zone manage-
Friends of Terra Cotta, P.O. Box 42]93, Main Post Of-
fice, San Francisco, CA 94142 (terra cotta architecture).
League of Historic American Theaters, 1600 H Street,
NW, Washington, DC 20036 (theaters).
National Association for Olmsted Parks, 175 Fifth
Avenue, New York, NY 10011 (landscape architecture by
Frederick Law Olmsted and his associates).
National Society for the Preservation of Covered Bridges,
63 Fairview Avenue, South Peabody, MA 01960 (covered
bridges).
Oral History Associatioq North Texas State University,
P.O. Box 13734, NT Station, Denton, TX 76203 (oral
history sources and methods).
Pioneer America Society, Inc, c/o Department of
Geography, University of Akron, Akron, OH 44325
(early American architectu rel.
Publi< Works Historical Society, 1313 East 60th Street,
Chicago, IL 60637 (public works projects).
Railroad Station Historical Society, 430 Ivy Avenue,
Crete, NE 68333 (railroad stations and related facilities).
Society for Applied Anthropology, 1001 Connecticut
Avenue, NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036 (oral
history and ethnographic sources and methods).
Victorian Society in America, 219 East Sixth Street,
Philadelphia, PA 19106 (Victorian architecture).
32 Conducting the Survey
ment agency or environmental protection agency.
These bodies of data can often be accessed by com-
puter, and sometimes have been used by the agencies
that maintain them to produce "predictive
models"-that is, predictions about the likely distribu-
tions of archeological sites and other historic proper-
ties.
Local, regional, or State histories: monographs, pam-
phlets, or other material prepared by local or State
historical societies or other groups concerned with
particular aspects of State or local history
(geneologica] societies, e.g., although researchers
should be aware that the concerns of geneologists may
not be directly related to the issue of establishing the
significance of resources).
The records of the National Register of Historic
Places, Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS),
and Historic American Engineering Record (HAER),
are available for review through the National Park
Service or the Library of Congress.
The American Guide Series (WPAJ, compiled and
written by the Federal Writers' Project of the Works
Progress Administration, is one of the basic sources of
information on communities, regions, and States.
Originally published some 45 years ago, these guides
contain detailed histories of their respective States,
descriptions of their resources and industries, and
selected points of interest for each community. A
number of these guides have been reprinted within re-
cent years and may provide useful background
material for those beginning survey work within a
community. Often, State, county, or city libraries
have retained the survey forms and research files
which formed the basis for these guides.
The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) provide
abstracted and excerpted information on aboriginal
societies, including American Indian groups, together
with extensive bibliographic material. Many univer-
sities maintain copies of those portions of the HRAF
that are pertinent to their research and teaching in an-
thropology and sociology. Inquiries at the an-
thropology department of local universities should
reveal whether the HRAF or other ethnographic
documents are available.
Anthropological and sociological works that provide
theoretical models of prehistoric and historic social
systems, economic systems, and settlement systems,
on a regional, national, or worldwide context, that
may be relevant to the historical contexts of the com-
munity.
Dissertations, theses, and other research papers on the
history and prehistory of the area, available in college
and university departments of history, anthropology,
and archeology.
Reports of oral history projects carried out by local
universities, colleges, secondary schools, and com-
munity organizations.
General works on the geology, geomorphology,
ecology, environment, and land-use history of the
region, which may help researchers understand
natural constraints on, and results of, trends in the
use of land and other resources in and around the
community.
Where may primary and secondary information be found?
Libraries offer a rich source of information on local
places and events and should be the starting point in
undertaking historical research in a community.
Libraries in larger towns and cities often house special
collections relating to the history and development of
the community, and local newspapers and journals
provide valuable insights into personalities and events
shaping the community's physical environment. In ad-
dition, old newspapers and directories provide infor-
mation about building materials, architects, and con-
tractors: they may also list building permits or con-
tain articles relevant to particular buildings.
Archives or public records at the local county court-
house or town hall usually provide census reports;
abstracts and title deeds; surveyors' notes; probate
records, which include items such as bills of sale,
debtors' notes, wills, and household inventories; and
tax records showing property improvements such as
major additions or the actual construction of the
house on taxed property. Land records, such as plat
maps, are also available from most county court-
houses.
Universities and colleges are also good places to
undertake research. University libraries often contain
special collections or archival material not available in
local libraries; faculty members in history, an-
thropology, and architecture departments may be able
to direct researchers to other available sources, such
as unpublished research papers and reports. Some
State universities have collections that deal specifically
with State history. Others have special research units
that archive information on local historic or
prehistoric archeology.
Museums usually have libraries and archives, and
employ staff familiar with undertaking research. Loea]
museums often collect regional artifacts-furniture,
housewares, hardware-that can provide insights into
their manufacture and owners, in short, the social
history of the community. Some museums maintain
significant collections of documented artifacts and
Conducting the Sun~ev 33
records concerning the archeology of the community
or the region.
State and local historical societies are often important
sources of information. Often such organizations are
not particularly oriented toward historic preservation
as such, but specialize in the collection and study of
documents about local or regional history, and
sometimes undertake oral history projects and other
special studies. Some have distinguished publication
programs; others maintain archives. Whatever their
size, scope, and particular interest, they are likely to
have gathered information that will be useful to the
survey effort.
Local historic preservation or landmark commissions
have increased greatly in number in the last decade.
While such commissions are largely a phenomenon of
the post-World War II years, a few date back to the
nineteenth century. These organizations range from
those supporting individual buildings to those
operating and maintaining several-or an entire
group-of historic structures, to those officially
responsible on behalf of local government for historic
preservation in the entire community. A number of
commissions have undertaken their own surveys, and
many maintain ongoing records of a community's
growth.
State, regional, and local archeological societfes often
maintain files, notes, and libraries of information on
archeological sites, excavations, and analyses. These
are useful not only for determining the locations of
potentially important properties, but also for gaining
insights into locally important research questions and
the nature of prior study in the area. The State
Historic Preservation Officer should be able to pro-
vide the names and addresses of such organizations.
These groups often limit access to their data in order
to prevent it from falling into the hands of vandals
and collectors; this concern should obviously be
respected.
State and National Parks in the vicinity of the com-
munity may have archives of historical information,
particularly if the interpretation of historic resources
is among their purposes. Even if park personnel have
not intentionally set out to collect such information, it
is often donated to the park, and may deal with
historical events and resources far beyond the park's
boundaries.
The National Archives in Washington, DC, and in
several regional respositories contain vast bodies of
information developed or collected by Federal agen-
cies over the years. The Archives may be particularly
important to a local survey if the survey deals with
Federal land or land formerly controlled by a Federal
agency, or land in which the Federal government has
been indirectly involved (for example, through soil
conservation or housing programs).
The Library of Congress houses the records collected
by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
Historic American Engineering Record (HABS/
HAER). These are maintained by a program called
Cooperative Preservation of Architectural Records
(COPAR), at the Library of Congress in Washington,
DC, and in regional repositories at Cambridge, MA,
New York, NY, and San Francisco, CA. The Library
of Congress also houses a tremendous collection of
published and manuscript historical documents, and is
the home of the American Folklife Center, which col-
lects, studies, and archives documents, tapes, photos,
videotapes, films, and other material on oral history,
folk arts, folk crafts, vernacular architecture and in-
dustrial activities, and ethnography.
The National Cartographic Information Center (U.S.
Geological Survey, Department of the Interior,
Reston, VA 22091) is a good source of information on
maps and other bodies of cartographic data.
Federal agencies may have useful information; for ex-
ample, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers may have
information on local coastal environments and civil
works projects that have been conducted along the
coast or rivers in the past. Local military bases often
have archives that contain information on the com-
munities near which they lie. Local and State offices
of the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Manage-
ment may have inventories of archeological sites and
other historic properties in the area, and may have
prepared predictive maps of their distribution that can
be helpful to communities in the vicinity. The Soil
Conservation Service and local Soil Conservation
District offices are good sources of maps and reports
on local soils and other aspects of the environment
that may be useful in archeological survey.
Planning and development offices of local government
or regional intergovernmental organizations can pro-
vide useful maps and reports on local demography,
economics, and environmental matters.
Noninstitutional sources. Local industries and
businesses may have records or histories of their
operations, and local newspapers may have clippings
or photograph files; these may be helpful to historians
in tracing a community's commercial development.
Neighborhood organizations may maintain archival
data on the history of the neighborhood and its
residents. Local residents themselves, especially those
whose families have lived in the area for several
generations, may keep family records and early pho-
tographs that could be useful in research.
34 Conducting the Survey
Conducting Field Survey
As discussed in Chapter 1, field survey is usually
divided into two types: reconnaissance and intensive
survey. Sometimes both types are conducted as
related parts of the same survey project; in other
cases, reconnaissance is used to plan and Eocus later
intensive survey. For some planning purposes, recon-
naissance may be all that is needed. In this section we
will first discuss how to conduct a reconnaissance,
then how to conduct an intensive survey.
How is a reconnaissance of above-ground resources carried out?
Assuming that the pattern of streets and roads in the
community has remained fairly stable through time
pehaps expanding, but with relatively few rights-0f-
way being abandoned-it can reasonably be expected
that most older buildings will be visible from modern
streets and roads. As a result, the windshield survey is
a common method of reconnaissance when historic
buildings and structures are the subjects of interest. A
windshield survey can also be efficient in the iden-
tification and initial description of historic districts
made up of buildings, structures, and landscapes, and
in the identification of major landscape features such
as parks, roadways, and areas where distinctive land-
use patterns have shaped the surface of the land.
In a windshield survey, surveyors literally drive the
streets and roads of the community and make notes
on the buildings, structures, and landscape
characteristics they see, and on the general character
of the areas through rahich they drive. Closer inspec-
tions are made on foot as needed, but [he basic pur-
pose of the reconnaissance is not to gain detailed in-
formation on particular structures or sites, but to get
a general picture of the distribution of different types
and styles, and of the character of different
neighborhoods. Records taken on individual structures
are usually abbreviated, but more detailed informa-
tion may be collected on the general organization of
the area being surveyed-its streetscapes, the general
character of its housing stock or commercial
buildings, representative buildings and structures, the
layout of its spaces in general, the social, economic,
and ethnic makeup of its residents. A good photo-
graphic record should be kept of the reconnaissance,
with the subject of each roll and frame clearly iden-
tified. Audio and video recorders may be used to ob-
tain rapidly general records of the area and its
resources; where such media are used, it is important
to keep careful records indicating which segments of
which tapes apply to which areas.
1/dindshield survey is most effectively carried out by
teams of two to three persons, one of whom concen-
trates on driving and covering the entire survey area
efficiently. At least one other team member should be
thoroughly familiar with local architectural styles;
where nonprofessionals are used, training in local ar-
chitectural styles may be supplemented by use of a
reference guide showing different styles and their
characteristic elements. It will also be helpful to the
reconnaissance if at least one member of the team is a
resident of the area being inspected, or is otherwise
personally familiar with its layout and social
characteristics.
Windshield survey creates an unavoidable bias toward
observing those buildings and structures visible
through the windshield-that is, those facing the
street. Phis bias should be kept in mind at all times,
and the team should be alert to opportunities to note
outbuildings and other structures that may ordinarily
be masked Erom the street. Evidence of changes in the
historic street and road pattern should also be looked
for, both in archival research and in the field, since
such changes may result in the isolation and masking
of buildings that once were visible from rights-of-way.
Where the survey area is large, it may be appropriate
to conduct a sample windshield reconnaissance. In
this kind of reconnaissance, sample blocks, streets, or
other units are selected that are thought likely to be
representative of entire subareas of the survey
area-residential neighborhoods or particular com-
mercial areas, for example. These samples are then in-
spected using standard windshield survey methods,
and used as the basis for generalizing about the
resources of the various subareas. Care should be
taken in selecting samples, to ensure that they are ob-
jectively chosen and likely to be truly representative.
It may be helpful to consult with sociologists or
others who have conducted surveys of other kinds in
the area, and to apply their techniques or to use the
survey units that they have selected. It may also be
helpful to consult the extensive literature on sampling
in such fields as human geography and archeology,
examples of which are included in the bibliography.
One of the important functions of a reconnaissance is
to identify the boundaries of areas that may become
the objects of intensive survey-perhaps potential
historic districts, perhaps portions of the community
having distinctive architectural, planning, or cultural
characteristics. Such boundaries should be clearly
mapped by the reconnaissance teams, and the basis
for recognizing each boundani should be specified.
Conducting the Survey 35
For each area subjected to windshield reconnaissance
the notes resulting from the reconnaissance should
document:
• the kinds of properties looked for;
• the boundaries of the area inspected;
• the methods used in inspecting the area, including
notes as to any areas given special attention and any
areas given less attention or not inspected at all;
• the general street plan of the area, and general
observations on the area's visual, cultural, economic,
and social characteristics;
• the general character of the area's architectural en-
vironment, with illustrations of representative
buildings and structures, streetscapes, landscapes, and
other relevant features;
• the kinds of historic buildings and structures
observed, and data on any particular buildings and
structures recorded in detail;
• the tentative boundaries of historic districts, and the
known or likely locations of specific historic
buildings, structures, sites, and objects; and
• the locations of any areas that appear not to con-
tain any historic buildings or structures.
How is a reconnaissance for archeological sites carried out?
Where land is relatively built up, as is the case in
most communities undertaking historic resources
surveys, both prehistoric and early historic ar-
cheological sites are likely to be more or less invisible,
buried under modern, created land surfaces and struc-
tures. As a result, archival research is especially im-
portant to the conduct of an archeological recon-
naissance; quite often, the reconnaissance consists of
nothing more than field-checking predictions made on
the basis of archival research.
The first step in an archeological reconnaissance,
then, is to develop predictions about where ar-
cheological sites are likely to be found. Such predic-
tions are developed based on the following kinds of
information, developed through archival research:
1. Information on prehistoric and early historic en-
vironments. By reconstructing the pre-modern natural
environment, archeologists can develop a basis for
predicting where earlier people could and could not
have lived and worked. For instance, iE much of a city
is built on reclaimed land that once was a lake, the
likelihood of prehistoric archeological sites in the
reclaimed areas will be very low, but the probability
of such sites on peninsulas protruding into the lake or
along the ancient shoreline may be quite high. Infor-
mation on early environments may be obtained from
the accounts of early explorers or settlers, from
previous archeological studies of the area, and
through the analysis of soil maps that often are
available from the Soil Conservation Service. For
coastal communities, the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers often has detailed maps showing previous
shoreline environments.
2. Data on prehistoric settlement patterns. If data are
available on the ways in which earlier populations
were distributed over the land, projections can be
made about how the archeological sites they created
will be distributed. Data may be found in
ethnographic accounts, early historical documents,
and previous archeological studies. Care must be
taken in making predictions on the basis of such data,
however, because they are often incomplete, biased,
or reflective of only one time period or social group
among many. It is particularly dangerous to make
predictions based on extant archeological information.
Most archeological surveys conducted before about
1965, and many conducted thereafter, were designed
not to record all archeological sites in the area being
studied, but only to find convenient sites to excavate.
Predicting from such data alone typically makes it ap-
pear that archeological sites are most often found
along roads and close to parking areas.
3. Data on local history and land use. The history of
the community should indicate what groups of people
arrived at different times, where they lived, what
sorts of activities they engaged in, and so on. Old
maps will often make it possible to pinpoint particular
vanished buildings, structures, and areas of popula-
tion concentration. Compilations of local historical
data may be biased, quite often emphasizing the
history of leading citizens, the rich, and the powerful.
Data on the less prominent social groups that con-
tributed to the mosaic of the community's history
may be harder to find. Detailed study of historic ac-
counts, particularly old newspapers, journals, and
other primary sources, and direct interviews with
descendants of the groups in question may be
necessary. Close coordination between archeologists
and those carrying out any oral history component of
the survey may be appropriate.
4. The history of land development and construction
in the area. Where a particular area has been iden-
tified as the likely location of prehistoric or early
historic activities or structures, information on the
kinds of land development and construction that have
taken place there will help archeologists determine the
likelihood that evidence of them has survived in the
form of archeological sites. Areas that have been
covered only with relatively ]ow-density housing,
36 Conducting the Suruey
especially without basements, are likely to contain the
archeological remains of previous activities that oc-
curred there, buried beneath fill and foundation slabs.
Conversely, areas that have seen extensive basement
excavation or other forms of major land disruption
are less likely to retain intact archeological remains.
5. Information on previous archeological discoveries.
In some communities, professional or avocational ar-
cheologists were on the scene before development
took place, and recorded archeological sites that may
now have disappeared under fill and structures.
Discoveries of archeological material during construc-
tion, pipeline laying, and other development activities
may be reported in newspapers. While the particular
artifacts or other material discovered will have been
removed from the ground, the fact that it was there
may indicate that other material still exists nearby.
Areas predicted to contain archeological sites based
on such information should be identified on maps and
inspected. The ground surface should be closely ex-
amined to the maximum extent possible, and any
locations where subsurface conditions may be exposed
(road cuts, ditches, etc.) should be inspected. It may
be appropriate to interview local residents or workers
to find out if they have discovered artifacts. In most
cases, some kind of subsurface testing will be
necessary. In a reconnaissance, this will usually in-
volve the use of powered or hand-driven augers or
other probes, or the excavation of backhoe trenches.
In some cases, test-pits excavated using hand tools
will be feasible, though this is often not cost-effective
where the surface has been compacted or filled with
construction rubble. Sometimes ground-penetrating
radar, magnetometers, and other remote sensing
devices can be used to good effect.
Under non-urban or suburban conditions, recon-
naissance fieldwork can be more general and in-
clusive. The same kind of background data should be
collected as under urban conditions, and the same
kinds of predictions attempted; these predictions will
give the field teams a clear idea of what to look for.
In the field, reconnaissance generally involves one of
two approaches, depending on the size of the area be-
ing inspected. For relatively small areas, a recon-
naissance may involve a simple inspection of the
ground surface and any locations where subsurface
conditions may be exposed (cut banks, etc.), to iden-
tify easily visible archeological remains and locations
where more work may be necessary to determine
what exists at depth (e.g., areas where the ground sur-
face is heavily obscured or buried). Where larger
areas are involved, a sampling approach is often used.
Sample blocks (often called quadrats) or transects are
selected using a strategy designed to ensure that they
are representative of the area as a whole. These are
then subjected to intensive survey as discussed below.
From the results of the intensive survey and archival
research, generalizations are made about the likely
distribution of archeological sites in the survey area as
a whole. There is extensive literature on the use of
sampling in archeological survey; for a summary
designed Eor use by non-archeologists, see the Na-
tional Park Service publication, The Archeological
Surr~e~: Methods and Uses.
At the reconnaissance level of survey, the data ob-
tained may be sufficient only to determine, within
reason, whether archeological sites in fact do exist
within the area studied, and to determine their ap-
proximate locations, boundaries, and depth. More in-
tensive study will often be needed to determine to
what extent they retain integrity and to define their
internal organization; in most cases, this kind of in-
formation will be vital to determining their
significance.
The reconnaissance data, including a full description
of the background research, its results, and the
methods employed in fieldwork, should be fully
documented as a part of the survey. At least the
following items should be covered in the recom
naissance documentation:
• the kinds of properties looked for, with the archival
or other basis for their definition and recognition;
• the boundaries of the area(s) inspected;
• the methods used, including identification of any
areas inspected more or less thoroughly than others,
and of any areas where special techniques to identify
subsurface features were employed;
• the general character of the area's archeological
resources, if any, as indicated by the results of the
reconnaissance;
• specific information on any sites recorded in detail;
and
• identification of any areas where, based on the ar-
chival research and field reconnaissance, it is con-
cluded that no archeological sites will be found, with
a discussion of the reasons for reaching this conclu-
sion in each case.
How is an intensive survey for above-ground resources carried out?
In an intensive survey, the goal is to document all
historic buildings, structures, sites, objects, and poten-
tial districts in sufficient detail to permit their evalua-
tion and registration in the National Register of
Historic Places or a State or local equivalent. As a
result, intensive survey involves the inspection of
every such property in the area being studied. Only
properties that can be clearly identified, on the basis
Conducting the Survey 37
of established criteria, as nonhistoric are not subjected
to study. Where a historic district is being considered,
it is important to note even nonhistoric properties as
non-contributing elements.
As with reconnaissance, it is vital that intensive suvey
fieldwork be preceded and accompanied by archival
research. As the survey progresses, archival research-
ers and field surveyors should continue to interact
closely.
It is usually necessary to divide the survey area into
manageable units, such as groups of city blocks or de-
fined neighborhoods, and either to survey these one
by one or to assign a team to each. The survey team
should consist of appropriately trained and supervised
workers, with the equipment necessary to prepare
complete records (see section on equipment, below).
The survey should be carried out essentially on foot;
all major buildings and structures, and all out-
buildings and other ancillary structures and objects
should be inspected. Interiors should be inspected
whenever possible to identify significant features.
Where cultural landscapes are involved, these should
be carefully described and mapped.
Normally, the survey will focus on the architectural
or landscaped qualities of the properties involved, and
will involve the description of each building or struc-
ture, each element of the cultural landscape, and,
where applicable, each district or object, with
reference to standard architectural and landscape ar-
chitectural terminology. Even though the significance
of a building or structure may lie in its association
with historical events or people, it is important that it
be described accurately in terms of the building style
it represents, its mode of construction, and its ar-
chitectural features. Naturally, however, where ar-
chival research suggests that properties may be impor-
tant for their association with historical events,
trends, groups, or individuals, special attention should
be given to aspects of each property that may reflect
this association. Similarly, where a property may
have specia) cultural value to a social or ethnic group
(e.g., a traditional ethnic neighborhood), its descrip-
tion should emphasize any aspects of the property
that reflect its value to the group.
Surveyors should be alert to the archeological value
of buildings and structures-that is, the information
they contain. To an archeologist, a building or struc-
ture is a complex artifact, created and used by people
for activities that reflect their social, cultural, and
economic needs and interests. The construction and
organization of the building or structure, its modifica-
tion through time, and the evidence of activities that
occurred in it may all be important. For example, the
way a house is constructed may reveal things about
the builder's perceptions of how space should be
organized. Modifications of the floor plan during the
life of the house may reveal how occupants at dif-
ferent times wished to organize their life-space in
response to changes in social conditions, population
size, economic status, technology (e.g., the introduc-
tion of electricity), and so on. The things left in and
around the house by its past occupants-furniture,
papers, wallpaper, graffiti-may reveal facets of their
daily lives, interests, preferences, and beliefs. Not on-
ly may the things themselves contain such information
but also their organization within the house may in-
dicate things about the occupants' view of themselve's'
and their world. The ways in which we organize and
fill our living spaces can reveal a great deal about
how we view ourselves and wish to be viewed by
others. John Collier (see Bibliography) discusses
methods used by anthropologists to record and
analyze the ways in which living people organize their
life-space and work-space. The same general methods
can be applied to abandoned spaces, but the
38 Conducting the Survey
Historic significance is not usually apparent from visual inspection, as architectural significance often is. Historic research revealed that this
small ranch itt Horse Creek, Wyoming, is an exceptional representative example of small ranches that deuelaped in response to the
burgeoning agriadture of the county. Additionally, it is directly associated with the rattle ranching frontier. (I1ick Allessandro)
photographic methods used by anthropologists can be
supplemented with measured drawings, maps, and
plans. The importance of this information must then
be evaluated within the broader context of our under-
standing of such cultural patterns and the existence of
written documentary evidence.
The intensive survey should result in a detailed report
form on each property, accompanied by appropriate
photographs, drawings, and other documentation (see
section on records, below).
Together with the results of archival research, these
become the basis for evaluation and development of
an inventory. The survey data produced by an inten-
sive survey should also include basic categories of in-
formation similar to those collected during recon-
naissance---specifying the kinds of properties sought,
the boundaries of the area(s) surveyed, the methods
employed, the locations and boundaries of identified
properties, and the locations and boundaries of areas
found to be devoid of historic properties.
How is an intensive survey for archeological sites carried out?
An intensive archeological survey is preceded by the
same kind of archival research discussed above with
reference to reconnaissance, but the research may be
more detailed and involve a greater variety of
sources.
In the field, in a built-up urban situation, the inten-
sive survey Tike the reconnaissance is focused on loca-
tions where archival research suggests the possibility
that archeological sites will be preserved, but the ef-
fort to find and characterize them is more detailed.
The extent to which excavations can be conducted
will, of course, be determined by the distribution of
buildings, streets, utilities, and other modern features
overyling the area of interest, but the general intent of
the fteldwork is not only to determine whether ar-
cheological sites do in fact exist but to learn enough
about their internal characteristics and integrity to
permit their evaluation.
Care should be taken not to let excavation get so ex-
tensive that it seriously disrupts the archeological site
being studied. The purpose of excavation during a
satraey is to obtain enough information to allow the
site"s significarvice to be evaluated, not to recover all
the data it contains. In some cases it is legitimate to
fully recover the data a site contains as soon as it is
discovered, but such cases are not the norm.
In a nonurban or suburban situation, intensive survey
generally involves detailed inspection of the entire
survey area. Unless there is a very good reason Eor
believing that nothing of archeological importance
could exist in a given area (e.g., records have been
found demonstrating that the area has been complete-
ly bulldozed, or has been underwater until recently),
all exposed land surfaces are cacefully and
systematically inspected under professional ar-
cheological supervision. Team members, trained to
identify things that might indicate the presence of an
archeological site in the area, are deployed in such a
way as to insure inspection of all land surfaces.
Typically, team members lined up 5 to 15 meters
apart (the distance depending on visibllity) walk over
the land scanning the surface. If the surface is
obscured by vegetation, special techniques must be
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rids „,.m.,
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Archeological remains can sometimes be discovered ioithout excava-
tion. Ground-penetrating radar is one esampfe of a method to iden-
tify berried feutnras. The radar unit is towed ulvng [he around sur-
face (photo 1), sending radar waves into the ground where they
bounce back from features suds as xualls, fire pits, acrd roncerrtrn-
tiars of pottery, The receitred e'~ignafs am translated by the unie intq
a series of graphs (photo 2), whidr can be used to guide excavation
(photo 3). Ground-penetrating radar is higWy sensitive to ground
moish~re conditions and other farfars, and thus is trot ahtrays
reliable. But, under proper rortditiorts, it can be a good and rosf-
e(fective way hr explore possible archeological resources without
digging. (Michael Roberts and Institute Eor Conservation Ar-
chaeology, Harvard University, for the Ariz.rma State Museum and
the bateau of Reclamation)
Conducting the Survey 39
used. The most common technique is shoz+el-testing,
in which small holes are dug by each team member at
regular intervals, and the contents inspected Eor ar-
tifacts, flakes of stone, bone, or other material that
might indicate the presence of an archeological site.
Power augers, backhoes, and other mechanized equip-
ment are used in some instances. If the surface is
obscured by leaves or other light cover, this may be
effectively removed over large areas by raking or
scraping. If the surface has been previously plowed,
but is now fallow and covered with vegetation,
replowing may improve visibility while doing minimal
damage to any sites that may occur there. Plowing or
other substantially disturbing techniques should not
be used on previously undisturbed surfaces. When
seeking sites that are likely to contain metal, metal
detectors may be helpful, and more sensitive
magnetometers can detect nonmetallic subsurface
anomalies. Aerial survey, using fixed-wing aircraft,
helicopters, satellite imagery, or air photos, may be
helpful for detecting features that are difficult to spot
on the ground.
Records should be kept of the areas surveyed, the
methods employed in survey, and any factors that
may have affected the resulting observations. All sites
or other historic properties observed should be re-
corded on standard forms. (See section on forms
below.) A final report should be prepared to docu-
ment the kinds of properties sought, with the archival
or other basis for defining and recognizing them, the
methods used in archival research and fieldwork, the
boundaries of the area(s) surveyed, the nature of the
survey coverage, any factors that might influence the
validity of the results, all properties recorded, their
locations, descriptions, and probable archeological
significance, and the locations and boundaries of any
areas determined to be devoid of archeological sites,
specifying the basis for each such determination.
The exact methods to be employed in any particular
archeological survey, the exact techniques appropriate
in the field, and the kinds of reports required, will
vary with local circumstances and needs. The State
Historic Preservation Officer should be consulted for
advice and assistance, and the results of the survey
should be made available for incorporation into the
State historic preservation plan. For further informa-
tion on archeological surveys, with special emphasis
on nonurban situations, see The Archeological
Survey: Methods and Uses (see Bibliography).
How can oral history or ethnography contribute to the survey?
Much of a community's or neighborhood's history
may not be on record anywhere, but may be richly
represented in the memories of its people, and its
cultural and aesthetic values may be best represented
in their thoughts, expressions, and ways of life. For
this reason, it is often important to include an oral
historical or ethnographic component in the survey.
Both fields of study are based substantially on inter-
views with knowledgeable citizens: oral history
focusses on straightforward recordation of their
recollections, while ethnography is more concerned
with contemporary cultural values, perceptions, and
ways of life.
Oral historical and ethnographic research must be
planned and carried out with the full knowledge and
cooperation of community and neighborhood leaders
and with sensitivity to their cultural backgrounds,
values, and modes of expression.
Local college oral history, anthropology, and soci-
ology programs may be of assistance in this aspect of
the survey project. The American Folklore Society,
the Oral History Assodation, and the Society Eor Ap-
plied Anthropology (See p. 19) are good sources of
general information on oral history and ethnographic
techniques.
An oral history project or an ethnographic study may
be as complex and time consuming as the rest of the
historic resources survey itself, and specialists in oral
history or ethnography may have interests that, while
worthwhile in themselves, are not directly pertinent to
the survey. It is important to structure this component
of the survey to ensure that the information gathered
OVERVIEWS
Govemmen[s responsible for relatively large land areas
(large cities, counties, regions) may wish to consider
preparing overviews before committing themselves to
more detailed, focussed surveys. An overview is a docu-
ment based on archival research alone, sometimes accom-
panied by very small-scale reconnaissance, that sum-
marizes the history and prehistory of the area, analyzes
the results of previous survey work and reaches conclu-
sions about its quality, and seeks to make general predic-
tions about which portions of [he total study area are
likely to contain different types of historic resources.
These predictions can be used in general land-use plan-
ning, and can be tested and refined through further
survey. Overviews can be extremely useful in the
development of regional plans, in the early planning of
land-use projects, in developing zoning and open-space
plans, in planning for the long-range acquisition of
parklands, and in making decisions on where to direct in-
tensive survey efforts.
4p Conducting the Survey
is as relevant as possible to the survey's goals, and to
make sure that the gathering of oral data does not
overwhelm the rest of the survey effort.
Typically, oral historical or ethnographic researchers
meet at regular intervals with members of the com-
munity, individually or in groups, to discuss the
history and other cultural aspects of those parts of the
survey area currently being studied or soon to be
studied in the field. It is also often useful to drive or
walk through the survey area with knowledgeable
residents of the community to obtain their comments
on specific properties and areas. Unless informants
object, sessions should usually be tape-recorded so
that written descriptions can be transcribed and cor-
related with other survey information. In order to en-
sure accuracy of the transcripts, and to respect the
confidentiality of informants, those interviewed
should be given the opportunity to edit tapes or
transcripts. To ensure maximum accuracy, verification
of informants' accounts should be sought through in-
terviews with multiple individuals and members of
different groups, and through comparison with
documentary and field survey data.
What kinds of data will be needed to evaluate historic resources?
Where a decision has been made to conduct an inten-
sive survey, the Department of the Interior recom-
mends that every effort be made to compile the kinds
of information described in National Register Bulletin
No. 16, Guidelines for Completing National Register
Forms. Ideally, such information should be organized
and recorded in a manner that is compatible with the
National Register Information System (NRIS) and the
data processing system used by the State Historic
Preservation Officer. The State Historic Preservation
Officer should be consulted about what kinds of in-
formation to record. If nomination to the National
Register is one of the survey goals, it is advisable to
review the documentation requirements for nomina-
tions or requests for determinations of eligibility at
the beginning of the survey, to make certain that all
necessary information is collected in a Eorm that can
readily be transferred to National Register forms at a
later date. An outline of the information required by
the National Register is provided on page 40, and
lists of the data categories used in the National
Register Information System are provided in Appen-
dix VI.
The Following kinds of information recorded on each
property identified should provide an adequate data
base for making accurate decisions about the proper-
ty's significance.
]. Resource Name
This is the primary name by which the resource is
known. The historic name is most often used in index-
ing and filing as it will continue to be meaningful
regardless of changes in occupancy or use. The
historic name may refer to the original owner or
builder; significant persons or events associated with
the property; original or later significant uses of the
property; innovative or unusual characteristics of the
property; or accepted professional, sdentific,
technical, or traditional names.
Archeological sites, if their historic names (for exam-
ple, the name of an Indian village recorded in the
ethnographic literature) are not known, are generally
named for the nearby geographic feature, an aspect of
cultural significance, their locations, or their owners.
2. Other Name!Site Number
This may be a common name or other secondary
name used to refer to the property, or a number or
number-letter code assigned to the property. The com-
mon name is the name by which the property is cur-
rently known. Most States have a site numbering
system whose use will facilitate integration with State
survey data.
3. Address/Location
Where a property has a street address, this should be
recorded.
If a road has a route number rather than a name, in-
dicate whether it is a State, county, or Federal road.
If the property does not have a street address, identify
the location by recording the names of the nearest
roads or, if there are no nearby roads, by referring to
the Universal Transverse Mercator Grid System. (See
item 11, Geographical Data.) Township, range and
section, or description of the property's relationship to
nearby roads or natural features may also be used to
indicate location.
Where a property is large, for example in the case of
an archeological site or historic district, the rough
boundaries of the property should be described or an
inclusive list of street addresses given.
If locational information should be restricted-that is,
if access to it should be permitted only to specified
users-this should be noted. Restricting access is ap-
propriate (and permitted by Federal law) where
revealing the location of a property to the public
could result in vandalism or despoilation. Access to
information on the locations of archeological sites is
often restricted because of the danger that vandals
and artifact collectors could destroy or damage the
site searching for artifacts.
Conducting the Survey 47
5. Owner
It is advisable to record both the category of owner-
ship (i.e., Federal government, State government,
local government, private) and the name(s) and ad-
dress(es) of the actual owner(s).
6. Resource Type
The resource should be classified as to whether it is a
site, building, structure, object, historic district, or
part of a historic district; National Register definitions
of resource categories may be found in the Introduc-
tion. If a property consisting of more than one
resource is documented on a survey form, such as a
farmhouse and outbuildings, the number of elements
of each resource type should be noted (e.g., 2
buildings and 3 structures).
7. Location of Legal Description
The location of the legal description of the property,
which is usually filed with the land records in the
county courthouse or local planning and zoning com-
mission or surveyoi s office, may be used to trace
chain of title, and is sometimes useful in legal actions
involving the property.
8. Representation in Existing Surveys
It is useful to note whether the property is included in
the State Historic Preservation Officer's statewide
survey of historic properties; in inventories compiled
by Federal agencies of properties under their jurisdir
lion or control, or in the environmental impact area
of their projects; in the Historic American Buildings
Survey; the Historic American Engineering Records;
the National Historic Landmarks program; or in any
other local, State, or private survey. Locating existing
surveys can save duplication of time and effort in
gathering survey data and in correlating data pro-
duced by the current survey with other documenta-
tion on the property. It may also be useful to indicate
whether the property is a locally designated landmark
or is part of a locally designated district.
9. Description of Property
Sufficient data should be gathered to give a profes-
sional description of the physical appearance and con-
dition of properties. For indiuidua[ buildings, struc-
tures, or objects, this information may include:
a. Type of structure (dwelling, church, factory, etc.)
b. Building placement (detached, row, etc.)
c. General characteristics:
Overall shape of plan (rectangle, ell, etc.)
Number of stories
Structural system
Number of vertical divisions or bays
Construction materials (brick, stone, etc.) and
wall finish (kind of bond, coursing, shingle, etc.)
Roof shape
d. Specific features including location, number, and
appearance of:
porches (verandas, stoops, attached sheds, etc.;
windows
doors
chimneys
dormers
other important or visually prominent exterior
features
e. Materials of roof, foundation, walls, and other
important features.
f. Important decorative elements
g. Interior features contributing to the character of
the building.
h. Number, type, and location of outbuildings, as
well as dates of their construction.
i. Important features of the immediate environment
such as roadways, landscaping, etc.
If a property has been moved, the following informa-
tion is helpful in assessing historical integrity:
a. Date of move
b. Descriptions or original and present locations
c. Distance the property has been moved
d. Methods employed in moving the property (if
known)
e. Explanation of the effect of the move on the
historical integrity of the property and upon its
new location, with particular reference to the rela-
tionships between its original and current orienta-
tions, locations, and settings.
f. Reason for the move.
Known alterations should be noted with appropriate
dates, if available. Preparation of a floor plan sketch
with original portions and later additions clearly
marked may be useful Eor properties that have been
altered many times.
Where possible, buildings and structures should be
classified with reference to the architectural styles they
represent. The architectural classification system used
by the National Register Information System is pro-
vided in Appendix VI. IF the style does not fall into
any particular category, major stylistic elements may
be noted. Regional or vernacular forms should be
identified by the most commonly used or generally ac-
cepted terminology. Terms not commonly known
should be defined.
Where a known person was responsible for designing
or building the property, his or her name should be
recorded.
Where a building or structure contains artifacts,
equipment, furnishings, papers, interior modifications,
or other characteristics that could provide useful in-
formation about its construction or use, or about the
42 Conducting the Survey
activities of its occupants or users, the nature and
locations of such material should be recorded. If such
materials have been removed from the property, Eor
example to a local archive or museum, this should be
noted.
For archeological sites, appropriate information may
include
a. Site type (e.g., midden, rockshelter, flake scatter,
historic factory, etc.).
b. Vertical and horizontal extent of the site and
methods by which these boundaries have been
defined.
c The immediate surrounding environment, both as
it probably was when the site was in use and as it
is today.
d. Any disrupting influence (urban development,
roads, agriculture) at work on or immediately
around the site.
e. Descriptions (or summaries) of known data on in-
ternal characteristics: st ratigraphy, artifact classes
and their distribution, structural remains, Faunal
and floral remains, materials useful for assigning
the site to a chronological period, etc.
f. Extent and nature of any excavation, testing, sur
face collecting, etc.
g. Descriptions of any standing or ruined struchires
or buildings that might be of architectural or
historic importance.
h. References to any known ethnographic or historical
descriptions of the site when it was occupied or in
use.
i. A list of pertinent previous investigations at the
site, if any, indicating dates, sponsoring institu-
tions or organizations, and bibliographic
references.
j. Quality and intensity of survey that resulted in
recording the site and limitations this may impose
on the data available for purposes of evaluation.
Historic site descriptions should include the preceding
information where relevant, and should also identify:
a. The present condition of the site and its environ-
ment.
b. Any natural features, such as bodies of water,
trees, cliffs, promontories, etc., that contributed to
the selection of the site for the event or activity
that gives it significance.
c Other natural features that characterized the site at
the time the event or activity took place.
d. Any evidence that remains on the site Erom the
event or activity that gives the site its significance.
e. The extent and kind of alterations that have af-
fected the site, and their effect on its integrity.
f. How the current physical environment and remains
of the site reflect the period and associations for
which the site is significant.
Sites of cultural value to American Indians or other
social groups should be described with reference to
the above items where they are pertinent, but special
attention should be given to the qualities of the prop-
erty that contribute to its importance in the eyes of
those who ascribe value to it. For example, if the
traditional origins of an American Indian tribe are
associated with a particular configuration of rocks on
a site, special attention should be given to describing
them.
If an architectural or historic district is identified, it
is useful to compile the following information:
a. General description of the natural and manmade
elements of the district: structures, buildings, sites,
objects, prominent geographical features, density
of development.
b. Numbers of buildings, structures, and objects that
do and do not contribute to the district.
c. General description of types, styles, or periods of
architecture represented in the district: scale, pro-
portions, materials, color, decoration, workmarn
ship, design quality.
d. General physical relationships of buildings to each
other and to the environment: facade lines, street
plans, parks, squares, open spaces, structural den-
sity, plantings, and important natural Eeato res
(some of this information may be recorded on
sketch maps).
e. General description of the district during the
period(s) when it achieved significance.
f. Present and original uses of buildings (commercial,
residential, etc.) and any adaptive uses.
g. General condition of buildings: restoration or
rehabilitation activities, alterations.
h. Noncontributing elements: the number of noncon-
tributing buildings, structures, and objects should
be given, and each such property identified.
i. Qualities that make the district distinct from its
surroundings. Where the social or cultural
characteristics of the area's residents contribute to
the district's character, these should be included.
j. A list of all buildings, structures, and objects (or
inclusive street addresses) that do and do not com
tribute to the character of the district.
k. Any archeological sites identified within the
district's boundaries, including both those that con-
tribute to the significance of the district and those
Conducting the Survey q3
whose significance is derived from qualities
unrelated to the district.
1. Concise boundary description: streets, property
lines, geographical features, etc., that separate the
district from its surroundings, with an explanation
of the basis for establishing the boundary.
If a commercfal or industrial district is identified, the
above information should be compiled to the extent it
is available and relevant; in addition, it is useful to
retard the following:
a. General description of the industrial activities and
processes taking place within the district, impor-
Cant natural and geographical features, and power
sources
b. General description of original machinery still in
place
c. General description of linear systems within the
district (canals, railroads, roads) and their terminal
points, with approximate length and width of area
to be encompassed in the district.
If a rural district containing buildings or structures of
historic or architectural significance is identified, in
addition to recording the above data as relevant, it is
useful to compile the Following information:
a. General description of geographical and
topographical features (valleys, bodies of water,
soil conditions, climate, changes in elevation,
vistas, etc.) that convey a sense of cohesiveness.
b. General description of buildings and structures, in-
cluding outbuildings, within the district bound-
aries, usually with special attention h)
characteristics indicative of vernacular car Eolk-
types of design and construction, Po the activities
housed in each such building or structure, and to
the equipment and other material remaining in each.
c. General description of manmade feahres of the en-
vironment and their relationship to the qualities
that give the district iks significance.
If an archeological district is identified, besides
gathering the above data where pertinent, the follow-
ing information should be recorded:
a. General description of the natural and manmade
elements of the district: structures, buildings, sites,
objects, prominent geographical features, density
of development.
b. Number of contributing sites, with a description of
each.
c. Number of noncontributing sites, with a descrip-
tion of each,
d. General description of the cultural, historic, or
other relationships among the sites in the district
that make the district a cohesive unit for investiga-
tion.
e. General description of the data categories and
research values represented in the district.
44 Conducting the Survey
Rural surveys should attempt to identify properties that were important in the development of the area or are representative of typical ac-
riuities in the past. A!7 of the structures and significant larcd areas associated with u property should be documented in the suro¢y. Burke's
Carden Rural Historic District, Tazewell Coumy, Vtrginia. (Virginia Division n4 Fdis[oric Landmarks)
E Identification of any non-archeological
characteristics of the district that may contribute to
its significance (e.g., cultural value to American In-
dian groups).
g. General condition of sites and extent to which ar-
cheological intersite contexts remain intact.
h. Assessment of the extent to which the area within
the district boundaries has been adequately
surveyed.
i. Summary of the nature and level of damage the
sites within the district have received or are receiv-
ing.
10. Significance
In most cases, the significance of any one resource
cannot be fully evaluated until the historic contexts
for the survey area have been developed and some
reasonably comparable level of documentation on
other resources in the survey project area has been
gathered. During the survey, however, the surveyor
should record the qualities of each property that relate
it to the historic contexts of the survey area and may
make it significant keeping in mind the criteria for
determining significance. In addition, the surveyor
may recognize qualities in a property that appear to
be unique or significant, and these observations may
be recorded Eor future reference and evaluation.
A statement of significance, whether designed to show
that a property is or is not significant, should be
developed as a reasoned argument, first identifying
the historic context or contexts to which the property
could relate, next discussing the property types within
the context and their relevant characteristics, and then
showing how the property in question does or does
not have the characteristics required to qualify it as
part of the context.
The areas in which a property may be significant
should be recorded on the survey form and supported
in the statement of significance. Area of significance is
derived from the relevant historic contexts and the
criteria for which the property may be important, for
example, commerce or architecture. The areas of
significance used by the National Register program
can be found in Appendix VI.
The exact information needed to evaluate significance
will depend on the historic context. In most cases in-
formation falling into the following categories will be
needed and should be recorded:
a. Historically significant events and/or patterns of
activity associated with the property.
b. Periods of time during which the property was in
use.
c. Specific dates or period of time when the resource
achieved its importance (e.g., date of construction,
date of a specific event, period of association with
an important person, period of an important ac-
tivity).
d. Historically significant persons associated with the
property (e.g., its tenants, visitors, owner).
e. Representation of a style, period, or method of
construction.
f. Persons responsible for the design or construction
of the property.
g. Quality of style, design, or workmanship.
h. Historically or culturally significant group
associated with the property, and the nature of its
association.
i. Information which the property has yielded or may
be likely to yield (especially Eor archeological sites
and districts).
j. Cultural affiliation (for archeological sites and
districts).
NATIONAL REGISTER DEFINITIONS OF
CONTRIBUTING AND NONCONTRIBUTING
RESOURCES
The following definitions are used by the National
Register to classify the resources making up a property as
contnbuting or nomm~Mbuting.
The physical characteristics and historic significance of
the overall property provide the basis for evaluating
component resources. Specific information about each
resource, such as date, function, associations, informa-
tion potential, and physical characteristic, can then be
related to the overall property to determine whether or
not [he component resource contributes. Resources that
do not relate in a significant way to the overall property
may contribute if they independently meet the National
Register criteria.
• A contributing building, site, structure, or object adds
to the historic architectural qualities, historic associa-
tions, or archeological values for which a property is
significant because a) it was present during the period
of significance, and possesses historic integrity reflect-
ing its character at that time or is capable of yielding
important information about the period, or b) it in-
dependently meets the National Register criteria.
• A noncontributing building, site, structure, or object
does not add to the historic architectural qualities,
historic associations, or archeological values For which
a property is significant because a) it was not present
during the period of significance, b) due to alterations,
disturbances, additions, or other changes, it no longer
possesses historic integrity reflecting its character at
that time or is incapable of yielding important informa-
tion about the period, or c) it does not independently
meet the National Register criteria.
Conducting the Survey 45
11. Geographical Data
The acreage of the property should be determined and
recorded as accurately as possible.
The location of the property should be determined ac-
cording to the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM)
Grid System. The UTM system is recommended
because of its accuracy, its universality, and its com-
patibility with automated data systems. The property
should be located on a U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS) map (7.5 or 15 minute series), and the UTM
coordinates for the location recorded. One reference
point centered on the property is sufficient for proper-
ties less than ten acres in size; for larger properties, at
least three reference points corresponding to the major
points delineating the property's boundaries should be
recorded. For an explanation of the UTM system, see
the National Park Service publication, Using the UTM
Grid System to Record Historic Sites (see Bibliog-
raphy).
Geographical data should include a verbal boundary
description precisely defining the boundaries of the
property surveyed. It may be in the form of a tax
parcel number, a city lot number, a sequence of metes
and bounds, a legal property description, or the
dimensions of the parcel of land fixed upon a given
point such as the intersection of two streets. Where it
is difficult to establish fixed reference points such as
roads or property lines, as in rural areas, descriptions
may be based on a series of UTM reference points or
on the section grid appearing on the USGS map. An
explanation, or justification, of why a particular
boundary was chosen should be recorded.
12. Other Documentation
If additional documentation on the resources is
available beyond that recorded on the basic survey
recording form (eg., survey files, records with the
State Historic Preservation Officer, publications,
HABS/HAER records), each known source of such
documentation should be recorded.
Records of historic properties should contain bibli-
ographies referencing the sources used in preparing
the records. Author, Full title, date, and location of
publication should be recorded. For an article, list the
magazine or journal from which it was taken, volume
number, and date. For unpublished manuscripts, in-
dicate where copies are available. Interviews should
be listed with the name of the person interviewed and
date of the interview.
13. Researcher
Names and qualifications of persons directly involved
in compiling information on the property should be
recorded.
14. Photographs
At least one photograph of each property should be
included in the survey data. Photographs can be used
to document the property's condition and physical ap-
pearance, and to illustrate important features of the
property. They can be used to check field observa-
tions and to provide visual evidence of historical, ar-
chitectural, or aesthetic significance. The number of
photographs needed to provide adequate coverage will
vary according to the nature and significance of the
property. For buildings and structures, at least one
photograph showing the principal facades and en-
vironment in which the property is located should be
included. Interior views are generally not needed,
unless significance is primarily based on interior
features.
INFORMATION REQ[IlRED FOR REGISTERING PROPERTIES [N THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES
Certain kinds of information are required for document-
ing properties nominated [o [he National Register of
Historic Places or considered for determinations of
eligibility for listing. The following list itemizes the re-
quired information as it is requested on the National
Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If one of
the survey goals is to register significant properties, effort
and care should be made to ensure that information col-
lected during survey meets the National Register
documentation requirements and can easily be transferred
to the National Register form. Because [he National
Register form is compatible with the National Register In-
formation System, standardized data categories have
been formulated for entering information pertaining to
certain items. These items are identified below by an
asterisk and include function and use, architectural
classification, materials, and areas of significance. Appen-
dix VI provides lists of the categories used by the Na-
tional Register [o complete these items. For further infor-
mation on completing National Register forms, consult
National Register Bulletin No. 16, Guidelines for Com-
pleting National 2egister of Historic Places Forms.
1. Name of Property
Historic name
Other namesi site number
2. Location
Address (including street & number, city or town,
state and code, county and code, and zipcode)
Not for publication (to be indicated when access to
information on location should be restricted)
Vicinity Qo be used when property is not located
in a town or city)
46 Conducting the Survey
3. Classification
Ownership of property (private, public-local,
public-State, and/or public-Federal)
Category of property (building(s), district, site,
structure, or object)
Number of contributing resources within property
(by resource type)
Number of noncontributing resources within prop-
erty (by resource type)
Number of contributing resources previously listed
in the National Register
Name of related multiple property listing, if any
4. State/Federal Agency Certification (to be completed
by State and/or Federal officials during registration
process)
5. National Park Service Certification (to be completed
by the National Park Service)
6. Function or Use'
Historic functions"
Curren[ functions'
7. Description
Architectural dassificatlon"
Materials (foundation, walls, roof, other)`
Narrative describing [he property's present and
historic physical appearance
8. Statement of Significance
Level at which evaluation has taken place (na-
tionally, statewide, locally)
Applicable National Register criteria (A,B, C,
and~or D)
Criteria considerations, if any apply
Area(s) of significance"
Period(s) of significance
Significant dates
Cultural affiliation (for archeology)
ArchitecNbuildcr
Significant person
Narrative stating the significance of the property
and justifying the applicable criteria, criteria con-
siderations, and areas and periods of significance.
9. Major Bibliographical References
References (including books, articles, interviews,
surveys, etc.)
Previous documentation on file at the National
Park Service (including listings or determinations
of eligibility for listing in the National Register,
designations of National Historic Landmarks, and
recordings by HA[3$%HAER).
Primary location of additional data (such as State
Historic Preservation Office, other State agency,
Federal agency, local government, university, or
other) and specific name of repository.
10. Geographical Data
Acreage of property
UTM references (one is required for properties
smaller than ]0 acres; at least 3 for larger proper-
ties)
Verbal boundary description
Foundary justification
11. Identification of person who prepared the form (in-
cluding name, title, organization, address, and
telephone number) and date.
' See Appendix VI For the standardized data categories
used to complete these items.
What additional planning information may be gathered in the survey process?
Information on the historic, architectural, or cultural
significance of resources is most useful in guiding
future community development if it is integrated with
other kinds of planning information. This informa-
tion, which is listed below, may already have been
gathered through other planning studies or it may be
gathered as part of the historic resources survey.
Because the expertise necessary to gather much of this
information is different from that necessary for the
historic resources survey, it may be more effective to
gather the information in a project separate from the
historic resources survey. If this option is chosen, the
two projects should be carefully coordinated.
Structural Information on Individual Buildings
A determination of the structural condition of in-
dividual buildings should be based on an examination
of:
a. Exterior condition of walls, roof, chimneys, win-
dow and door openings, gutters and downspouts,
stairs, porches.
b. Interior condition of foundations and basements,
beams, joists and piers, flooring, walls and ceilings,
window frames and doors.
c Conditon of mechanical systems for plumbing,
electricity, and heating. Condition of original con-
struction and any subsequent alterations, adequacy of
fire prevention and control measures, condition and
adequacy of elevator facilities (if available).
d. Estimated cost of bringing building to code.
<onductina the Sun°ev 47
Physical/Development Factors Affecting Buildings or
Neighborhoods:
Important industrial and engineering structures should be included
in the survey. !n addition to their intrinsic vulua in the history o/
American industry and engineering, such struchrres are often
associated with the economic development of a rommunity and
with its prominent citizens. The Sloss Blast Furnace Site. 9irming-
harn, Alabama, cbnkribufed to [he development of that city us the
iron and steel center of the South. The site Dias recently been
developed into a local historical park. Qack E. Doucher for Historic
American Buildings Survey/Ilistoric American Engineering Record)
a. Threats to area/building (vandalism, demolition,
neglect ).
b, Public and private development plans,
c. Rehabilitation work (being considered, under way,
completed, now planned),
d. Land use/zoning.
e. Density.
f. Transportation routes and facilities.
g. Municipal services (utilities, sewer, police, etc.).
h. Parking.
i. Setbacks.
j. Poor area.
k. Occupancy limitations.
L Designation of critical environmental areas or
protected features.
m, Areas that are red-lined or receive less favorable
treatment from lending institutions.
n, Existing easements or legal encumbrances.
o. Current assessed evaluation (land, improvements,
total).
Socioeconomic Character of Area:
a. Income level of residents or tenants.
b. Tax rates and has'e,
c. Amount of ownership versus renkal.
d. Community institutions (civic, religious, educa-
tional).
e. Rea] estate trends.
Planning Information For Archeological Sites:
a. Accessibility oI site
b. Potential for interpretation to the public.
c. Local attitudes toward protection, use, or excava-
tion of Site.
d. Likely development pressures on the site.
e. Potential for natural deterioration (through ero-
sion, soil chemistry changes, etc.).
Forms, maps, photographs: How should survey data be recorded?
Before beginning training sessions and the survey
itself, methods of recording survey data need to be
established. Generally, most data gathered during the
survey are recorded on standardized forms and maps,
with photographs, supplemented by sketches and ad-
ditional records.
Survey Forms
Most State historic preservation programs have
developed standard survey forms for their statewide
surveys. The use of these forms at the local level is
most desirable, as it Eacrlitates integration of the infor-
mation into statewide survey and nomination of prop-
erties to the National Register.
The kinds of forms used depend on the intensity of
the survey, the kinds of properties to be recorded, the
degree of expertise of those conducting the survey,
and other factors unique ko each survey. As a result,
communities may wish to adapt State survey forms to
their particular needs. If this is done, care should be
exercised to ensure that consistency is mainkained in
the description of key elements used by the State in
data storage and retrieval.
Most survey forms fall into three main categories
1. A multiple choice checklist with or without illustra-
tions, often in the form of a card coded for automated
data processing.
2. One or more sheets presenting a series of questions
or categories of information requiring brief written
responses.
3. One or (usually) more sheets presenting a series of
48 Canductint; the Survey
general questions or categories requiring more lengthy
responses.
The multiple choice checklist may be useful i6
• the survey is a reconnaissance,
• volunteers without extensive training are conducting
the survey,
• a limited range of resources are thought to be pres-
ent (e.g., buildings representing only a few architec-
tural styles), or
• a limited range of resources is being sought (as in
some theme-focussed surveys).
For an intensive survey, however, this type of form is
seldom appropriate, because it is virtually impossible
to incorporate the complex variability represented by
a whole range of historic properties into a simple
checklist. Although checklist forms are useful especial-
ly for architectural information, many buildings and
their architectural and decorative Features defy
classification under the categories generally provided.
Checklists may be useful for describing individual
buildings within districts, but they are seldom useful
for describing districts as wholes, because they do not
provide a mechanism for recording a district's overall
environment, its social charactistics, and its other uni-
que features. For archeological sites, checklists are
often useful for noting the presence or absence of par-
ticular predictable features and artifacts, but usually
must be supplemented by substantial verbal descrip-
tion to record stratigraphy, size, and other unique
characteristics. Cultural landscapes, too, whether
designed or created by reairrent land-use practices,
are usually too complicated, and contain too many
unique features, to be accurately captured in a
checklist. Transcribing data from the checklist into a
narrative description, like those required by the Na-
tional Register and most State registers, can be dif-
ficult because much of the information needed for
narrative description either cannot be derived at all
From the checklist format or can be derived only
through extrapolation and interpretation, increasing
the potential for error.
Forms that have a series of questions or categories
generally require a certain amount of expertise. Since
the forms do not spell out elements to be identified,
the surveyors themselves must be able to prepare
complete and accurate property descriptions; they
must be particularly careful to include all major
elements of the property in the description. These
forms do allow for the description of unique elements
of particular properties or areas that would normally
not be specified on a checklist form.
Longer and more complicated response forms, such as
those used by the National Register, require a higher
degree of expertise in completing the documentation.
Information for these forms may be derived from
shorter checklist forms or from other rough survey
data.
As a result of these differences, it is often desirable to
use a variety of forms in a given survey, for example,
using flexible response forms like those of the Na-
tional Register for recording districts and structures or
buildings that may be individually significant, using
tailored combinations of categorical questions and
checklist items for archeological sites and other prop-
erties having some predictable and some less predic-
table characteristics, and using checklists for the
description of individual buildings and structures
making up a particular district.
Forms are seldom sufficient in themselves for re-
cording survey data. They should be supplemented by
more general, flexible notes to record general en-
vironmental and contextual data, information on
survey conditions, and supplementary data. Each
surveyor should keep a log or diary to record general
observations and supplementary information about
the progress of the survey and about the property or
area being studied, such as its general architectural
and social characteristics, anticipated effects of pro-
posed or possible development, ideas for the adaptive
use of particular buildings, names of local contacts
with particular information, names of interested local
citizens, and miscellaneous historical or archeological
information. Unless they are recorded on the scene,
such observations are usually lost to those who might
benefit from them or find them useful at a later date.
Field Maps
Surveyors will need maps to use as guides during the
onsi to orientation and to use as worksheets during the
field survey. A master map can be prepared for these
purposes by annotating an existing small-scale map of
the community or county. In cases where areas or
properties to be surveyed have already been deter-
mined, these should be delineated on the map. Sites
discovered through historical research, that should be
investigated during the field survey, may be pin-
pointed on the map.
The base maps used in most historic resources surveys
are U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 7.5 minute and 15
minute quadrangle maps. USGS quads are used by
most State Historic Preservation Officers and Federal
agencies to locate and record historic resources in
their inventories. These maps show topography,
natural features, roads, buildings, and structures in
rural areas, latitude and longitude lines, and
township, range, and section lines. Importantly, most
have Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) grid tics,
which allow historic properties to be accurately plot-
ted and their locations recorded for future retrieval
and analysis, especially using automated data process-
ing. USGS maps can often be obtained locally; if not,
an index to available maps may be obtained by
writing the U.S. Geological Survey, Sunrise Valley
Drive, 2eston, VA 20021.
Conducting the Survey 49
For urban areas, however, it will be necessary to sup-
plement USGS quads with more detailed local maps.
USGS quads show built-up areas merely as pink
blotches, with only major streets marked. As a result
although USGS quads should be used to help relate
the local survey to such larger-scale efforts as the
statewide comprehensive survey, surveyors in urban
areas will find other, usually locally produced maps
more useful for field use and as base maps. Detailed
maps of most large cities can be obtained Erom city
planning agencies. Other sources of useful maps in-
clude State highway departments, local preservation
commissions, regional planning agencies, local
highway commissions, and real tors.
Photographs
Photographs are an essential part of survey data.
Whether photographs are taken by field surveyors or
professional photographers, the 35 mm camera prob-
ably provides the most flexible format for survey pur-
poses. Some 35 mm cameras can be equipped with a
perspective-correction lens, which, when properly
used, helps eliminate perspective-induced distortion in
photographs of structures. (This lens is best used by
an experienced photographer.) The use of slightly
wide-angle (35 mm) or normal (50 mm) lenses allows
photographers to take shots of entire buildings or
whole facades. Fast lenses allow for the best use of
available light and good recording of details.
While black and white prints are appropriate for
survey documentation, other photographic forms may
be useful supplements to the basic records of in-
dividual properties.
• Color slides may be useful as supplemental
documentation For evaluating properties. Although
not a substitute Eor black and white prints, slides can
be used in public presentations to generate local in-
terest in the survey project and in historic resources.
• For quick identification, acontact print or Polaroid
photograph identified by name and number may be
affixed to the field survey form.
• Videotapes may be useful in quickly capturing the
social and architectural characteristics of historic
districts or landscapes.
It is essential that a practical system be established for
numbering, processing, and filing photographs in such
a way that they can be easily identified, correlated
with forms, systematically filed, and retrieved. The
most common approach is to assign a unique number
to each roll of Eilm, and to maintain a log indicating
the subject of each frame on each roll, by roll and
frame number. Film should be kept in a central place
and assigned a number as it is signed out to avoid the
possibility of assigning the same number to two rolls.
Each photographer then logs in his or her photos,
recording for each shot the roll number, the frame
number, and such information as the property name
and location, the direction of the view (e.g., north-
west corner of building; view across site from south-
east), detail included (e.g., front porch; rock feature),
and other details concerning the property or the ex-
posure. Photo roll and exposure numbers should also
be entered on property recording forms for cross-
reference purposes. General views of streets or open
space areas should be recorded with appropriate loca-
tional information and names or numbers of in-
dividual properties included in the picture.
It is a helpful check on paper records to place a
marker in the view being photographed when the
photograph is taken. This should indicate the subject
and other relevant data (view, detail, date). Cards or
pieces of cardboard with such information written in
magic marker can be used for this purpose, though a
more professional product is obtained using a menu
board with plastic letters and numbers. It is also often
helpful to include a scale marker (for example, a
meter stick-a piece of lath one meter long, marked in
10-cm increments) and a north indicator (in ar-
cheological convention, a wooden or plastic arrow or
a trowel) in the photo.
Photos and especially negatives should be carefully
filed under conditions that will minimize their
deterioration, and according to a system that will
make it easy to retrieve them. It is often most conve-
nient to retain the roll and exposure number as' a
basic index number for the print and negative frame,
sometimes with an additional accession number to
identify the area or the survey that produced the
photo. Photo logs should be retained permanently as
part of the survey data, on computer or in the form
of logbooks or card files. It is wise to consult the
State Historic Preservation Officer for advice about
photo recording, filing, and retrieval systems.
What equipment will be needed for survey work?
Equipment for each survey team may include some or
all of the following:
• clipboards, spiral notebooks (for logs and general
notes).
supply of pens, pencils, and magic markers
• field survey forms
•USGS quadrangle(s) and UTM counter
• other relevant map(s)
• tape measures (each surveyor is usually equipped
with a 3-meter or 10-foot tape, and each team with a
50 Conducting the Survey
30-meter, 50-meter, 50-foot or 100-foot tape).
• compass
• camera(s)
• black and white film
• color slide film
• official identification
• letter of introduction explaining survey
• additional lenses for camera (wide angle, telephoto,
perspective correction).
Survey teams concentrating on architectural resources
may also need an appropriate style manual (e.g., one
developed for the survey itself, or by the State
Historic Preservation Officer, or a general guide such
as McAlester, McGee, or Whiffen see Bibliography]),
Archeological survey teams will usually need at least
trowels, and in some cases will require augers or
porthole diggers, shovels, or such power equipment as
motorized augers or backhoes. In some cases, it will
be useful to equip teams with guides to local artifact
types or types of architectural elements indicative of
different time periods or building functions.
Survey teams engaging in oral history or ethnographic
recording will probably need tape recorders or
videotape equipment.
The survey coordinator will also need to consider
what sort of equipment may be appropriate for
transporting the survey teams into and around their
survey areas. Intensive surveys are usually done on
foot, but teams must still be transported to and from
their survey locations. if municipal transport is not
sufficient for this purpose, the survey teams will aced
access to automobiles, bicycles, or some other mode
of transport.
Conducting, the Survey SI
~~ _ ~
~~
Review and Organization of
Survey Data
Before survey data can be integrated into the com-
munity planning process, it must be compiled in a
systematic manner and reviewed for content, clarity,
and accuracy. Properties identified must be evaluated
against established criteria. The data must be stored in
a form that makes key elements readily retrievable,
and that protects the information against loss and
deterioration. This section discusses what can be done
with survey data, including how an inventory-that
is, a selective list of significant properties-can be
derived from the data. Methods of compiling,
evaluating, and storing the data are considered. This
phase of the project should be undertaken with special
care because it will have a direct effect on the
usefulness of the inventory for planning purposes.
How are survey data reviewed during fieldwork?
Organization and review of survey data should begin
while fieldwork is still in progress, although naturally
they will continue after fieldwork is complete.
Descriptions of physical appearance and other obser-
vations made in the field should be checked against
photographs and documentary evidence gathered by
the researchers. Maps and other reference material
may be used to verify locations of resources that are
surveyed.
In order to use the review of survey data to correct
mistakes and inaccuracies in field reporting, the data
produced by each survey team in each area should be
reviewed and organized as soon as possible after it is
produced. Fieldwork should not be allowed to get too
far ahead of review, organization, and analysis of
data. Information gathered in the field must be in-
tegrated with documentary evidence uncovered during
archival research. This responsibility may be assumed
by the survey coordinator. Inconsistencies-descrip-
tions not matching photographs, questions of owner-
ship, conflicting dates of constructionshould be
carefully reviewed, and, if necessary, additional ar-
chival research or fieldwork should be done to
achieve consistency.
Treatment of Forms
Forms used in the field are usually considered rough
working copies rather than final documents.
Surveyors should review forms filled out in the field
to make sure that observations are clear, terminology
is correct, and descriptions are complete and accurate.
After the preliminary forms have been reviewed by
the survey coordinator or other knowledgeable per-
sons, final forms for archival purposes should be
prepared. Where an automated data processing system
will be used in maintaining the survey data, the rele-
vant information should be entered into the system
from the forms at this point. If narrative descriptions
are prepared from the forms, these too should be
checked and edited, using original survey forms and
photographs for verification.
Organization of Other Notes
Supplementary notes taken in the field, both with
respect to particular resources and with reference to
the progress of the survey in general, should be com-
piled as the survey progresses. Since a given page of
notes may include information on several different
properties or areas, or touch on a number of different
topics, it is often useful to photocopy notes as soon as
they come in. The original can then be filed safely to
guard against loss of data during analysis, while the
52 Review and Organization of Survey Data
copy can be cut up in order to reorganize its contents,
combine contents with other notes and forms, and
organize files providing full data on particular proper-
ties, areas, or historic contexts.
Organization of Phatographs
As photographs are processed, they should be
promptly correlaked with forms and other field data.
The accuracy of photo records should be checked,
and relevant roll and. frame numbers should be
entered on the final Eorms. Information on systems for
filing photographs may be found on pages 54-60.
Organization of Maps
Certain maps will usually have been prepared before
fieldwork begins; for example, maps indicating the
probable locations of properties relevant to different
historic contexts, maps showing the predicted loca-
tions of subsurface archeological resources, and maps
showing the locations of properties identified during
previous surveys. As the new survey data are proc-
essed, these maps may be corrected, but it is usually
wise ko preserve a copy of each map originally
prepared on the basis of archival researchtn order to
compare pre-fieldwork expectatians with actual results.
As data Erom the field are processed, properties
should be located on a master map or maps. Each
property mapped should be assigned a number, name,
or other designator that makes it possible to relate the
mark on the map to the Eorm or Eorms that describe
the actual property. Master maps should be consistenk
in size and type with those used by the State Historic
Preservation Officer in the sEatewide comprehensive
survey (usually USCS Quads}, or shauld be of a size
and scale to allow correlation with existing commun-
ity planning base maps. As each step of the survey
work is compleked, data should be transferred to these
maps. As the maps are filled in they should be
reviewed to see what patterns are developing that
may not be obvious on the ground; analysis of
mapped data may make it possible to locate concen
krations of historic resources other than those distnus
identified through archival work or evident in the Geld
To avoid duplication of effort and to minimize confu-
sion in future planning, it is essential that information
concerning the rtahue and intensity of survey
coverage be maintained in a clear and understandable
format. It may be mast effective to prepare a map or
map overlays indicating which areas have been
surveyed and which have not and identifying any dif-
ferences in the type or intensity of survey among
variaus areas. For example, areas that have been in-
tensively surveyed for all types of historic resources
would be differentiated from areas that have been
surveyed intensively for architectural resources and
only cursorily inspected for archeglogical resources.
Stich data may be recorded on coded map overlays,
in block by block summaries',or in any ether clear way.
Sketeh maps for both individual properties and
historic districts should be checked for accuracy and
clarity. District sketch maps should be cheeke~d to
make sure that all individual properties in the district
are shown and that all outstanding features, intru-
sions, and boundaries are clearly marked. Street
names and/or highway numbers should also be
shown. Descriptions of the boundaries and inclusive
street addresses should be checked against the sketch
map to insure that they are consistent and that pro-
perties have not been inadvertently included or emit-
ted. Sketch maps of archeological sites should be
checked to ensure that such data as the location of
surface features and subsurface exposures, the locaton
of test pits, backhoe trenches, or auger holes, and
cross-references to other notes, stratigraphic drawings,
and rerrtote sensing data are accurate and cc'?mplete,
and that key reference points (e.g., streets, buildings)
are included to assist in relocating the site, A north
arrow (magnekic or true) and scale shrndd be added to
the map, if not already present. It may be necessary
to redraw district sketch maps once all the necessary
checking and clarification has been done. Care should
be taken in redrawing sketch maps to ensure Phat
elements noted in the field are not lost, and to guard
against creative reinterpretation of actual field condi-
tions.
rm +,
m m n ,, AY,
n, ,.
tr
~
,
tin ~za~~~~ e "f
nrv9 ,
y,ya t7r1` v ~
aw. mm )
v ~~V~Y
•• C
Y
~~ o~ '`,,,~
;y ~ ;~'
- Y ~
,m ~ /~ /
~' . F .
&
' 'R ~
~ a N,.
f
`~„~ ~
"G~ l
;~
s ,
~
Nu4 7
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~o- ~~n !
~ % a.
This map, taken from the comprehensive Survey of Architectural
History of Cambridge, Report is Cambridgeport (1971), is one of a
series of maps showfng tDie history of land use in Nvis notu a<rban-
ized area of Mas,achwetts. Residential areas are dear) y fndicated
by dots whf[e mvnruerriaf am~1 industrial areus are fndicated by
diagonal lines. Mnjor industrial complexes are idercti~'ed toy nanve.
Buildings that are blackened belong to fhe Massuchuvet[s Insfikute
mf Techrmtogy and Harvard Llniuersih~. (Courtesy of the Cam-
bridge Historical Commission)
Review and Organizatii'm of Survey Data 53
As archival research and fieldwork are completed, it
may be useful to prepare a variety of kinds of maps
to aid in evaluation and planning. Maps or multiple
overlays on a master map, showing the following
categories of information are often prepared:
1. Predicted areas of sensitivity. Areas where, based
on survey work to date, it is predicted that significant
historic resources may occur should be identified on
maps. Such maps can help guide continuing survey ef-
forts and provide community planners with early
warning of potential conflicts between development
and preservation, even when survey data are not vet
complete.
2. Areas where survey is needed. Areas where the
analysis of historic contexts and survey priorities in-
dicate that survey is necessary, but where survey has
not yet occurred, should be identified on maps, and
eliminated as the survey progresses.
3. Buildings and structures. All buildings and struc-
tures, regardless of age, should be mapped, differen-
tiating those that contribute to the character of the
area surveyed from those that do not. (See definitions
of contributing and nonumtributinQ resources on
p.45.)
4. Architectural style or period. A map plotting ar-
chitectural periods might be prepared by an architeo-
tural historian to show areas with particular design
characteristics. This information may assist in identi-
fying districts.
S. Historical events. Based on information gathered
by archival researchers, and oral history or
ethnography, a map may be prepared showing strur
Lures, sites, or areas associated with historic events,
trends, activities, or important individuals in the
histary of the community. This information may also
assist in identifying districts.
6. Cultural groups. A map or series of maps showing
the locations and distribution of different social,
How and why are resources evaluated?
economic, or ethnic groups at various periods in the
past may be prepared.
This map may serve to identify present-day neigh-
borhoods having particular historic, architectural, or
cultural characteristics, and areas that may have im-
portance for historical archeology.
7. Archeological data. The locations of all sites, struc-
tures, building, districts, and objects of archeological
importance can be mapped and coded to indicate
period, type of property, condition, and other data.
Based on archival research andior fieldwork, maps
may be prepared showing areas where archeological
properties of different kinds are likely to occur, or
where care should be taken during future construction
or other development to minimize damage to buried
archeological resources that cannot now be seen on
the surface. It is important that archeological site
location data be protected to avoid its misuse by ar-
tifact collectors who may both damage archeological
sites and commit acts of trespass in their search for
objects (Indian artifacts, old bottles, etc.) Eor sale or
addition to their collections.
8. Visual features. Features identified by visual
analysis-views and vistas, edges, focal points,
cultural landscapes, streetscapes, visually prominent
structures-may also be indicated diagrammatically
on a map.
4. Existing building uses. Mapping the uses of all
buildings within a given area often indicates the
physical and developmental status of the area and
may be useful for planning purposes. Standard plain
ning color codes may be used to indicate zoning and
various uses such as singlrfamily residence, office, or
retail use.
10. Building condition. Colorcoding can also be used
to show buildings in good condition, those needing
minor or major repairs, and those dilapidated or
structurall~~ unsound.
The primary reason to evaluate properties found
through the survey is to designate those which are
worthy of preservation and should be considered in
local planning. These properties may be listed in a
historic resources inventory-a selective list of
resources meeting establishing criteria of significance.
By providing information on historic significance, in-
tegrity, and boundaries, survey results may provide
the basis for designation of historic properties and
districts under a local preservation ordinance and
subsequently serve as an authoritative basis for design
review and other functions of the local historic preser-
vation commission, Furthermore, decisions concerning
a wide range of local preservation activities, both
private and public, ranging from main street
revitalization to tax abatement programs can be based
on the evaluations made during the survey process.
A related purpose of the evaluation process is to iden-
tify properties for nomination to the National Register
or those on which determinations of eligibility for the
National Register should be made as part of Federal
environmental review processes, and those that may
be certified as eligible for Federal assistance through
grants and tax credits.
The community should strongly consider using the
National Register criteria given on page 5 as a
54 Keview and Organization of Survey Data
basis for evaluation. Developed by the National Park
Service for evaluating potential entries to the National
Register, the criteria are broadly worded to provide
for the diversity of resources within rural areas,
towns, and cities across the country. These criteria,
used by the Federal government and the State historic
preservation prdgrams, are the national standard for
evaluating historic resources. The use of historic con-
texts provides a mechanism for translating the broad
National Register criteria into locally meaningful
terms. For example, the National Register criteria
allow any property that is associated with the Hues of
persons significant in our past to be regarded as eligi-
ble for listing, but it is the historic contexts of the
area that define who such people were.
If criteria different from those of the National Register
must be used, the community may wish to consider a
dual evaluation system, using the National Register
criteria as well as its own. The rationale for this is
that it is properties included in and eligible for the
National Register-not a separate local listing based
on different criteria-that Federal agencies and gov-
ernments receiving Federal assistance are required to
consider in planning their projects. In evaluating the
significance of resources, communities may find it use-
ful to refer to the Secretary of the Interior's Standards
and Guidelines for Eualuation.
Evaluation of historic resources should be made with
reference to the historic contexts established during
survey planning or during the survey itself. In
essence, this involves identifying the historic context
or contexts to which each property might relate and
then deciding whether and how it does-or does
not-fit into the context,
Evaluation decisions should be made by people who
are qualified, through education, training, and ex-
perience, to apply the criteria with reference to the
relevant historic contexts. Many communities
establish review boards to make evaluation decisions.
It is important that such a board include professionals
in the disciplines of architectural history, history, ar-
cheology, architecture, and other fields appropriate to
the historic contexts of the community. The board
should also include people broadly representative of
the community and its cultural groups. Board
members should be familiar with the range of proper-
ties included in the National Register, as most of the
properties selected for the community inventory may
well be eligible Eor National Register listing. The Na-
tional Park Service's Manual for State Historic Preser-
vation Review Boards (see Bibliography) is recom-
mended reading for local review board members.
The evaluation process should ensure a balanced and
adequate consideration of all resources in the survey
area. Evaluation should be based solely on the
historic, architectural, archeological, and cultural
values perceived in the properties involved, without
consideration of the economic value of such properties
or how they may be treated in planning. In other
words, properties should be evaluated purely on their
merits. Decisions about what to do with properties
evaluated as significant should be made separately.
The survey coordinator often presents the survey data
to the evaluation group. The data is ordinarily
organized to present a) the historic context involved;
b) enough information on each property to assign it
to a property type within the mntex t, compare it with
the characteristics expected of its type, locate it on the
ground, and define its boundaries; and c) an argument
as to why the property is or is not significant within
the relevant historic context. Forms, photographs,
maps, archival documentation, and surveyors" field
notes are used in such presentations, often along with
slide shows and planning base maps.
The inventory should be open, so that properties can
be added as they are identified through survey work
and as they come to be regarded as historic by the
changing community. For this reason, review boards
are often established by statute with permanent of-
ficial status in local government, providing continuing
oversight to the survey and evaluation process. [n
order to be certified for participation in the national
historic preservation program under Section 101(c) of
the National Historic Preservation Act, a community
must establish its historic preservation commission by
stah~te.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using numerical and categorical evaluation
systems?
Systems that assign numerical scores to surveyed
historic resources for the purpose of establishing
preservation priority categories have been developed
by many communities. Summaries of several studies
that use such evaluation systems are included in the
appendix.
The premise behind these systems is that the relative
architectural, historical, and archeological significance
of resources can be evaluated on numerical scales,
permitting the resources to be placed within distinct
priority categories. While it is essential that the results
of the survey be incorporated into an overall com-
munity preservation plan (discussed in the introduc-
tion), numerical rating systems may not be the most
effective way of determining priorities. The basic
logistical problem with such systems is the difficulty
in working with often complex rating formulas.
Numerical systems can also give a false sense of cer-
Review and Organization of Survey Data 55
tainty in judgement about resources: in quantifying
intangibles like significance, it is questionable whether
the difference between one building scoring 79 and
another scoring 80 is really meaningful.
It is difficult to assess the number of points which
should be given for any one aspect of significance.
Although a building of national significance may
receive more points than one of local significance, the
locally significant building may be more critical to the
character of the community. It is equally difficult to
balance historical significance against architectural
significance and to determine how many points each
should receive. Finally, it is difficult to evaluate
diverse resources within one system. For example,
how does one evaluate an early industrial paper mill
against a Frank Lloyd Wright house or an Indian
burial mound?
Categorizing resources by total numerical score may
lead to serious problems. Some cities have found that
opponents of preservation projects use the classifica-
tion systems to their advantage. While a community
may intend to establish priorities for preservation ac-
tivities by categorizing its historic resources, the
system can be used to encourage the sacrifice of lower
priority resources in situations also involving
resources from the higher priority categories. Public
officials or decisionmakers may themselves also
neglect to give due consideration to buildings with less
than the highest numerical rankings. Conversely, a
property that achieves a high rating may be perceived
by some to be inviolate purely because of its historical
value. This is inappropriate because decisions about
what to do with a property, regardless of its level of
significance, involve not only the historical value of
the property but also community needs and interests,
development priorities, and changing economic, legal,
and social constraints.
Another problem with numerical systems is that they
may not be sufficiently flexible. It may be difficult to
move a property from one category to another if the
factors used originally to categorize it change.
Numerical evaluation systems generally do not pro-
vide for adjustment based on the discovery of addi-
tional resources, loss of similar resources, discovery of
new data, or change in the condition of the evaluated
resources.
The experience of the National Park Service suggests
that the complexities inherent in historic resources
evaluations and the number of other factors that must
be considered in establishing preservation priorities do
not lend themselves to simple numerical formulas.
Case-by-case evaluation of resources may provide a
more accurate assessment of the significance of
resources and thus a more realistic basis for planning
decisions.
What kinds of due process considerations may be required in evaluating properties?
In evaluating privately owned properties for listing in
an inventory, it may be legally necessary and is
always prudent to notify property owners and give
them the opportunity to comment on the proposed
listing. Such notification is required by law with
respect to nominations to the National Register.
Depending on local law, due process requirements for
listing properties may involve public hearings and the
opportunity to rebut the findings of the survey.
The State Historic Preservation Officer can assist in
meeting Federal requirements for property owner
notification in connection with National Register
nominations. The community's legal counsel should
be able to establish what due process requirements
may be imposed by State and local law. The rationale
for such requirements springs Erom the fact that listing
in the National Register and in some State and local
inventories may confer economic advantages on a
property owner and conversely may impose some
constraints on his or her use of the property. As a
result, if listing in the inventory gives no legal protec-
tion or restrictions on properties, due process pro-
cedures may not be required by law. Even where they
are not required, however, it is wise to involve prop-
erty owners in the evaluation process in order to
maintain community support for the preservation pro-
gram and avoid misunderstanding.
What kind of documentation should be included in the inventory files?
Documentation on each property selected for the in-
ventory should include the final, clean form describ-
ing the property, pertinent supplementary data, rele-
vant maps and sketches, record photographs, and an
evaluation of the property's significance. In many
cases, it may be appropriate to keep some of these
items in different files: for example, base maps show-
ing the location of a property or relating it to other
aspects of an historic context may be too large to file
physically with the property Eorm and notes, and
negatives of photographs should normally be filed
separately to ensure their protection from deteriora-
tion. In such a case, files should be cross-referenced so
that all information pertinent to a given property or a
56 Review and Organization of Survey Data
given historic context can be found and correlated. A
microcomputer-based catologue is useful for this pur-
pose, as discussed below.
Evaluations of significance are sometimes entered on
survey forms, and may be provisional, that is
representing the survey team's judgement during field-
work, or final based on the judgement of the review
board or its equivalent. Alternatively, the community
may wish to prepare special inventory forms for those
properties determined to be significant. A longer nar-
rative Eorm may be patterned after National Register
forms. If survey forms have been adequately refined
and evaluations are integrated into or kept with the
other survey data, it may not be necessary Eor the
community to spend extra time preparing special in-
ventory forms.
How can information be stored to permit efficient retrieval at a later date?
As the survey data are evaluated, they must be
organized for storage and further use. Decisions must
be made about two things: how the data can be kept
in a way that makes it most accessible and usable to
those who need it, and how the physical products of
the survey-forms, maps, photographs, surveyors'
notes, evaluators' comments, and so forth-will be
kept secure for future reference. The Eirst issue in-
volves decisions about data retrieval, the second
about physical Eiling and security systems.
Data Retrieval
Decisions about how to maintain data in a retrievable
form must be based on the community's needs. Thus,
as discussed in Chapter I, the community should
determine how it expects or wishes the survey data to
be used (i.e., what its information needs are) before
devising its storage and retrieval system. Advance
planning should enable the community to avoid
wasting time and money on the development of a
system that does not meet real informational needs.
The efficient use of survey data in community plan-
ning demands the use of an information system that
makes basic data readily accessible, that allows infor-
mation to be combined in different ways, and that
permits the easy entry of new data. Keeping informa-
tion current is atime-consuming task, but one that
can be minimized with a modern data processing and
retrieval system and a trained staff.
The basic information retrieval systems, as disting-
uished from the survey data files themselves, is often
referred to as a catalogue. It is used, just as is a
library card catalogue, to determine the location of
full survey data needed for particular tasks, but it can
also itself contain the most frequently used informa-
tion about surveyed properties, thus eliminating the
need for frequent reference to bulky manual files. The
more readily available the key elements of the survey
data are, the more likely they are to be used by local
planners and others involved in community develop-
ment.
The amount of information each catalogue entry
should contain depends on how the catalogue is to be
used. If the catalogue is only to be used as a guide to
the location of survey files that are in good order and
are relatively easy to use, it may be little more than
an index to the files, each entry including only name,
location, classification, and possibly the date of the
property. If the catalogue is to be used by groups in
different placesplanning offices, research centers,
libraries-without immediate access to the survey files
themselves, the catalogue will be of little use unless it
contains more information. If users are likely to want
to combine data in different Eorms for different pur-
posesto seek out all buildings of a particular style
for a research project, for example, or to identify the
locations of all historic properties of all kinds in a
given area for purposes of development project plain
ning-it will be appropriate for the catalogue to con-
tain still more information. In these cases, it will be
far easier to combine and recombine data using the
catalogue only rather than to do so by digging
through the full body of survey data. A typical
catalogue entry in a system designated for substantial
use in planning and research might include the name
of the property, address, geographical data, property
type, owner, short description, and a statement of
significance.
The National Register maintains a computerized infor-
mation system that is a useful model for communities
to consider, although some of its data entries are
specifically designed for the Register's own purposes
and would require adaptation to meet local needs. A
current description of the system and its contents can
be obtained from National Park Service Regional Of-
fices or from the National Register in Washington,
DC.
What form should the catalogue take? Again, the
deciding factor is how it will be used. A complicated
system may become a burden to those responsible for
maintaining 9t, but a system that does not permit easy
cross-referencing and recombination of data for plan-
ning purposes, may become an expensive, useless
overhead burden on the community.
A fully operational catalogue system should ideally be
able to provide:
7. Rapid, easy access to information such as location,
names of properties, types of ownership, uses, date,
significance, etc.
Neview and Organization of Survey Data 57
2. Information services for land-use, policy, and proj
ed planning.
3. Comprehensive lists of, and information on, prop-
erties or types of properties for setting protection and
enhancement priorities.
4. Information on what areas of the community have
been surveyed and how comprehensive the survey is
to date.
5. Clear identification of the location of further infor-
mation on each property in the hard data survey files.
The most commonly used catalogue systems are:
L Computer-based systems. These are by far the
most flexible and broadly useful of catalogue systems,
because of the tremendous amount of information
that can be entered into the system, the ease with
which information can be retrieved, and the variety of
ways such information can be combined and sorted
for different purposes. A great many readily available
packaged programs Eor the maintenance and use of
files are applicable to the maintenance of a survey
catalogue. There should be no need to design a pro-
gram specific to the community's purposes.
Inexpensive microcomputers are fully adequate for the
maintenance and use of survey catalogue data in most
communities. There should seldom be any need to use
expensive mainframe computers, unless the communi-
ty uses such a computer Eor other purposes and can
make it available at a competitive price for the
maintenance of survey data. Even where use of a
mainframe computer is possible, it is wise to design
the catalogue in such a way that it can be accessed
through microcomputers as well, in order to ensure
maximum accessibility by the greatest number of
authorized users at all times.
In addition to providing easy access to information
such as property location, significance, uses, and
owners, acomputer-based system makes it easy to
eliminate inconsistent information and to correct, up-
date, and add to existing material. Such a system has
the capacity to quickly generate complex listings: all
buildings located within the path of a proposed
highway, all federally owned resources, properties
needing restoration or rehabilitation work, buildings
certified for rehabilitation tax credits. Readily
available file search and graphics programs can make
it possible to generate maps showing areas surveyed
at different levels of intensity or with reference to dif-
ferent resource types, areas predicted on the basis of
archival research or reconnaissance to contain
specified kinds of properties, or the distribution of
specified property types. File maintenance programs
typically include provision for placing security codes
on particular Eiles, so that information to which the
community wishes to restrict access-for example, ar-
cheological site descriptions and locations that might
attract artifact collectors-can be kept secure.
As noted in Chapter I, in deciding on what kind of
computer-based system to use, the community should
consider its needs for consistency with two kinds of
larger systems. On the one hand, consistency with
other systems used in the community Eor other pur-
poses is obviously desirable, both to permit sharing of
hardware and software and more importantly to
facilitate the use of survey data in community plan-
ning. On the other hand, consistency with systems
used in the storage and retrieval of survey data in
larger geographic areas should be considered. Con-
sistency with the National Register Information
System will facilitate National Register nominations
and certification for tax benefits. Consistency with the
system used by the State Historic Preservation Officer
will make it easy to coordinate the local survey with
the statewide comprehensive survey. Consistency with
the systems used by Federal and State planning and
land use agencies in the area (Coastal Zone Manage-
ment, Bureau of Land Management, Forest Service,
Corps of Engineers) will help ensure that these agen-
cies will take the local survey data into account in
their planning, and will make it possible for the local
survey to tap the agencies' information resources.
Consistency with the systems of academic institutions,
museums, and other non-governmental entities that
maintain information on historic properties in the area
should also be considered. For example, if a university
anthropology department maintainslocal archeolog-
ical site files, it may be efficient to design a system
that is consistent with that used by the university so
that data can be readily shared for both community
planning and university research purposes.
2. Cards. Card-based filing systems have been made
virtually obsolete by the rapid growth of computer
technology and the decrease in the cost of computer
hardware and software. Before opting for acard-
based system, with its inherent limitations, a com-
munity should carefully consider its alternatives. A
community that adopts acard-based system is very
likely to want to replace it with acomputer-based
system before very many years have passed, and the
cost of transferring the data from one system to
another at that time may be considerable. If a
computer-based system is truly not feasible, however,
cards are a reasonable alternative. A 5-by-7 or
8-by-10 inch card can be used simply as a reference to
a complete property file, as with card catalogues used
in libraries, or it can include such information as
name, address, geographical data, building type,
owner, short description, and statement of
significance. The master card for each property could
also include a section of map and a small photograph.
Many different card systems are available from
private companies. Edge-punched cards-early precur-
sors of computer-based catalogue systems-use
punched holes along the edges of cards as a sorting
device. Holes are punched according to a code that
gg Review and Organization of Survey Data
refers to the different data entries; aneedle-like device
is then passed through the edges of a trayful of cards,
and those with the appropriate hole codes are caught
on the needle. If well planned, this sytem may be
quite efficient Eor inventories of under approximately
1,000 sites.
3. Publications. A catalogue printed in booklet or
other form can be widely disseminated but has the
great disadvantage that effective updating requires re-
publication. See Chapter V for more information on
publications.
Whatever system or combination of systems is
employed, the catalogue should be systematically
organized, with each entry thoroughly recorded and
cross-referenced to back-up hard data files, and ar
cessible to the interested public and to appropriate
user agencies and organizations. Communities seeking
certification to participate in the national historic
preservation program under Section 101(c) of the Na-
tional Historic Preservation Act should ensure that
their catalogue systems are consistent with the
Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Registration,
which require that registration of historic properties
be conducted according to stated procedures, contain
information that locates, describes, and justifies the
significance and physical integrity of each registered
property, and be accessible to the public. The Stand-
ards permit information on the location of historic
properties to be withheld from the public, if revealing
such information could cause damage to a proper-
ty-for example, if revealing the locations of fragile
archeological sites could lead to their destruction by
artifact seekers.
Hard Data Filing Systems
The hard data on paper and film that are the physical
products of the survey must be filed in a manner that
not only makes them reasonably accessible but also
protects them. In contrast with the catalogue, where
accessibility and flexibility of use are the key con-
siderations, in establishing a hard data filing system
the archival, curatorial need to maintain the material
products of the survey in perpetuity becomes para-
mount.
The three basic decisions that must be made about
devising a filing system are the physical form of the
file, the order in which files will be kept, and the pro-
tection of the files.
1. Physical form of the file. Survey data may be
stored in vertical files, one folder per property. In this
way, forms, photographs, maps, results of historical
research, and other material on a property may be
kept together. Such a system of files would facilitate
updating information and adding photographs and
maps. Looseleaf notebooks may be used in the same
way as vertical files. It may be useful to consult an
archivist concerning the proper procedure for storing
loose papers. Tapes from interviews may have to be
stored separately but should be clearly identified with
the names of those recorded, the topic of discussion,
and the date of the recording. Special considerations
for photograph files are discussed later.
2. Order. A common method of organizing files is
geographical, that is, properties listed by location
(e.g., street) in a logical progression. Districts iden-
tified during the survey and analysis processes could
be organized in the same way. The advantage to this
kind of organization is that location does not change,
as a property owner might. Also, although properties
may be cross-referenced by historical theme or type of
significance, it would probably be more difficult to
find properties listed under themes than under loca-
tions.
3. Protection of files. Consideration should be given
to how the files will be protected against loss, fire,
theft, mutilation, and physical deterioration. I[ may
be advisable to provide an archival backup in case of
damage to or loss of the original files. Microfilm is a
relatively inexpensive backup, especially microfiche
jackets for records that are frequently updated.
Repositories
It is important for survey documentation to be filed in
a location that is convenient to planning officials and
interested individuals alike. Ideally, this will mean the
local planning department, where extensive use of the
information will be made, or some other official
branch of local government equipped to handle public
records (town or county archives, hall of records,
etc.). The local historic preservation coordinator's or
commission's office, as a center for preservation infor-
mation and activities, is a logical repository, If there
are no public facilities equipped to handle these files,
a private historic preservation organization or local
historical society might be able to provide temporary
storage. Since data gathered through a publicly fund-
ed survey belongs and should be available to the en-
tire community, a private entity would probably not
be appropriate as a permanent repository.
With regard to repositories for archeological informa-
tion, it is imperative that the locations of arche-
ological resources be treated as confidential with ac-
cess to the records limited to qualified researchers and
planners. Many State Historic Preservation Officers
and State archeologists have procedures for limiting
access to this information.
Photographic Files
Photographic files should be able to accommodate
three kinds of photographic material: prints,
negatives, and slides. Photographic materials require
special conditions for storage and handling. Because
of their varying size, use, and conservation needs,
they should be filed separately from paper records
Review and Organization of Survec Data 59
and from each other. They should be stored in a loca-
tion having a moderately low relative humidity and
cool temperature, safe from direct sunlight and air
pollutants such as dust, smoke, and chemical fumes.
Temperatures from 65 to 68 degrees Fahrenheit with a
relative humidity of 40 to 45% should provide both
proper storage and comfortable working conditions.
Photographic materials should be stored vertically in
baked enamel metal filing cabinets (wooden boxes or
cabinets contain harmful resins and glues). If protec-
tive envelopes or sleeves are used, they should be
made of inert materials such as polyester, triacetate,
polypropolene, or polyethylene (cellophane and
glassine envelopes should not be used). Files should be
free of paper dips, rubber bands, glues, tape, papers
or cardboard, or other materials that will in time
damage the photographs. White cotton gloves should
be used when handling photographic materials, and
materials should always be handled along the edges so
that the emulsion is never touched.
Photographic prints may be stored most easily if they
are mounted on acid free or alkaline buffered card-
board of a standard size; the dimensions of the board
should be greater than those of the photograph to
allow for handling without touching the photograph.
Prints receiving considerable use may also be placed
in clear plastic envelopes, sleeves, or print files made
of inert materials (polyester, triacetate, etc.). For long-
term stability, photographs should be archivally proc-
essed on fiber-based photographic paper (resin-coated
papers should not be used); if mounted, photographs
should be held in place by paper hinges attached with
wheat starch paste (dry mount tissue or adhesives
such as rubber cement should not be used). The
mounting board or envelope should be labeled with
the name of the property, identification number, loca-
tion, view (e.g. SW elevation), photographer's name,
and date of the photograph. Photographs may be
organized by geographical location or property name
or number.
Historic photographs, exhibition prints, or
photographs for which no negatives are available
should receive special care. They should be filed
separately from paper records or other kinds of
photographic materials. If regular usage for publica-
tion or study is anticipated, reference prints should be
made and the originals stored under archival condi-
tions. Because they can be replaced, reference prints
do not require the archival storage condition of
original materials and may be filed with other
materials, including survey forms, maps, and other
documents.
Negatives should be stored in acid free or alkaline
buffered envelopes made of inert material (polyester,
triacetate, etc.) with the emulsion side away from any
seams. Large format negatives (5-by-7, 4-by-5, etc.)
should be placed in separate envelopes. Smaller
negatives (35 mm), which come in rolls, should be cut
into strips 5 to 6 frames in length (do not cut into in-
dividual frames; this makes storage and printing dif-
ficult). Each strip should then be stored in a separate
plastic sleeve or envelope made of inert material.
Clear plastic negative files are available that provide
pockets for 5 or 6 strips having 5 to F frames each,
making it possible to store an entire roll on one sheet
and to locate easily a specific frame. Negatives may
be classified using a simple three-part numbering
system which identifies the film format, number of
roll, and frame number. For example, the number
35-110-12 identifies the 12th frame of the 110th roll of
35 mm Eilm. Protected negatives may be stored by
consecutive roll and frame numbers and cross-
referenced according to location, or may be filed
directly by location.
Because negatives are generally original material and
cannot be replaced, they should be stored separately
from other materials under archival conditions. Con-
tact prints may be made for filing with other survey
records. A Eorm attached to or filed with the contact
print can easily reference the roll and frame numbers,
and provide information Eor each negative such as
property name, location, identification number, name,
view, photographer, and date.
Slides should be stored separately Erom other
materials in closed baked enamel metal compartment
files. Because color materials are more susceptible to
deterioration and damage due to heat, light, and
humidity than other photographic materials, color
slides should be stored at a lower temperature, be-
tween 50 to 60 degrees, if possible. Slides should
always be handled along the cardboard mount, and
placed in clear plastic sleeves made of inert material
when being transported or used Eor study purposes.
Information including property name, location, iden-
tification number, view, photographer, and date may
be printed on the cardboard mount. Slides may be
filed in various ways including geographical location,
property name, or identification number.
60 Review and Organization of Survey Da[a
Use of Survey Data in Planning
The U.S. Supreme Court, in its decision Penn Centro)
Tronsportation Co. u. New York City, commented
that identifying (historic) properties and areas ... is
critical to any landmark preservation effort (438 U.S.
104, 110, 1978). The Conservation Foundation's
Handbook on Historic Preservation Law (see
Bibliography), commenting on the Court's observa-
tion, notes that surveys are a key element in making
city preservation planning and development goals
complementary. But how does this key element relate
to other aspects of planning? This section will address
questions about how survey data can actually be used.
Since each community's planning needs are unique,
this discussion will necessarily be general, and some
elements of it will apply to some communities better
than others.
Two kinds of planning will be discussed: preservation
planning and community development planning.
These are not unrelated; indeed as will be stressed,
they should be closely coordinated, and they often in-
volve the same activities and strategies, but they will
be discussed individually here for ease of presentation.
What are the major components of preservation planning?
Preservation planning, as used in this publication,
means planning for the continued identification and
evaluation of historic properties and for their protec-
tion and enhancement. Ideally these efforts should be
guided by a comprehensive historic preservation plan
that integrates the various activities and gives them
coherence and direction, as well as relates the com-
munity's preservation efforts to community develop-
ment planning as a whole.
A comprehensive historic preservation plan typically
has several elements: an identification element, an
evaluation element, and a protection element, the last
incorporating a range of possible strategies for keep-
ing historic properties in place, maintaining their in-
tegrity, and, in the words of the National Historic
Preservation Act, letting them exist in productive har-
mony and fulfill the social, economic, and other re-
quirements of present and future generations (16
U.S.C. 470-1(1). A realistic preservation plan will also
include provision for those instances in which historic
resources cannot be physically preserved-when other
community needs demand that they be removed,
demolished, or dug up.
How are survey data used in ongoing identification?
As the survey progresses, it is almost certain that
historic contexts not recognized or fully defined at the
time the survey was planned will become evident.
Sometimes contexts that were initially defined very
broadly are divided into multiple contexts as they are
refined based nn incoming survey data. For example,
an initial context might be the dere(oprnent of w=are-
housing as a nwjor cih/ industry and, as survey data
developed, it might be found that in fact the city's
history had been characterized by two major phases
of warehouse development-one associated with
steamship commerce, the other, in another period of
time, with railroads, and each represented by distinc-
tive kinds of warehouses in different parts of town.
Dividing the context into two would be appropriate to
ensure that both kinds of warehouses and the historic
and architectural significance of each were given due
consideration.
Within each context, the analysis and synthesis of in-
coming survey data will almost always lead to the
identification of property types and locational pat-
terns not fully anticipated at the time the survey was
planned, resulting in continual adjustments to the
Use of Survey Data in Planning 61
survey design. As information gaps established as
priority targets for survey during initial survey plan-
ning are filled, new gaps will become apparent. ~Ihis
should not be a surprise, but should be welcomed as
evidence of a maturing survey effort. The incoming
survey data should be used to adjust and retarget
subsequent phases of archival research and fieldwork
To take maximum advantage of the natural feedback
between the survey work itself and survey planning, it
is usually wise to conduct survey in phases, first am-
ducting abroad-brush reconnaissance, then using the
results of the reconnaissance data to design subse-
quent phases of work. Unless some urgent develop-
ment priority demands iL, it is usually unwise simply
to undertake acommunity-wide intensive survey at
the outset, or to target a particular area for intensive
survey while postponing giving attention to the rest of
the community. Lacking the information provided by
initial reconnaissance of the entire comnwnity, the in-
tensive survey is likely to be poorly focussed, and im-
portant resources may be unnecessarily lost.
How are survey data used in making evaluation decisions?
Survey data obviously provide the raw material on
which decisions about the significance of particular
properties are made, but they are important to
evaluation decisionmaking in more subtle ways as
well. Since decisions regarding the evaluation of prop-
erties involves placing properties in historic contexts,
the more that is known about a given context, the
better will be the evaluation decisions made about
particular properties. Recalling the example given
above, for instance, when the question of how many
and which warehouses to nominate to the National
Register arises, the answer may vary considerably
depending on whether a single warehouse-related con-
text or two such contexts are recognized. In short, as
the survey progresses, evaluation decisions should
become steadily better and better informed. The level
of information upon which an evaluation decision is
made can be particularly important if the decision is
likely to be controversial. Where a decision is likely
to be challenged, for example by a property owner
who feels that recognizing a building as historic will
impede its demolition or by preservationists who feel
that a property is more historic than the survey data
indicate, it is essential that the decision made be based
not only on information about the property itself but
also on the historic context of which it is (or is not) a
part.
Evaluation decisions can be made on the basis of in-
complete survey data, but it is wise not to make them
without some information on the community's historic
contexts and their component property types. As a
result, it may be best, unless there is some urgent
reason to do otherwise, to defer decisions about the
significance of particular properties until at least some
initial survey data have been collected concerning the
relevant historic contexts. For example, even though a
particular property owner is very anxious to have his
or her building nominated to the National Register at
the very outset of the survey effort, it may be in the
best interests of an orderly and defensible process of
evaluation to defer the nomination until at least
reconnaissance-level data are available on that par-
ticular context or contexts to which the building may
relate. More importantly, a decision that a given
property is not significant should never be made
without access to a reasonable body of survey data on
relevant historic contexts, since such an uninformed
decision may result in the property's destruction
without attention to its historic values.
This is not to say that no evaluation decisions should
be made until the survey effort has reached some par-
ticular level of maturity; sometimes there are good
reasons to give priority to consider the significance of
a particular property before much contextual informa-
tion has been gathered. For example, if a particular
site or structure is threatened by a development proj-
ect, or if an evaluation of a building is important to a
rehabilitation plan, it may be necessary to give the
property's evaluation a higher priority than would
normally be the case in the overall survey process.
When an evaluation must be made without a firm
understanding of the relevant historic contexts,
however, it should be made on the basis of as much
relevant data as it is possible to accumulate, and with
full recognition of the fact that it may result in the
destruction of a property that might later on the basis
of complete survey results be found to be very signifi-
cant, or in the investment of money and other
resources in a property later found to lack historic
value.
How can survey data contribute to strategies for the preservation and enhancement of
historic resources?
A community historic preservation plan may include
a wide range of strategies for the preservation and
enhancement of historic properties. A summary of
many such approaches can be found in Remember the
Neighborhoods, by the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation (see Bibliography). Several commonly
62 Use oh Survey Data in Planning
used strategies will be discussed below, with reference
to the contribution survey data can make to them.
General Historic Preservation Ordinances
Community-wide historic preservation ordinances are
effective ways to ensure that historic properties are
considered in community planning as a whole, and in
the development of different areas of the community.
A community seeking certification under Section
101(c) of the National Historic Preservation Act must
have and enforce such an ordinance. The Conserva-
tion Foundation's Handbook on Historic Preservation
Law (see Bibliography) gives a good outline of the key
provisions of ageneral-purpose preservation or-
dinance (though with insufficient attention to the
treatment of archeological sites), and provides useful
advice about how to draft such ordinances.
Theoretically, a historic preservation ordinance could
be established based on no information at all about a
community's historic resources, but merely on the
general supposition that there might be something in
the community having historic sgnifieance. In fact,
however, some body of information on the communi-
t_v"s resources is usually necessary simply to generate
the awareness that there is something to protect, and
the more survey data that are available, and the more
comprehensive such data are, the better the ordinance
can be drafted to address the community's actual
preservation opportunities and constraints.
Historic preservation ordinances typically provide for
the existence of a review body of some kind to
oversee the preservation program and specifically to
make evaluation decisions. Survey data can help
define the kinds ok expertise that should be
represented on the review body. Por example, if on
the basis of initial archival research or other survey
work it appears that the community was the site of
significant prehistoric development, the presence on
the review body of an archeologist specializing in
prehistory might be called for, while if it appears that
the community contained many buildings representing
different schools of design, periods of construction,
and architectural styles, the presence of an architec-
tu~al historian would be appropriate. Representation
by sociologists or anthropologists might be called for
it evaluation decisions were likely to involve the con-
sideration of ethnic neighborhoods or other resources
associated with particular contemporary social
groups.
Ordinances ako spell out the scope of authorities
assumed by the review body and the preservation
program it oversees. Survey data can help define what
authorities are needed. If the community contains
many historic buildings that may be candidates Eor
adaptive use and rehabilitation, but which may also
be subjected to insensitive renovation, the preserva-
tion program may need to have the authority to
review and approve renovation activities as well as
outright demolition. If the visual qualities of certain
streetscapes are likely to be important, the program
may need the authority to review alterations to
building exteriors. If the community is likely to con-
tain significant subsurface archeological resources, the
program may need the authority to review grading
permits or other authorizations for ground disturb-
ance.
Finally, ordinances usually set forth the procedures
and standards that will be used by the preservation
program in evaluation decisions and in decisions
about approval or disapproval of particular kinds of
activities that may affect historic properties. Suwey
data can help ensure that such procedures and stand-
ards are actually appropriate to the community's
resources. For example, if the community's central
business district contains many historic buildings suit-
able for rehabilitation, ordinance drafters may want
to pay particular attention to the establishment of
standards for rehabilitation and procedures for
reviewing renovation-projects. If an important historic
context is agricultural development in what are now
the suburbs of a city, special attention may need to be
paid to standards and procedures for dealing with
visual and physical intrusions on surviving farmsteads
and agricultural buffers.
The relationship between the survey process and the
development of an ordinance is a dynamic one. On
the one hand, the ordinance will be most sensitive to
the community's needs if it is based in part on some
survey data. On the other hand, the survey will prob-
ably be most effective if it is backed up and structured
by an ordinance. If a community has the luxury to
establish its preservation plan in an orderly, step-by-
step manner, it may be best to conduct at least initial
survey planning, establishing basic historic contexts,
and perhaps to conduct some level of reconnaissance
work, before drafting an ordinance, and then to draft
the ordinance with an eye toward facilitating further
survey as well as fulfilling other preservation objec-
tives. In any event, drafters of ordinances should take
into account whatever survey data is available as they
carry out their work.
Historic District Ordinances
Historic district ordinances difter from general historic
preservation ordinances in that they apply only within
particular designated historic districts and in that they
are typically much more specific in their terms. They
often provide that particular kinds of changes, for ex-
ample, any alteration to the exterior of a building or
structure, can be undertaken only after issuance of a
permit by the city historic preservation office or by a
historic district commission. Drafters of historic
district ordinances will need survey data of the kinds
discussed above, but in addition, of course, survey
data will be needed to define the historic district to
Lse of Survey Uata in Planning 63
which the ordinance applies. If the district is to be
nominated to the National Register, Fairly complete
data based on intensive survey will be needed. IE it is
to be designated at the local level only, less (or in
some cases, more) information will be required,
depending on local law and policy. To establish
justifiable controls, it is necessary to know enough
about the historic resources that make up the district
to decide what their important characteristics are, and
for this task, good survey data are needed.
Financial Incentives
Financial incentives for the preservation, rehabilita-
tion, and adaptive use of historic properties can take
many forms, some carried out completely at the local
level, some featuring a partnership with State and
Federal agencies. Examples include:
• tax incentives, such as Federal investment tax
credits and local exemptions from or reduction of
property tax;
• grants from the State Historic Preservation Officer,
the National Park Service, the Department of Housing
and Urban Development, the National Endowments
for the Arts and Humanities, the National Trust for
Historic Preservation, and other public and private
agencies;
• Federal, State, and local subsidies to assist key
businesses and to support low-income housing, help-
ing to stabilize deteriorating commercial areas and
neighborhoods; the Department of Housing and Ur-
ban Development has published examples of such pro-
grams that are worth consideration (e.g., Leveraging
your CDBG, see Bibliography);
• the charitable contributions of partial interest in an
historically important land area or certified historic
structure that tan be deducted from taxes; and
• the use of reuoluing funds and loin interest loans to
support such activities as sensitive rehabilitation and
facade restoration.
Information and advice on possible financial incen-
tives can be obtained from the State Historic Preser-
vation Officer. Survey data are important in the ad-
ministration of financial incentive programs not only
to identify specific historic properties whose owners
or developers might be offered such incentives, but
also to give the community an early idea about what
kinds of incentives might be appropriate. To return to
an earlier example, the community whose central
business district contains many buildings that could be
rehabilitated may want to give special attention to tax
incentives for rehabilitation, and perhaps to donations
of facade easements, while the community whose
agricultural hinterland is important may take special
interest in the purchase or receipt by donation of con-
servation easements.
Archeological Programs
Programs to protect and use archeological sites come
in several forms. Provisions applicable to other kinds
of historic properties can be adapted to archeological
purposes; for example, conservation easements can be
used to protect archeological sites from land disturb-
ance, and tax credits can be offered for the contribu-
tion of funds to archeological excavation or for the
contribution of the artifacts recovered from such ex-
cavations to the government or anon-profit corpora-
tion. Preservation ordinances can provide for the
review of grading permits and other actions that per-
mit subsurface disturbance, and can require that ar-
cheologicalsalvage excavations be done when a
significant site is to be disturbed.
All these provisions can be best and most sensitively
put in place if some survey data are in hand. For ex-
ample, development interests in a community may ob-
ject strenuously to an ordinance giving a preservation
program review authority over all grading permits,
but may object less if the authority is restricted to
particular areas where survey data indicates the
likelihood of significant subsurface resources.
Because archeology is concerned with the preserva-
tion, recovery, and interpretation of information
about the community's past, there are certain
strategies that can be applied to archeological preser-
vation more effectively than to the preservation of
other kinds of resources. Salvage archeology-the ex-
cavation of sites that must be destroyed and the
translation of the data they contain into books, ar-
chives, and exhibits-is an example of such a strategy.
There is a great potential for public involvement in
salvage archeology, which typically requires a large
workforce and many skills and levels of experience.
Some communities have public archeology programs
that stimulate interest and provide recreational oppor-
tunities under professional supervision while support-
ing local museums and interpretive programs and
salvaging archeological sites at low cost. Such pro-
grams not only use survey data to determine where to
dig, but also can be used to carry out the arche-
ological component of a survey program itself. An ex-
cellent example of such a program is described in the
National Park Service publication Approaches to
Preserving a City's Past (see Bibliography).
Interpretive Programs
Programs that interpret historic properties, and the
community's history, prehistory, and architecture in
general, for the public can be powerful tools in preser-
vation. They can generate public interest in and sym-
pathy for preservation, and make the objects of
preservation understandable to taxpayers, voters, and
decisionmakers. Examples of interpretive programs in-
clude the development of house museums, the
sponsorship of walking tours, the publication of
brochures and books on the community's past, the
64 Use of Survey Data in Planning
establishment of displays in museums, public
buildings, and open spaces, and the on-site interpreta
lion of historic buildings, structures, and sites.
Survey data are important to interpretive programs
not only for the identification of properties that may
be interpreted, but also for the establishment of con-
texts in which interpretation can be carried out. An
interpretive program will be most meaningful to the
public if it presents an integrated view of the com-
munity's past, based on significant history contexts
developed in the course of survey work.
Public Involvement
The more the public can be involved in a
community's preservation program, the more likely
the program is to succeed. Not only can survey data
contribute to public support by helping the public
understand what is important about the community's
past, but the survey effort itself can be a powerful
stimulus to public involvement. Because a survey can,
and indeed must, draw on a wide range of talents,
and because most survey work can be done by trained
volunteers under professional supervision, a com-
munity's residents can become deeply involved in the
conduct of the survey itself, and it can serve to
catalyze their participation in the community's preser-
vation program as a whole.
Where Destruction Must Occur
Historic properties cannot always be preserved in
place, even with the best of preservation plans and
programs. Modern economic and social requirements
sometimes cannot be accommodated by the adaptive
use of historic buildings, and in the competition for
urban space, such buildings must sometimes be the
losers no matter how earnestly the community may
wish to preserve them. Archeological sites are even
more prone to destruction, since even a rehabilitation
project may involve disturbance oEthe ground under
and around a building.
Where historic properties must give way to modern
development, or to natural processes of erosion and
decay, several strategies can be undertaken to avoid
complete loss. In some cases historic buildings can be
relocated to new sites with compatible surroundings
where they can be preserved and rehabilitated. Often
such buildings are marketed for relocation-offered
for sale at a low price (the cost of demolition, or less)
to anyone who will relocate and rehabilitate them. If
demolition must occur, buildings are often recorded
so that a body of information will remain about
them. The Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record, both in the
National Park Service, can provide detailed informa-
tion on architectual recordation. In some cases, ar-
chitectural elements are salvaged for reuse in new
development, or for curation in a museum. Arche-
ological sites are often subjected to salvage excavation
or data recovery; this involves the conduct of ar-
cheological research aimed at extracting the useful in-
formation such sites contain before they are
destroyed. Guidelines for archeological salvage
research projects, and examples of such projects, can
be obtained from the National Park Service.
How can survey data be used in community development planning?
Historic preservation can be viewed both as an oppor-
tunity for community development and as a con-
straint upon such development. In the past it has
largely been viewed as the latter; today it is increas-
ingly seen as the former, but in fact it properly is both.
From the standpoint of constraints, such survey data
as the description of historic contexts, predictive
maps, and inventories are vital to the identification of
conflicts between development planning and local
preservation priorities, and can facilitate determining
what will need to be done to meet State and Federal
environmental review requirements. From the stand-
point of opportunities, survey data can be used to
identify the historic contexts and their constituent
elements-buildings, streetscapes, building uses,
cultural activities, and other resources-on which
community development can build in order to make
the most of the community's unique historic qualities.
Ideally, development planning should use survey data
to identify opportunities for the use of the communi-
ty's historic character in creating its future, to
minimize conflicts between preservation and develop-
ment, and to provide for the orderly resolution of
those conflicts that inevitably will occur.
The National Park Service publication Economics of
Reaitalization (see Bibliography) provides a prescrip-
tion for integrating historic preservation positively
into development planning. The essential steps in the
process involve:
1. Identifying opportunities and constraints, including:
• defining and characterizing the target area,
• identifying community goals,
• identifying assests for and constraints on develop-
ment,
• identifying the Federal, State, and local regulations
that might control or influence the development,
and
• describing existing proposals or alternatives for
development.
Use of Survey Data in Planning 65
2. Overview analysis of:
• market dynamics,
• investment climate,
• the capabilities of the community and the de-
veloper(s) involved,
• the social and community interests and concerns
that pertain to the development area, and
• the potential of the development to catalyze addi-
tional positive development.
3. Screening options, involving assessment o6
• economic impacts, both positive and negative,
• social impacts, both positive and negative,
• the potential of each option to catalyze further
positive development, and
• the development opportunities that will be foregone
if a particular development option is chosen.
Survey data are vital to carrying out many of the
above steps in orderly development planning. [t is ob-
vious that survey data can and should be used to
identify development assets such as historic buildings
suitable for rehabilitation and adaptive use, and
historic neighborhoods whose cultural cohesion pro-
vides abasis for economic growth without loss of
character or displacement of residents. Survey data
can also be useful in identifying community goals and
social interests and concerns, especially with reference
to the goals of neighborhood groups, social groups,
businesses, and others who may wish to preserve and
enhance the historic and cultural character of par-
ticular areas of the community. Similarly, survey data
can provide a basis for measuring aspects of the social
impact of a proposed development, by identifying the
kinds of changes that will be welcome and those that
will be distasteful to those who value the character of
the areas that may be affected. Survey data can also
help in the assessment of a project's catalytic poten-
tial, by identifying properties and areas with the
potential for rehabilitation and reuse in the vicinity of
a proposed development project.
Ideally, development planning should relate to an
area's historic resources in a positive manner, viewing
existing structures, views, streetscapes, social groups
and activities, and cultural attributes of the area as
things to be understood and built upon. Using survey
data at an appropriate scale, developmenC planning
should seek to characterize the historic resources of
the area and to identify the key elements chat define
its character-both such tangible elements as
buildings, street plans, and archeological sites, and
such intangible elements as social groups and patterns
of activity. These should be used to help define the
development plan in a way that uses the area's
character rather than destroys it.
Even where survey data cannot be integrated into
planning in such a positive manner, such data are still
vital in identifying constraints and in establishing
orderly processes for dealing with them. At a bare
minimum, what a development planner needs to
know about historic resources is a) where they are
and b) what can feasibly be done to care for them in
the development process. Survey data can, of course,
provide such information. A completed survey will
allow planners to identify precisely what historic
resources exist in a proposed project area and, by pro-
viding astatement of each property's significance, will
provide one key piece of information needed to deter-
mine how each property should be treated.
However, a survey need not be completed to provide
vital information for development planning purposes.
For example, based on archival research and recon-
naissance level field investigation of an area where
development is being planned, it should be possible to
document:
• the historic contexts relevant to the area;
• the basic types of historic properties likely to be
found;
• the contemporary cultural, social, and economic
uses of such properties, and the way these structure
the use of space;
• the general changes that are occurring in the ar-
chitectural fabric and social uses of the area;
• the social groups, ethnic groups, organizations, and
others having historic and cultural interests in the
area;
• the historic preservation goals and priorities that
currently apply to the area, and to some extent,
likely future goals and priorities;
• in some cases, the mechanisms that might be used
to resolve conflicts with preservation-related in-
terests, and
• sources of additional information on the area's
resources.
For example, imagine that a community wishes to
undertake a program to revitalize an area consisting
of an economically depressed residential neighborhood
and a commercial street, and that an historic
resources survey of the area has progressed only to
the reconnaissance level. Based on archival research,
windshield survey, interviews with local residents and
organizations during survey planning, and minor ar-
cheological fieldwork, the survey data might docu-
ment:
1. Three major historic contexts are thus far known to
be relevant to the area. The earliest is based on use of
the area in the 18th century as a cattle ranch, and is
important to economic historians studying the early
66 Use o1 Survev Data in Planning
development of the beef industry. The second in-
volves commercial development stimulated by
economic boom conditions in the 1S80s and 1890s,
and the third is the immigration of ethnic populations
during the early 20th century.
2. It is unlikely that any standing structures survive to
represent the cattle ranching historic context, but the
archeological remains of the ranch center are likely to
occur in a two-block area under existing ]ow-density
housing. Many of the area's commercial buildings
date from the late 19th century boom. The
neighborhood subject to effect by the project includes
row houses built originally to house Irish immigrants
and later adapted by an Italian immigrant group; the
area remains heavily influenced by Italian customs to-
day.
3. The cattle ranching historic context has no ap-
parent influence on modern uses of space, and its ar-
cheological sites are not significantly influenced by
contemporary activities. The commercial buildings
continue in use, primarily serving the day-to-day
needs of the neighborhood. The neighborhood ap-
pears to be close-knit; archival research and initial in-
terviews indicate that related families tend to occupy
adjacent or nearby houses, where they regularly in-
teract and assist one another. Field reconnaissance
suggests that this has resulted in the formation of
somewhat distinctive mini-neighborhoods in which ex-
terior painting, landscaping, and minor details of ar-
chitectural ornamentation vary from one group of
families to another; it is assumed that the same pat-
terns would be observed if the interior organization of
houses were examined.
4. The entire area is suffering decay as a result of its
depressed economy. Owners of commercial buildings
have damaged their buildings by deferring main-
tenance and by using inappropriate materials and
techniques to cover up damage or to rnodernize the
appearance of the buildings. In the residential
neighborhood, it appears that some clusters of houses,
representing particular groups of families, are well
maintained, while other clusters are rapidly
deteriorating. It is assumed that the well-maintained
clusters represent groups of families that continue the
tradition of cooperation and self-help, while those
that are deteriorating reflect family clusters that are
disintegrating.
5. A group of businesspeople has been cooperating
with the survey, and its members have expressed in-
terest in rehabilitation. Aneighborhood group has ex-
pressed suspicion about the intentions of the survey
team during initial interviews, but its representatives
have spoken eloquently about their desire to retain
the character of the neighborhood and reverse the pat-
terns of disintegration they observe around them.
6. Current preservation goals applicable to the area
include determining the integrity and significance of
any archeological remains of the cattle ranching
historic context, defining the significant characteristics
of the area's commercial buildings as a basis For
rehabilitation planning, and studying the residential
neighborhood as a potential historic district, Dealing
with the commercial buildings is given highest priority
because of their deteriorating condition and the in-
terest that their owners have shown in rehabilitation.
Study of the neighborhood is given second priority
because of the potential for using historic preservation
strategies over the long ran to help its residents
reverse the process o4 decay. Addressing the ar-
cheological remains of the ranching context is given
lowest priority because the remains are in no im-
mediate danger.
7. The businesspeople do not form an organized
group, but could probably be brought together to
cooperate with local government and developers in a
redevelopment effort. Some of the major leaders of
the residential neighborhood do not speak English as
their first language, so efforts should be made to en-
sure that project plans are described and discussed in
Italian as well. An effort should be made to ensure
that representatives of each family cluster are con-
tacted to discuss project planning, preferably with the
cooperation of trusted neighborhood leaders.
8. A master's thesis on file with the history depart-
ment at a nearby college is the major organized source
of information on the cattle ranching historic context,
and describes how the location of the ranch center
was established through the study of historical
records. The anthropology department at the same
college developed a proposal For a field school in
historical archeology at the ranch center site, but fail-
ed to obtain funding; this proposal could serve as the
basis for designing a testing program to determine
what physical remains actually exist on the site, and
perhaps for designing an archeological salvage project
iE the site is to be disturbed. The boom period of the
late 19th century is well documented in records on file
at the local courthouse and in the city library, though
little work has yet been done on the study of its ar-
chitectural products per se. Initial interviews have
resulted in the identification of several individuals
who can provide oral historical and ethnographic in-
formation on the Italian use of the residential
neighborhood, but information on the initial Irish
period is very sparse at present.
Based on such information, development planners and
preservation authorities can work together to integrate
preservation goals and priorities into the development
process. Disturbance of the area likely to contain the
remains of the historic ranch can be avoided if possi-
ble; if avoidance is not feasible, an archeological pro-
gram can be designed to establish what remains ac-
tually exist and, if they have real value for research,
Gsc of Survey Data in Planning 67
to recover pertinent data from them. Businesspeople
interested in rehabilitating their buildings can be
organized to work with developers and planners, and
the project can be planned to the extent feasible to be
compatible with their interests. Revitalization of the
neighborhood can be planned to build on its social
strengths and perhaps to correct the weaknesses that
are leading to its deterioration, preserving its cultural
character and, thereby, its particular architectural
values.
Not all of these happy results may be possible. It may
not be feasible to preserve so much of the area's
historic and architectural fabric and still have an
economically viable project. Even if in the end
nothing is preserved, however, the application of
survey data will not have been in vain. If nothing
else, the data will provide the basis for understanding
what is being lost and making informed decisions
about whether to sacrifice it. It will also provide the
basis for considering measures to mitigate loss of the
resources, through relocation, recordation, and
salvage. Finally, it will help ensure that people and
groups interested in preserving and maintaining the
character or the area participate in the planning proc-
ess, rather than feeling that the project was imposed
upon them without considering their concerns.
The major point to be remembered is that survey data
can be mobilized and employed at virtually any point
in the progress of a survey to provide information
useful in development planning. If the survey itself is
well planned, at each step in its progress survey
leaders will have some idea of the historic contexts
relevant to various parts of the community, and some
set of goals and priorities for each context. Develop-
ment planners should take these goals and priorities
into account in carrying out their work, seeking to
address them in carrying out their own programs.
If the survey is at a very early stage when it intersects
with development planning, development planners
will be able to draw only on general, preliminary
survey data. They will probably have to be prepared
for planning delays while historic contexts are
developed, initial surveys are conducted, and preser-
vation goals and priorities arc established, before they
can try to blend such goals and priorities with those
of development. As the survey matures, development
planners will have to worry less and less about the
identification of contexts and properties and the
establishment of goals and priorities: these. will have
been established, and the challenge Eor development
planners will be to seek ways to accommodate them.
Survey data are most useful to development planning
if they are systematically integrated into the com-
munity's general planning. This is done by establish-
ing a preservation element in the community's general
plan, and by adjusting the general plan as a whole to
ensure that the guidance it provides to decisionmakers
is not inconsistent with preservation interests. Zoning
is oh particular importance to preservation. Whatever
incentives to preservation a community may adopt, if
its zoning is designed to encourage high-density
development of areas containing historic resources,
such development is likely to occur. It is desirable to
incorporate historic preservation concerns into a com-
munity's zoning system, so that historic areas and
areas around key historic sites and structures are win-
ed only for development that is compatible with the
character of the historic resources. If this is not feasi-
ble, then the general plan may overlay onto the zom
ing plan a requirement for review and approval of
development schemes by an historic preservation or
architecultural design review body.
Ideally, the historic preservation component of a com-
munity's general plan should be cornprehensiz~e-- that
is, it should deal with all kinds of resources important
to understanding, appreciating, and experiencing the
community's past. This requires that the community
have at least the results of some archival research,
and usually some reconnaissance-level survey data, in
hand when it begins work on the plan. Enough should
be known to have at least a general idea about such
matters as:
• an initial formulation of historic contexts that mav_
have characterized the community's history;
• whether the community is likely to have significant
prehistoric or historic archeological resources, and
in what areas these may be concentrated;
• the general types of buildings and structures that
make up the community's built environment, and
what their major important characteristics are;
• the general locations and boundaries of likely
historic districts;
• the general nature and characteristics of any
cultural landscapes; and
• the social and cultural characteristics of the com-
munity and its neigborhoods that may influence
preservation decisions.
At the same time, it should be remembered that a
survey need not be complete to serve as the basis for
development of a preservation plan. Plans can be
developed at relatively early stages in the conduct of e
survey, as long as they provide for ongoing survey
and evaluation, and for adjustments to the plan itself
as new survey data are acquired.
68 Use of Survey Data in Planning
5'
Publications
One of the major ways in which an historic resources
survey benefits historic preservation in a community
Is that it builds public awareness of the community's
built environment and historic heritage. As the survey
progresses toward completion, increasing amounts of
information will be available to help achieve this ob-
jective. Publications using this information are an effi-
dent means of communicating preservation concerns
and recommendations to a variety of people in the
public and private sectorscommunity planners, local
decisionmakers, residents, and educators. This section
discusses ways of making survey data available to a
broad audience through a range of publications and
promotional material.
What should be published once a survey is completed?
7~he decision of what and how much to publish
depends on the community's own goals and priorities.
Among the factors to consider arc the purpose to be
achieved, the potential audience of the publication,
and the amount of money available for publication.
Communities should be aware that publication may
be the single most expensive part of the survey proc-
ess. Apublication is evidence of local commitment to
ongoing preservation activity, however, and may be
instrumental in generating enthusiasm and obtaining
support and funding for carrying out the overall com-
munity preservation plan and other preservation
projects.
A single publication that attempts to convey the full
range of detailed survey information may be over-
whelming. The general public may be interested in
some but not all of the information that is important
to the professional historian, archeologist, architect,
or planner or to local government officials. All may
be interested in the historical, architectural, and ar-
cheological resources of their community, but exten-
siae explanation of methodology, standards and
criteria, and development and alternatives for further
action may he of interest only to Limited, particular
audiences.
To make effective use of survey data, a community
may want to schedule several publications reflecting
the varied interests oI local citizens and organizations.
General interest publications can provide information
on the architectural, archeological, historical, cultural,
and environmental character of the community. Pub-
lications that can make dtizens aware of their cultural
heritage and provide the impetus for local preserva-
tion activity include summaries of local history and
prehistory, guidebooks, historic and archeological
monographs, photographic essays, illustrated selec-
tions from the inventory, and leaflets on individual
properties or areas. Other ideas include the produc-
tion of walking tour maps and posters summarizing
survey results or illustrating the community's heritage.
Publications containing more technical information
may be used to communicate the goals and methods
developed in the preservation plan to local ad-
ministrators and decisionmakers. These may sum-
marize an entire inventory, present the results of ar-
chival research, reconnaissance, or intensive survey as
overlay maps showing areas where particular kinds of
historic properties may be expected, present the
survey process and methodology, and provide de-
tailed guidelines for preservation, restoration, or
rehabilitation.
The following types of information should be pub-
lished as the results of surveys, though not necessarily
all in the same volume:
• The name of the group or agency conducting the
survey and identification of personnel involved.
• A brief introduction to preservation and explana-
tion of the reasons for undertaking the survey.
• A brief description of the historic contexts, goals,
and priorities that structured the survey.
Publications 69
• An explanation of criteria used in evaluating prop-
erties.
• An explanation of survey methodology.
• A general description of the area covered by the
survey.
• A discussion of the historic property types repre-
sentative of each historic context.
• Particularly in fhe case of a reconnaissance level
survey, a discussion of the likely locational distribu-
tions of different historic property types.
• Examples of, or a complete list of, the properties
identified. A list of some or all properties in the in-
ventory, if a large number of structures and sites are
included in the inventory, description of all the prop-
erties may prove overwhelming to the general reader.
• Illustrations of significant resources; maps, photo-
graphs, line drawings.
• A discussion of the visual and physical interrela-
tionship among environmental features, large and
small, manmade and natural. Discussion of the visual
effect of new buildings juxtaposed with older ones;
pivotal structures with ]ess important neighbors; the
relationship of buildings to open spaces. Discussion of
natural features such as rivers, bluffs, and hills which
define an area's character; also other elements such as
vistas and views, paths, focal points, edges and land-
marks, signs, graphics, landscaping, pavement,
lighting, and street furniture. Disa~ssion of pertinent
social and cultural characteristics of historic districts
and other properties.
• Outline of long and short term goals (as defined in
the preservation plan).
• Recommendations for community action based on
the survey, and discussion of techniques and strategies
for accomplishing these objectives: legal and financial
tools, sources of funding, architectural and planning
options.
• Information explaining hova the survey may result
in or affect local designations, and how the local
historic preservation commission and review process,
if any, function.
• Glossary and bibliography
• Additional planning data, such as airrent building
use, social Factors, and zoning,
• State, Federal, and local preservation activity,
related groups, and programs.
• Storage and repository systems; explanation of
where and how to find information on properties
surveyed.
What are some considerations in production and distribution of survey publication?
The primary considerations in production and
distribution are the Format and quality of the publica-
tions desired, the intended means of distribution, and
the amount of funding needed. Funding a publication
usually involves resourcefulness, imagination, and
persistence. Although a community should expect to
bear most, if not at all, of the cost of publishing,
Federal and Slate funding sources can sometimes be
helpful; the State Historic Preservation Officer should
be consulted for advice. Locally, businesses and
chambers of commerce may be persuaded to under-
write the cost of such publications; also, groups
whose members v.~ere involved as volunteers in the
survey process may wish to contribute, as may other
civic groups and clubs. Realtors and organizations of
realtors may contribute to publication, particularly
where they are active in the sale of real estate in
historic districts. Editors and designers may also be
persuaded to donate their time to production of the
publication. An alternative means of paying for
publishing costs is to obtain the services of a local
university or environmental press willing to undertake
such a publication. Bank loans may provide another
means of funding publications: though rare, the
technique has been used successfully by several
organizations.
In creating a publication, it is important to consider
format and tone. Well-designed publications will com-
municate the urgency and challenge of preservation
efforts, educate residents and local officials, and
stimulate greater visual awareness; unwieldy, verbose,
or visually unattractive publications can negate the
impact of the mast interesting and valuable body of
information. In tone, format, and content, a publica-
tion should be designed to interest as well as inform
those to whom it is directed. A well-designed publica-
tion need not be expensive: imaginative use at line
drawings, type copy, and paper color will enhance
format at relatively little cost.
Obtaining the services of a designer, and possibly an
editor, may result in a more professional-quality
publication. Ideally, editors working on the project
should have done similar work (with local historical
or environmental groups, for example), and have in-
terest or experience in preservation. Des[gners should
be familiar with paper stock, typefaces, and page
design, and be able to dea] effectively with
photographs, drawings, maps, and other graphic
material.
A punter is usually selected an the basis of bids, and
the press selected is generally the one that offers the.
70 Publications
best quality at the lowest cost. Usually a publication
schedule is not worked out until the project is well
underway, at a point when the project manager can
estimate the number of pages, amount of graphic
material, kind of paper, type of cover, and number of
copies needed.
Distribution and promotion considerations apply
primarily to general interest publications. For these
publications, alternative methods of distribution need
to be considered: whether a publication is to be
distributed free of charge G.e., to every house in a
particular area, at a lecture, tour or other event, or at
a particular location), or sold. If sold, will it be sold
by a particular organization or commercially, and at
cost or for profit?
Press releases and advertisements are useful in pro-
moting apublication. Sending review copies to the
State Historic Preservation Officer and local
newspapers, journals, and radio and television sta-
tions, and publicity copies to municipal libraries, ar-
chives, and other public information centers, may en-
courage review and display of the publication.
Thought may also be given to visual or graphic pro-
motion of the publication; posters may be placed in
post offices, grocery stores, libraries, and schools, or
copies of the publication may be displayed in store
windows.
What are some alternatives to traditional publication?
It should be stressed that there is seldom a need to
publish all the data resulting from a survey; what is
important is to make it available to those who need it
Eor planning and related purposes. The basic survey
data should he maintained in flexible, open-ended files
with appropriate catalogue systems, as discussed in
Chapter III. Publications should present summary
data, data needed to back up plans and recommenda-
tions, and material of direct public interest.
In the storage and presentation of primary survey
data themselves, micropublication may be useful and
economical. The most common form of micropublica-
Lion is microfiche, where each 4-by-6 inch plastic fiche
contains the images of up to 700 pages of text and
pictures. Commercial microfilming companies can
generally produce multiple copies at a much lower
per-page cost than printing companies. Such newer
technologies as videodisc recording should also be ex-
plored; videodisc recording is relatively inexpensive
and can handle a greater range of material than any
other form of data storage and presentation, It also
can be integrated with computer systems and used in
the analysis of data as well as in its storage and
presentation.
Publications 71
Appendix I:
Archeological Surveys
As discussed in the preceding chapters, efforts to iden-
tify archeological sites and other properties containing
important information about the pass are normal
parts of comprehensive historic resources surveys.
Some special discussion of archeology is necessary,
however, because archeological surveys require special
methods and, more significantly, because they involve
certain ways of looking at one's surroundings-and
thinking about them- that may be relatively un-
familiar.
What is Archeology?
Archeology is a systematic, scientific attempt to
reconstruct activities and social groups that have oc-
curred or existed in the past, and to see how these
have changed through time. The perspective of ar-
cheology is essentially that of history-that it we can
account for the past, we can better understand the
present and the future. Archeology, however, is
strongly influenced by the social sciences, particularly
anthropology. As a result, archeology"s attempts to
account for the past tend to be comparative and scien-
tific: archeologists try to ask definite questions about
the past, pose hypothetical answers, and test the
validity of these answers by examining comparative
data, often from many sites and areas.
Many archeological questions are of purely local or
short-term interest. For example, archeology may be
used to obtain information necessary for the accurate
restoration of a building, to check the validity of a
reported historic event, or to reconstruct the culture-
history of a particular area. The questions asked in
such studies, while they may be important in
understanding the community's history, serve no large
historical or social-scientific purpose, except to pro-
vide bodies of information that may eventually be
combined with other data in large-scale anthro-
pological or historical research. An increasingly large
segment of modern archeological research is devoted
to a search for answers to questions of major an-
thropological significance; for example, archeologists
seek to understand the effects of environmental
change and population pressure, the reasons for war,
the bases for various forms of political organization,
and the effects of change from one economic sv_ stem
to another. It is important to realize that these big
questions often require many little answers from
many little and big sites. Like any other science, ar-
cheology is less involved with spectacular discoveries
than with testing modest hypotheses about rather
humble phenomena. The accumulated results of such
tests provide the basis for large scale research. Thus,
no one should be surprised at the fact that ar-
cheologists often are more interested in small, simple,
ordinary, and seemingly redundant properties than in
big, impressive monuments.
On the other hand, not everything that an ar-
cheologist might possibly study is worth studying.
Some research questions that might be studied in a
community may be trivial, and others may have
already been effectively answered through other
research, or be better studied using other resources,
making it redundant to invest time and trouble in
seeking to study them using the community s par-
ticular archeological resources. Since archeology can
be expensive, communities should be careful in
designing the archeological components of their
surveys. The historic contexts to which archeological
data may be relevant should be carefully defined, and
decisions should be made about the research questions
that are truly significant enough to pursue, before
beginning fieldwork. The Szcretary o~ the Interio/s
Standards and Guidelines for Archeological Doaunero-
tation and Treahnent of ArdieoloAical Resources, a
publication of the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation (see [3ibliography), provide guidance in
how archeological resources may productively be ap-
proached.
Things that are of archeological importance may be
very subtle, hard to see and record. Usually it is not
artifacts themselves that are important but the loca-
tions of artifacts relative to one another. Dcetz,
Fagan, VlcHargue and Roberts, and Brace (see
Bibliography) give good basic introductions to ar-
cheological field methods.
Many, perhaps most, archeologists in the United
States specialize in prehistorir archeology, which in
this country means the study of the archeological re-
mains of American Indian societies as they existed
before substantial contact with Europeans. The Na-
tional Historic Preservation Act treats prehistory as a
part of history for purposes of national policy, and it
is treated as such in this publication-in other words,
it is assumed that a comprehensive historic preserva-
tion program should be concerned with properties
created during prehistor-ic time periods as well as with
those created since literate observers arrived on the
scene and history began in a technical sense.
At the same time, it is important not to consider ar-
cheology as only prehistory, and not to think that ar-
cheological data exist only under the ground. Ar-
cheologists are concerned not only with prehistory but
also with even the most recent past. One group of ar-
cheologists, for example, has studied industrial water
power systems form the 19th and 20th centuries in
Troy, New York, and Paterson, New Jersey, while
72 Archeological Surveys
another group has concentrated on the very recent
past by studying the garbage of modern Tucson,
Arizona, to seek understanding of changing economic
conditions and how people cape with them (Rathje
1977). Many archeologists specialize in historic ar-
cheology-that is, the archeology of sites and struc-
tures dating from time periods since significant con-
tact between American Indians and Europeans, and
some specialize in industrial archeology-the study of
sites and structures reflecting changing industrial proc-
esses and practices.
The kinds of archeological expertise needed by a par-
ticular community in its survey effort should become
apparent during the initial definition of historic con-
texts. If it appears that the community may have been
the scene of substantial prehistoric American Indian
activity, specialists in prehistory should be consulted.
If early industrial developments may be important, a
specialist in industrial archeology should be sought
out, If the processes of growth and development in
the community since the time of contact between
American Indians and Europeans may have left
evidence in the ground or in buildings or structures
that could be profitably studied by archeologists, a
specialist in historical archeology should be contacted.
The State Historic Preservation Officer and the Na-
tional Park Service Regional Offices can be of
assistance in defining the kinds of assistance needed,
and such organizations as the Society for Historical
Archeology, the Society for Industrial Archeology,
and the Society of Professional Archeologists (see p.
191 may be helpful.
The Archeology of Buildings and Structures
To an archeologist, a building or structure is a com-
plex artifact, created and used by people for activities
that reflect their social, cultural, and economic needs
and interests. The construction and organization of
the building or structure, its modification through
time, and the evidence of activities that occurred in it
may all be important. For example, the way a house
is constructed may reveal things about the builder's
perceptions of how space should be organized.
Modifications of the floor plan during the life of the
house may reveal how occupants at different times
wished to organize their life-space in response to
changes in social conditions, population size,
economic status, technology (e.g., the introduction of
electricity), and so on. The things ]eft in and around
the house by its past occupants-furniture, papers,
wallpaper, graffiti-may reveal facets of their daily
lives, interests, preferences, and beliefs. Not only may
the things themselves contain such information but
their organization within the house may indicate
things about the occupants' view of themselves and
their world. The ways in which we organize and fill
our living spaces can reveal a great deal about how
we view ourselves and wish to be viewed by others.
In industrial structures, such things as scars on the
floors left by belt-drive, marks left by the mounting
of machinery, and patterns of grease or other stains
reflecting drippage from pieces of equipment may pro-
vide evidence of vanished machinery and abandoned
industrial techniques.
The Archeology of Sites
A site is less obvious than a building I,iecause it does
not protrude above the ground. [t may, of course,
contain elements (including buildings and structures)
that do protrude above the ground. It is important to
remember that moat historic structures and buildings
are surrounded and underlain by historic arched-~
logical sites-the debris remaining from the decay or
demolition of outbuih'lings, deposition of trash, and
so on. These sites are often of value not only for
};eneral archeological research but fur developing a
detailed understanding of the buildings or struchue:~s'
that stand nn them, Other sites, of course, are not
associated with buildings or stntctures now standing.
Their buildings or statctures may have disappearedot
been roduc~d to subsurface remnants (e.g., prehistoric
village sites, many early histt~>ric structures), or they
may never have been associated with buildings or
structures (e.g., campsites, trails, battlefields, hunting
stations).
r
/!,
tmrnediatefy under a modern efeuated expressway, archeologists ex-
cavate the remains of the 19th century Henley Distillery in Boston,
Massachusetts. (Linda Gifford, Public Archeology Laboratory,
Brown University, and Massachusetts Department of Public Works)
Archeological Surveys 73
Sites are often very hard to recognize, especially for
untrained persons. Prehistoric sites are sometimes the
most difficult to notice, because they do not contain
familiar manufactured items. A prehistoric campsite,
for example, may have nothing on the surface of the
ground but a few flakes of stone resulting from the
manufacture of spear-points, and a few cracked rocks
from cooking fires. On the other hand, sites repre-
senting more recent historic periods may be hard to
recognize predsely fiecause the debris they contain is
so familiar; such a site may be represented on the sur-
face only by a scatter of bottle fragments or pieces of
porcelain or brick, indistinguishable by the untrained
eye from modern trash.
Some sites may be entirely buried making it important
to understand the geology and recent depositional and
construction history of the area being surveyed in
order to predict where such buried sites might occur.
Historical data may indicate that a particular area ex-
perienced recurrent flooding in the past that may have
buried archeological sites, including the remains of
early structures, under silt, or that an area had been
subjected to purposeful landfill. Archeologists in port
cities like New York and San Francisco have found
whole ship hulls preserved under such landfill. On the
other hand, historical data on an area's construction
history may reveal that the construction of buildings
with deep basements has penetrated the levels at
which archeological sites might be expected to be
buried, leaving little likelihood that such sites remain
undisturbed.
The Archeology of Districts
Definition of an archeological district implies not only
that sites, buildings, structures, or objects of ar-
cheological value are present but that there is some
plausible connection or relationship among them. Ar-
cheologists often define as a district the area that was
probably used by a social group in its daily activities.
For example, a watershed containing a prehistoric
village site and a number of campsites may be regard-
ed as a district on the basis of archeological and/or
ethnographic evidence that the whole area was used
for hunting, gathering plant foods, or shifting
agriculture, with the village and the campsites
representing different types of activities engaged in by
the same population. An area that was a recognizable
ethnic neighborhood in the past-for example, a
Chinaroum or the location of a free Black community
aRer the Civil War-may be defined as a district, as
may an area of definable commercial or industrial ac-
tivity such as a port area or a commercial street.
The Archeology of Objects
Archeologists are unaccustomed to thinking of the
subjects of their inquiry as objects; because the sub-
jects are almost always stationary, they are thought of
as sites instead. Objects, some still movable such as
totem poles, may have archeological value in much
the same way as do structures and buildings, in that
they may contain evidence of the way life and ac-
tivities were organized in the past. Prehistoric objects
such as isolated rocks covered with petrogylphs
(pecked or inscribed rock-art) or pictographs (painted
art rockart) are of archeological value as indicators of
religious or artistic activities and often as markers of
trails, hunting areas, social boundaries, water holes,
dangerous areas, and other aspects of the environment
that must be studied to understand prehistoric rela-
tionships between social groups and the natural
world. Such objects may also retain cultural and
religious importance to groups of American Indian ex-
traction in the community.
Selecting an Archeologist
Because of the subtlety, fragility, and complexity of
the archeological record, it is vital that an arche-
ological survey be professionally supervised and that
surveyors be fully trained. In selecting an archeologist
to supervise a survey it is important to recognize that
not all professional archeologists are equal in their
training or interests. For example, an archeologist
who has specialized in studies of prehistory may be at
a loss when confronted with the archeology of historic
buildings, structures, or relatively recent sites. As
noted above, the State Historic Preservation Officer,
regional offices of the National Park Service, and rele-
vant professional associations may be of aid in match-
ing the community's needs with available ar-
cheological expertise. The community may also find it
helpful to seek the advice of other communities that
have obtained archeological services; the State
Historic Preservation Officer and the National
Alliance of Historic Preservation Commissions (see p.
19) should be able to identify such communities and
provide information on contact people.
During the selection process, the supervisory ar-
cheologist should be made thoroughly familiar with
the purposes of the survey and the historic contexts
identified during survey planning to which ar-
cheological research may contribute.
Guidelines for the actual conduct of archeological
surveys are included in Chapter II, and references to
useful supplementary guidance are provided in the
bibliography. The State Historic Preservation Officer
should be consulted for guidelines specific to the
State. Some States have State Archeologists, separate
from the office of the State Historic Preservation Of-
ficer, who also should be contacted,
74 Archeological Surveys
Appendix II:
Federal Legislation Affecting Historic Preservation
A large number of Federal laws affect historiq preser-
vation in various ways-by authorizing Federal sup-
port for preservation programs, by establishing such
programs and defining their functions, by establishing
procedures relevant to different kinds of preservation
activities, and by creating particular opportunities for
the preservation of different kinds of resources. This
appendix briefly outlines the major pertinent legisla-
tion in existence as of 1.985, with particular attention
to the statutes most directly pertinent to local historic
preservation programs.
Since Federal law is constantly changing, communities
interested in current information on applicable
statutes should check with their State Historic Preser-
vation Officer rather then relying on the following in-
formation to be comprehensive.
Statutes directly pertinent to local preservation programs
National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amend-
ed (Public Law 89-665) 16 U.S.C. 470-470w
This Act is the centerpiece of the national historic
preservation program. As amended in 1980, it
authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to expand and
maintain the National Register of Historic Places, and
establishes procedures for doing so; provides for
gubernatorial appointment of State Historic Preserva-
tion Officers and specifies their duties; specifies how
local governments are to be certified for participation
in the program; authorizes grants-in-aid by the
Secretary of the Intertar to States and local govern-
ments For preservation purposes; sets forth respon-
sibilities for Federal agencies in historic preservation;
establishes the Advisory Council on Historic Preserva-
tion and specifies its responsibilities; and directs the
Secretary of the Interior and the Advisory Council to
conduct various studies and provide various types of
guidance and regulations. Section LO6 of the Act re-
quires Federal agencies to consider the effects of their
activities on historic properties, and Co give the Ad-
visory Council an opportunity to comment on such
activities. Importantly for local communities, as
amended in 1.980, the Act also provides for the cer-
tification of local historic preservation programs for
special participation in the activities authorized by the
Act.
The full text of the Act with al] amendments, in a
convenient brochure form, can be obtained free of
charge Erom the Advisory Council. Pertinent regula-
tions implementing various portions of the Act in-
clude 36 CFR Part 60, dealing with Nakional Register
nominations and determinations of eligibility, 36 CFR
Part 61, providing procedures for approved State and
local government historic preservation programs, and
36 CFR Part 800, providing procedures for compliance
with Section 106.
Federal Tax Law
Federal tax law supports historic preservation in two
major ways. First, investment tax credits are provided
For the substantial rehabilitakion of historic commer-
cial, industrial, and rental residential buildings, pro-
vided that both the historic significance of the
building and the professional quality of the rehabilita-
tion have been certified by the Secretary of the In-
~. r .7~
~4~ ar ~ ~~e~ ~
77It~ ~I~ I~IN bt° Wd'4 4p It'y'~gM ~P OP
4~~~dtk ~~ ~I~ ~~ 6pt x~ ;~ !~.
~rFi ~IF~I ~Mt dtlF F ww h1
~~°~~FFIFI`f! tCwlk ~"~' BM~r r~BF.B
Irr "tf lr Rte ~ entt ~g'tt"t ~~ "1f I~
~~. rn~u wmu wF'!k ~~ M~FW R~ RFC ~ ~'~"~
The Railroad Exchange Building (the Santa Fe Buiidin~, Chicago,
Illinois, has undergone a successful rehabilitation that is ronsistent
with the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation.
The owners Tuere able to take advantage of the Ras incentives pro-
vided by the 6mnornic Recovery tax Art of 1981. (Courtesy of
Santa Fe Railway)
Federal Legislation 75
tenor. Second, the law permits income and estate tax
deductions for the charitable donation of interest in
historic properties, including certified historic struc-
tures and land areas (e.g., archeological and other
historic sites).
The availability of investment tax credits for historic
rehabilitation has been a major factor in engendering
financial support for many local historic preservation
programs, and has been important in defining survey
priorities in many cases. Recent tax legislation sup-
porting historic preservation has included the Tax
Treatment Extension Act of 1980, Economic Recovery
Tax Act of 1981, Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility
Act of 1982, and Tax Reform Act of 1984. Changes to
the tax laws occur frequently, and current information
should be obtained from the State Historic Preserva-
tion Officer or the National Park Service when con-
sidering how Federal tax law may affect a particular
program at a particular time.
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (Public
Law 91-190) 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq. (1970)
This legislation obligates Federal agencies to consider
the environmental costs of their projects as part of the
Federal planning process. It provides for the prepara-
tion and review of environmental assessments and im-
pact statements during the planning of projects.
The Council on Environmental Quality promulgates
regulations for implementation of this act; these are
found at 40 CFR Part 1500 and subsequent sections of
the Code of Federal Regulations.
Housing and Community Development Act of 1974,
as amended (Public Law 93-333 as amended) 42
U.S.C. 5300 et seq.
Like the tax laws, the housing and community
development laws change frequently, and since 1974,
many provisions have been included that affect
historic preservation. In 1974, the existing law was
changed to combine a number of categorical grant
programs into a single program under which the
Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) provides Community Development Block
Grants (CDBG) to local governments, which have
broad discretion in their use. CDBG funds can be
used to support historic preservation activities, as well
as activities that may damage historic properties. The
1974 act also authorized HUD support for programs
of urban homesteading, which can provide the basis
for rehabilitation of historic residential buildings.
Subsequent amendments created such special grant
programs as the Urban Development Action Grant
(UDAG) and Housing Development Action Grant
(HoDAG) programs.
Among the unusual features of the Housing and Com-
munity Development Act, as amended, are the fact
that CDBG funds can be used as though they were
non-Federal funds to match historic preservation
grants from the Department of the Interior, and the
fad that, for purposes of the CDBG, UDAG, and
HoDAG programs, the local government that receives
the grants, not the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, is responsible for compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act and Section 106 of
the National Historic Preservation Act. Special provi-
sions dealing with historic preservation were included
in amendments dealing with the UDAG and HoDAG
programs, and have resulted in special regulations
published by the Advisory Council on Historic Preser-
vation at 36 CFR Part 801 (dealing with UDAG) and
by HUD at 24 CFR Part 850 (HoDAG).
Participation in a local government's housing and
community development program, including the pro-
vision of planning assistance in its compliance with
the National Environmental Policy Act and Section
106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, is an
important activity for many local preservation pro-
grams, which provides a context Eor the application of
survey data to local planning.
Statutes that may provide special opportunities for local preservation programs
"Surplus Reol Property Act," 1972 Amendment to the
Federal Property and Administration Services Act of
1949 (Public Law 92-362) 40 U.S.C. 484(K)(3)
This act authorizes the General Services Administra-
tion to convey approved surplus Federal property to
any State agency or municipality free of charge, pro-
vided that the property is used as a historic monu-
ment for the benefit of the public. To qualify for this
provision, the structure must be included or eligible
for inclusion in the National Register. This act is also
applicable to revenue-producing properties if the in-
come in excess of rehabilitation or maintenance costs
is used for public historic preservation, park, or
recreation purposes and the proposed income-
producing use of the structure is compatible with
historic monument purposes, as approved by the
Secretary of the Interior. The act includes recapture
provisions under which the property would revert to
the Federal government should it be used for purposes
incompatible with the objective of preserving historic
monuments.
Public Buildings Cooperative Use Act of 1976 (Public
Law 94-541) 90 STAT. 2505, 40 U.S.C. 175
This act makes it national policy to acquire structures
of historic or architectural significance for Federal of-
fice buildings, to encourage the public use of such
76 Federal Legislation
buildings by accommodating commercial, cultural,
educational, and recreational uses of them both dur-
ing and outside regular Federal working hours, and to
provide the handicapped access to them.
AMTRAK Improvement Act of 1974 (Public Law
93-496) as amended by the Rail Transportation Im-
provement Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-555) 45 U.S.C.
501
These acts authorize the Department of Transporta-
tion and the National Endowment for the Arts to
develop National Register listed railroad stations for
use as inter-modal transportation centers, or civic or
cultural centers, while preserving their historic in-
tegrity.
Emergency Home Purchase Assistance Act of 1974
(Public Law 93-449)12 U.S.C.1723e
This act authorizes Federal insurance for loans to
finance the restoration or rehabilitation of residential
structures listed in or eligible For the National
Register.
The Department of Transportation Act of 1966
(Public Law 89-670) 23 U.S.C. 138
Among other things, this act directs the Secretary of
Transportation not to approve any program or pro-
ject that requires the use of land from a historic site of
national, State, or local significance as determined by
Federal, State, or local officials having jurisdiction
thereof unless 1) there is no feasible and prudent alter-
native to the use of such land, and 2) such program
includes all possible planning to minimize harm to
such historic property. This means that the Federal
Highway Administration, the Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration, the Urban Mass Transportation Ad-
ministration, and the U.S. Coast Guard must give
special consideration to the potential effect of their
projects on historic resources whether or not the
historic resource affected is in or determined to be
eligible for the National Register.
Archeological and Historic Preservation Act of 1974
(Public Law 93-291)16 U.S.C. 469a-c
This act provides for the recovery of archeological
data that would otherwise be lost as the result of
Federal construction or other federally licensed or
assisted activities. It authorizes Federal agencies to
recover such data when their activities will lead to its
loss, and authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to
conduct such recovery operations on behalf of other
agencies and where such agencies do not do so
themselves.
Archeological Resources Protection Act of 1979
(Public Law 96-95) 16 U.S.C. 470aa-11
This act prohibits the unauthorized disturbance of ar-
cheological resources on Federal and Indian lands,
prescribes criminal penalties for such disturbance, and
authorizes the establishment of regulations setting
Forth procedures for obtaining permits. Significantly
for local preservation programs, it also prohibits in-
terstate traffic in antiquities obtained illegally from
any lands, public or private, providing a basis for
prosecution in the Federal courts of parties who ex-
cavate archeological material in contravention of local
statutes or trespass laws and move such material
across State lines.
Federal authorities of secondary interest to local preservation programs
Antiquities Act of 1906 (Public Law 59-209) 16 U.S.C.
431-33 (1970)
This act authorizes the President to designate National
Monuments and provides for the protection of historic
and prehistoric ruins and objects of antiquity located
on Federal lands.
Historic Sites Act of 1935 (Public Law 74-292) 16
U.S.C.461-67(1970)
This act gives the Secretary of the Interior the power
to make historic surveys and to document, evaluate,
acquire, and preserve archeological and historic sites
across the country.
Executive Order 11593, Protection and Enhancement
of the Cultural Environment, 16 U.S.C. 470 (Sapp. 1,
1971)
This order directs Federal agencies to take leadership
in preserving, restoring, and maintaining the historic
and cultural environment of the Nation. Federal agen-
cies must survey, inventory, and nominate all historic
resources under their jurisdiction or control (to the ex-
tent that the agency substantially exercises the at-
tributes of ownership) to the National Register. Until
these processes are completed, agency heads must ex-
ercise caution to assure that potential qualified Federal
property is not inadvertently transferred, sold,
demolished, or substantially altered. Many of the pro-
visions of this order were incorporated into the Na-
tional Historic Preservation Act by amendments in
1980.
Federal Legislation 77
Appendix III:
Legal and Financial Tools Used to Preserve and Enhance
Historic Resources
As discussed in Chapter IV, a community's preserva-
tion efforts will be best served if it adopts a com-
prehensive historic preservation plan. Such a plan
serves to guide both the community's preservation ef-
forts per se-its survey, its program of evaluation and
inventory, its programs to restore and rehabilitate
historic properties and to provide for their study, ar-
cheological salvage, and adaptive use, and its pro-
grams to encourage rehabilitation and reuse by the
private sector-as well as its efforts to ensure that
preservation concerns are addressed in development
and land-use planning. The purpose of this appendix
is to list and briefly discuss the legal and financial
tools that can be incorporated into a preservation
plan. It should be recognized that this list is by no
means exhaustive, and that new and creative uses of
financial and legal tools are being developed con-
stantly.
Legal Tools
A wide variety of legal approaches to preservation
can be tailored to meet the needs and goals of a par-
ticular community; however, any local ordinance
must recognize State constitutional restrictions, com-
mon law requirements, and existing legislation dealing
with preservation and related areas. The existence of
State enabling legislation for historic preservation can
provide a legal framework in which local governments
can base their preservation programs, commissions,
and zoning ordinances. A thorough investigation of
State and local taws, with the assistance of legal ex-
perts, is essential in determining which legal mech-
anisms are best suited to fulfilling local preservation
needs.
1. Community Historic Preservation Ordinances
Community historic preservation ordinances cover an
entire city, county, or other political subdivision.
They are often called landmarks cornmission or-
dinances because one of their major features is the
establishment of a board of review, often called a
landmarks commission, to oversee the community's
preservation program and make judgements about the
significance of resources. This terminology may be a
little misleading, however, since it implies a concern
only with landmarks rather than with the general
historic, architectural, and cultural fabric of the com-
munity. Increasingly, more general terms like historic
preservation commission are being used to describe
the bodies that oversee local preservation programs.
Historic preservation commissions are generally
responsible for designating significant individual
resources or districts in accordance with criteria
established by the ordinances under whose authority
they operate. Such ordinances also often give them
some measure of authority to control the alteration or
demolition of designated properties, and sometimes to
review the quality of new design in the vicinity of
such properties, or within historic districts. Commis-
sions sometimes are provided with staff which they
oversee in carrying out the community's overall
preservation program; in other cases, commissions are
advisory to planning departments or other agencies of
local government whose personnel carry out the day-
to-day work of the program. The degree of authority
granted to such commissions varies widely; in some
cases, properties may not be designated as historic
without the permission of their owners; in other cases,
designation depends solely on the judgement of the
commission. Some ordinances place great power in
the hands of the commission to control alteration or
demolition of designated resources, while others place
none, and still others require that the views of the
commission be taken into account in decisionmaking,
but not necessarily heeded.
Local governments seeking certification to participate
in the national historic preservation program under
Section 101(c) of the National Historic Preservation
Act must establish historic preservation commissions
by ordinance, and give them responsibilities and
authorities mirroring and coordinating with those of
the State Historic Preservation Officer with respect to
survey, nomination of properties to the National
Register, preservation planning, grants administration,
consultation with Federal, State, and local agencies to
help them avoid damaging historic properties, and
provision of education and information to the public
(36 CFR Part 61S[c][2]).
Guidelines for ordinance development can be found in
A Handbook on Historic Preservation Law (see
Bibliography), which also contains a model ordinance
and sample ordinances, and can be obtained from the
National Trust for Historic Preservation.
2. Historic District Ordinances
Historic district ordinances protect specific designated
districts-commercial, industrial, rural, or residential
areas-within a community. Such ordinances general-
ly define specific boundaries, limit development or
otherwise protect the district, and establish a review
board or commission to oversee compliance with the
~g Legal and Financial Tools
protective clauses. As is the case with community
historic preservation commissions, the degree of
authority granted to historic district commissions
varies widely; they may act simply as advisory
boards, reviewing and making recommendations on
applications for building permits Eor proposed altera-
tions, or the legislation may enable them to stay,
grant, or deny demolition, alteration, and new con-
struction. Generally, the ordinance also establishes
procedures for appealing decisions of the historic
dfstrict commission.
The discussion of ordinance creation in A Handbook
on Historic Preservation Law will be useful for those
considering creation of historic district ordinances,
and sample district ordinances are available from the
National Trust for Historic Preservation.
3. Zoning
It is particularly important that a community's
historic preservation plan is coordinated with its zon-
ing ordinance- If permissible under local and State
law, it is advantageous to create an historic preserva-
tion classification within the local zoning ordinance.
Alternatively, an ordinance could provide for the
overlay of preservation review, with reference to ar-
chitectural design or modification of existing struc-
tures, on the existing zoning of historic districts. The
important thing to strive Eor is to minimize conflict
between preservation and. existing zoning. However
urgently a community's hiskorir preservation plan
The National Park Seance has acquired scerzic easements to protect
the unique nrral character of the O!d !Jatrhez Trace. Atta7a Coun-
hr. ,btississippi, and to resb~irt rtrtdesirahle mrnmeninl development.
(Courtesy o} National Park Servicel
seeks to promote retention and rehabilitation of
historic structures, if the underlying zoning permits
conflicting uses that have the potential Eor higher
economic return, in the long run preservation will lose
out. Conversely, if preservation planning and zoning
are coordinated, they can work together to promote
the beneficial use of historic resources.
4. Easements
Easements are acquired interests in property owned. by
another. Since an easement is less than a total or fee
interest in property, it may be a cheaper means of
controlling use than outright purchase. Acquisition of
an easement which precludes a property owner from
making nonconforming alterations to the facade of his
or her historic house, for example, is a common and
often effective preservation tool. Preservation or con-
servation easements are of three general types.
a. Open Space, Conseruation, or Scenic Ease-
ments-Open space, conservation, or scenic easements
are a well recognized genera]. form of land use control
which has been used for many years in the United
States to conserve undeveloped land areas. An exam-
ple of the use of this type of easement is the National
Park Service program to acquire scenic easements to
restrict development and maintain the picturesque
qualities of lands along the Blue Ridge and Natchez
Trace Parkways. This type of easement has also been
used to control the development of lands surrounding
historic properties and to keep archeological sites safe
from development of the ]ands in which they exist.
b. Exterior or Facade Easements-Exterior or facade
easements restrict the development, use, or alteration
of the exterior portions of a building or structure.
Such easements are particularly useful where the
architectural or visual quality of the exteriors of
buildings is a major concern, Eor example, in historic
districts where the ambiance of streetscapes is impor-
tant.
c Interior Easements-Interior easements can be writ-
ten to prevent alteration of interiors of buildings or
structures. They can apply to an entire building in-
terior or to particular elements, for example, pro-
viding that the detailing in a particular room not be
altered without permission, or prohibiting the removal
of a staircase.
Potentially, easements have several advantages over
other types of less-than-fee controls:
• They may be assignable fo other parties---trans-
ferred from the original purchaser to another.
• They may run with the Iand-be binding on subse-
quent purchasers of the property affected.
I egal and Financial Tools 79
• They may be acquired through gift or purchase.
Donors of easements, and those who sell them for less
than their appraised value, may be able to deduct the
value of their donations from Federal and State in-
come and estate taxes. In addition, the sale or dona-
tion of an easement may substantially reduce the fair
market value of a property, thus allowing possible
decreases in local property taxes and other Federal,
State, and local taxes.
Implementing an easement program is not a simple
operation. The legal instruments that convey ease-
ments must be carefully drawn up, and easements re-
quire conscientious policing by their holders to insure
that the property owners are complying with them.
The following preliminary steps are important:
• Investigation of relevant Federal and State laws and
passage of enabling legislation, where necessary.
• Meticulous drafting of the legal instrument creating
the easement, accompanied by adequate documenta-
tion describing the exact qualities or conditions of the
property to be preserved.
• Careful identification of appropriate organizations
to receive, hold, and police easements. Such organiza-
tions may be agencies of local government-for exam-
ple, local preservation commissions or parks depart-
ments-or private organizations such as historical or
archeological societies. Decisions about easement re-
cipients should be explored with legal counsel,
because in many jurisdictions, the protection afforded
a property will depend on who holds the easement.
Legal counsel is vita] in the development and ad-
ministration of an easement program, because of the
need Eor the documents conveying each easement to
be sound and appropriate under Federal, State, and
local law. The validity of the entire easement program
will depend on its relationship to the existing frame-
work of State property laws.
Despite its advantages, an easement program may not
necessarily be the most effective tool for preservation
nor the most financially expedient in the long run.
Although purchase of an easement is often cheaper
than acquiring the entire fee, in some cases, the value
of the development rights of a property, for example,
may constitute the major portion of a property's fair
market value, so that the acquisition of an easement
restricting these rights would be almost as expensive
as purchasing the property itself and would require
policing.
5. Covenants and Reverter Clauses
Covenants are contractual agreements between private
parties that run with the land, thereby restricting uses
that may be made of the property. Reverter clauses in
deeds stipulate that unless certain conditions are
followed, ownership of the property involved will
return to the conveyor or to a designated third party.
Both may be used to maintain the historic integrity of
a property. When properly drafted, they may also
bind subsequent owners to abide by the conditions
contained in them.
These legal tools may be useful in purchase and resale
or leaseback arrangements where properties have been
acquired and will be later disposed of subject to the
conditions of convenants. They may be useful in
situations where property has been acquired through
eminent domain and will be later disposed of subject
to the condition of a covenant.
An advantage in using covenants is that specific pro-
visions for penalties or other remedies may be includ-
ed in them to come into effect if the terms of the
agreement are broken.
Reverter clauses lack this flexibility, providing only
for reversion of title to the conveyor or the
conveyoi s designee in event of a breach of the condi-
tions agreed to. Their use could be an inappropriate
means of attempting to enforce compliance with
preservation goals where reversion of ownership
would be a financial burden to the original seller, for
example.
It should be noted that unless covenants or reverter
clauses are very carefully drafted and contain the
precise legal elements appropriate in the jurisdiction in
which they are to apply, they may not run with the
land, i.e., be binding on subsequent purchasers. In ad-
dition, they may be difficult to enforce over a long
period of time, particularly if conditions present at the
time of the agreement have changed.
6. Transfer of Development Rights
By permitting a property owner to sell the air rights
over his or her property to another, a community can
create the basis for compensating an owner who is not
permitted to develop a parcel to what would ordinari-
ly be its maximum potential. A local ordinance per-
mitting transfer of development rights can make it
possible, for example, for the local government or a
preservation organization to exchange the right to
develop a nonhistorie parcel for the air rights over an
historic building, where otherwise ahigh-rise building
could be constructed if the historic structure is
demolished. Appraising the value of air rights when a
sale or exchange is proposed may be complicated, but
providing the opportunity for such transfers in the
design of local ordinances can make a useful tool
available for preservation in many circumstances.
7. Tax Advantages
Federal tax law at present encourages preservation
and rehabilitation of historic properties by allowing
corporate and individual taxpayers to deduct the
value of the donation of conservation easements from
their income taxes and by providing investment tax
credits (ITCs) to taxpayers who carry out certified
g0 Legal and Financial Tools
rehabilitation projects on income-producing certified
historic buildings. Many communities have found that
the Federal tax laws provide a powerful tool for local
preservation, both to encourage rehabilitation in par-
ticular parts of the community and to help build part-
nerships with developers and property owners who
might othewise be hostile to, or at least unresponsive
to, preservation concerns.
Because of the fluid nature of Federal tax law•, com-
munities should be sure to have the most up-to-date
available information on Federal tax incentives before
relying heavily on them to help build a local program.
The State Historic Preservation Officer and the
regional offices of the National Park Service can pro-
vide current information.
It should also be recognized that over-reliance on
Federal tax incentives can lead to some distortion in a
local preservation program's priorities. The fact that
Federal ITCs are available only for the rehabilitation
of income-producing property has caused some com-
munities to concentrate their attention on commercial
areas and on historic contexts relevant to commercial
buildings at the expense of other aspects of the com-
munity and its heritage. Care should be taken to
avoid ignoring other important preservation problems
and opportunities in the face of enthusiasm over the
tax advantages of rehabilitating income-producing
properties.
State and local tax laws have traditionally worked to
discourage the preservation and rehabilitation of
historic and cultural properties. This is rapidly chang-
ing in many parts of the Nation, but in formulating
preservation plans, communities should carefully
study the local and State tax codes to identify poten-
tially useful amendments. Listed below are tax incen-
tives which can work to encourage preservation:
• Tax credits or deductions on State income or prop-
erty taxes for rehabilitation and maintenance of
historic properties or for donations of easements for
preservation purposes.
• Tax credits or deductions on local property taxes.
• Abatement or partial abatement of property taxes,
i.e., partial or complete exemptions on qualified prop-
erties.
• Alternate methods of valuation, i.e., assessment of
property value on the basis of existing use or other
than fair market value.
Alternate valuation of historic and cultural properties
can help to alleviate the development pressures on
historic properties and other undeueloped areas
caused by their assessment at fair market value.
Where a property has substantial development poten-
tial, its fair market value is often much greater than
the value of the property at its existing use. IE a basis
other than fair market value can be established for
valuation, the pressure created by taxation to convert
the property to its highest and best use can be
alleviated.
Effective use of alternate methods of valuation re-
quires accurate means of assessing the value of
historic resources. These means must be developed
carefully to insure fairness and objectivity.
Tax incentives for preservation need not always be
applied on a community-wide basis, or in perpetuity.
For example, it may be appropriate to target a par-
ticular area containing a concentration of historic
buildings in need of rehabilitation, and reduce the
assessed valuation of or provide tax credits to
rehabilitated buildings in the area for a specific period
of time. The time period established and the amount
of the reduction or credit should be sufficient to
stimulate significant investment in the area; at the
same time, care must be taken to ensure that the in-
centive program is fair and does not work to the
detriment of other parts of the community.
Development of State and local programs for tax
credits, deductions, or abatement should include con-
sideration of the following factors:
• Criteria for the recognition of properties eligible for
tax credits, deductions, or abatement, such as Na-
tional Register listing or inclusion in the community
inventory.
• Definitions of activities for which credit or deduc-
tions would be allowed (kinds of rehabilitation,
maintenance, etc.).
• Amount of credit or deduction allowed per proper-
ty, per activity, or per period of time.
• Length of time for amortization of allowable ex-
penses.
• Relationship between State and local tax benefit
programs, and between these programs and the
Federal program.
8. State and Local Environmental Laws
Many States have adopted laws designed to ensure
that both the natural and cultural environments are
considered in government decisionmaking; these can
provide an important basis for the integration of
historic preservation into local planning. Such laws
are usually modelled on the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) and are referred to as State En-
vironmental Policy Acts or SEPAs in the legal
literature. SEPAs typically require the preparation of
an environmental impact report or statement
whenever a State or local goverment agency proposes
an action that might affect the environment-for ex-
ample, approval of a subdivision, issuance of a major
grading permit, provision of financial assistance to a
development, or undertaking capital construction. The
environmental impact document involves identifying
Legal and Financial Tools gj
those aspects of the environment that may be af-
fected, projecting the effects, and analyzing alter-
natives. It is then up to the government decision-
maker-the State agency, the city council, the plan-
ning boardto use the environmental document in
deciding whether to proceed with the action and iE so,
whether to adopt conditions on the action to mitigate
its effects on the environment.
Virtually every SEPA includes historic properties in its
definition of the environment that it seeks to protect,
so SEPAs can provide a powerful tool Eor use by local
governments and preservation organizations to ensure
that preservation is considered in planning. What is
often a problem in making SEPAs work for preserva-
tion is ensuring that historic properties and preserva-
tion issues are actually identified in the environmental
impact document. Here, of course, the availability of
survey data can be very important. On the other
hand, if a preservation agency or organization has a
good working relationship with the local decision-
makers who require and review environmental docu-
ments under a SEPA, it can work to ensure that
studies undertaken to prepare the environmental
documents do identify historic properties and do so in
a manner that contributes to the survey data base.
Once accurate information on historic properties and
preservation issues has been presented in an en-
vironmental document, the next problem is to en-
courage the relevant decisionmakers to consider
preservation alternatives in a positive light. Such con-
sideration will be most likely if the community has a
comprehensive historic preservation plan in place,
providing access to some or all of the preservation
tools discussed in this appendix.
Where a SEPA exists, community preservation agen-
cies and organizations will find it useful to become
familiar with its terms and how they are interpreted
by local and State decisionmakers. It should then be
possible to incorporate the use of the review process
prescribed by the SEPA into the community's historic
preservation plan. Local ordinances can also be
developed to build on the provisions of the SEPA. If
no SEPA exists, the community might consider adopt-
ing asimilar law itself. The Handbook on Historic
Preservation Law (see Bibliography) provides a useful
discussion of SEPAs and their uses, with references to
the rapidly growing literature on the topic that will be
helpful to those designing or using such laws.
9. Social Impact Ordinances
In order to minimize conflict between development
and other community interests, and to maximize
citizen participation in decisionmaking, some com-
munities have adopted ordinances providing for
analysis of the social impacts of proposed actions, and
for organized participation by affected social groups
in decisions about development and land use. Often
these ordinances provide for negotiation between af-
fected groups and development interests or govern-
ment agencies, or for mediation of disputes. The City
of Honolulu, for example, adopted an ordinance in
1981 that required the preparation of social impact
analyses in advance of development projects, in con-
sultation with affected neighborhood groups and other
interests, and the conduct of meetings with all con-
cerned parties to resolve conflicts (see Bibliography).
Social impact analysis and negotiation to resolve en-
vironmental disputes are being used increasingly at
State and Federal government levels as well, both in
the United States and in other nations (see Baldwin,
Kent, Social Irnpact Assessment, Susskind and Wein-
stein, and Talbot in Bibliography).
Because neighborhood concerns about development
and land use changes often focus on perceived injury
to neighborhood character, cultural values, and prop-
erty value, they often are closely related to, or in-
coporate, historic preservation interests. A communi-
ty's preservation agency or organization can benefit
from exploring ways to ensure that preservation in-
terests and alternatives are fully considered in social
impact analysis and the negotiation of solutions to
conflicts between development and neighborhood con-
cerns.
10. Regulating Consultant Quality
Environmental documents prepared under SEPAs,
under the National Historic Preservation Act, and
with reference to the National Historic Preservation
Act are usually done by or with the aid of profes-
sional consultants. A community can help ensure that
preservation issues will be properly considered in its
own planning and in that carried out by State and
local agencies if it finds ways to regulate the quality
of the consultants who prepare such documents.
At a minimum, consultants who prepare the historic
preservation elements of environmental documents
should be required to meet the professional qualifica-
tion standards in the Secretary of the Interior's Stand-
ards and Guidelines for Archeology and Historic
Preser-cation, and should have a demonstrated record
of doing good historic preservation work of the type
for which a consultant is needed. For archeologists, a
community may wish to consider requiring certifica-
tion by the Society of Professional Archeologists
(SOFA). SOFA reviews the qualifications of ar-
cheologists and certifies them in various specialities,
also requiring them to abide by a code of ethics and
professional standards equivalent to, but more de-
tailed than, the relevant parts of the Secretary of the
Interior's Standard and Guidelines.
Agencies and organizations interested in regulating the
quality of consultants should discuss options carefully
with legal counsel. There are strong legal strictures on
requiring consultants to be members of particular
organizations, but in most jurisdictions it is legal to
82 Legal and Financial Tools
require that an individual's professional qualifications
be certified by an organization of peers. Alternatively,
formal licensing by the local government might be
considered.
Financial Tools
1. Revolving Funds
Revolving funds are designed to provide a preserva-
tion organization with the financial capacity to buy,
sell, and maintain property without large sources of
long-term financing. They have proven to be effective
preservation techniques in a wide range of situations.
As the name implies, funds in a revolving fund
revolve; they are invested in a property, re-
covered-ideally at a profit, and invested in another.
Organizations with preservation revolving funds can
respond quickly to emergencies by purchasing en-
dangered sites or buildings directly rather than look-
ing for a sympathetic buyer or trying to raise funds
for special purchase. By buying endangered proper-
ties, the organization buys time. Buildings and struo-
tures may be rehabilitated, easements may be placed
on them, and they may be resold or leased to parties
who will maintain them. Alternatively, properties can
be transferred and rehabilitated by the new owner ac-
cording to agreements accompanying the sale. Ar-
cheological sites may be sold with covenants restrict-
ing excavation or permitting only certain kinds of
land use, or might be subjected to a program of
research excavation and then sold without restrictions
once their important data have been extracted. When
the properties are sold, the money returns to the
revolving fund and can be used again to save other
properties.
Use of revolving fund techniques places the communi-
ty or preservation organization in the real estate
market. As the organization begins to buy and sell
property, local business people begin to take note,
and if the program is successful they can develop
respect for preservation as a new economic force in
the community. Properties bought and sold gain in
value as they are rehabilitated, and the rehabilitation
itself generates other economic activity. When several
properties in an area have been bought and
rehabilitated, the area is likely to become more attrac-
tive to private investors. Bank loans may be more
easily obtained, and other property owners in the area
may begin to rehabilitate their property. The net
value is increased property values and an increased
tax base Eor the community-proof that historic
preservation can be good business.
The problems involved in establishing and operating a
revolving fund are to obtain the money to make the
initial purchases, to turn these around quickly enough
to generate momentum rather than allowing the fund
to stall with its first few projects, and to operate the
fund in a businesslike manner. Some communities use
Community Development Block Grants to establish
revolving funds, while others have obtained initial
funding through community-based fundraising efforts,
local appropriations, grants from private foundations,
and bequests. Revolving funds may also be estab-
lished on a statewide basis. The advantage of State
revolving funds is that they have a broader base of
support.
For additional information on revolving funds see
Revolving Funds for Historic Preservation, by Arthur
Ziegler, Leopold Adler, and Walter Kidney (see
Bibliography).
2. Grants
Community Development Block Grants and certain
Federal categorical grants available through the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development are
popular sources of funding for preservation activities.
Block grants have few limitations that apply to their
use, and can be applied to survey, operation of a
general historic preservation program, establishment
of revolving funds, direct rehabilitation projects, and
a wide variety of other preservation functions.
Categorical grants are typically more limited in their
application.
The State Historic Preservation Officer may be a
source of grant funds4rom the Historic Preservation
Fund managed by the National Park Service. The Na-
tional Historic Preservation Act provides Eor the pass-
through of Historic Preservation Fund money to local
governments whose preservation programs have been
certified by the State Historic Preservation Officer and
the Secretary of the Interior; these funds can then be
used at the local government's discretion for historic
preservation purposes, within guidelines established
by the National Park Service. The basic procedures to
be followed by certified local governments are
published in the Code of Federal Regulations at 36
CFR Part 61. The State Historic Preservation Officer
can also provide matching grants from the Historic
Preservation Fund for particular preservation ac-
tivities, including those carried out by local govern-
ments that have not been certified in accordance with
36 CFR Part 61, and often administers grant programs
established by the State as well.
State Arts and Humanities Councils and folkliEe pro-
grams are possible sources of funding for particular
preservation-related projects, and may be able to offer
advice about other sources. Other State funding op-
portunities are likely to be available from time to
time, often in connection with economic development
programs; it is wise to maintain contact with State
legislators to keep track of potentially useful legisla-
tion.
Grants may also be available from such Federal agen-
cies as the National Endowment for the Arts, the Na-
tional Endowment for the Humanities, and various
Legal and Financial Tools g3
agencies of the Departments of Housing and Urban
Development, Agriculture, Commerce, and Transpor-
tation, for particular project and program activities.
The availability of grants for particular purposes
changes from year to year as Congress approves new
programs and allows others to expire or remain in ex-
istence without appropriations. The State Historic
Preservation Officer should be consulted for current
information.
Private sources of grant funds can also be important.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation main-
tains avariety of grant programs, and should be con-
tacted directly to determine what is currently
available. A wide range of private foundations offer
support for activities related to preservation, ranging
from research to restoration, and some local philan-
thropic organizations specialize in supporting worth-
while projects in particular communities. The local
library or university grants office is a good place to
consult directories of foundations and other potential
private sources of grant support.
3. Contracts
Some local preservation programs contract with
Federal, State, and local agencies, private developers,
and regulated industries to carry out the surveys,
evaluations, and other studies that may be required of
them under the National Historic Preservation Act,
the National Environmental Policy Act, or relevant
SEPAs. This has several advantages; it ensures that
the work done on such studies is consistent with the
standards and policies of the local preservation pro-
gram, builds up the survey data base, can usually be
done efficiently, and helps support the local program
by covering overhead costs. The practice can lead to
real or perceived conflicts of interest if the local pro-
gram is also involved in review of the undertakings
on which it does studies. Care should be taken, and
the advice of legal counsel sought, in establishing any
such contracting operation.
4. Syndication
Syndication is an increasingly popular way of financ-
ing rehabilitation projects; it involves bringing
together investors and preservation interests into
legally constituted syndicates for the purpose of carry-
ing out a project or projects from which all will
theoretically benefit. Several large private firms now
specialize in syndication; the State Historic Preserva-
lion Office may have information on such specialists,
and may be able to advise about the applicability of
syndication to a particular project.
5. Development Bonuses
A community can encourage rehabilitation of historic
buildings or preservation of historic open space by
providing development bonuses. For example, a cor-
poration that agrees to rehabilitate certain historic
buildings as part of a development in an historic
district might be given an increase density allowance
for another part of the development. Such arrange-
ments typically involve zoning variances and are one
good reason for close coordination between historic
preservation planning and zoning.
6. Land Cost Subsidies
A community can provide a strong incentive to
rehabilitation by purchasing historic properties and
then selling them to developers at a reduced price.
Particularly in large cities with a high level of
economic activity, land prices are often among the
biggest expense items faced by a developer, and may
be a major factor in making rehabilitation less cost-
effective than demolition and construction of a larger,
taller building with greater marketable floor space. By
reducing the cost of the land through a partial sub-
sidy, the community can reduce, or even reverse, the
differential between rehabilitation and new construc-
tion.
7. Reduction in Interest Rates
Another way to encourage the private rehabilitation
of historic buildings is to reduce the interest rates on
construction loans or mortgages. Some local govern-
ments use Community Development Block Grants or
other grant funds to provide developers with low-
interest loans, while others use their revenue bond
powers to raise the necessary capital.
The use of such techniques as syndication, reduction
in interest rates, and land cost subsidies requires a
high level of cooperation among preservationists,
local government, funding sources, and the develop-
ment community. An effective community historic
preservation plan should be developed in consultation
with such interests so that these and other innovative
approaches to financing historic preservation activities
can be fully explored.
gq LeQal and Financial Tools
Appendix IV
Bibliography
Communifies may wish io consult the following
publications for further information on the identifica-
tion, evaluation, and protection of historic resources.
These publications are a sampling of the information
currently available and arc not meant to comprise an
exhaustive list. For an encyclopedic treatment of
available sourms on virtually every aspect of historic
preservation, sm the National Trust for Historic
Preservation s A(I About Old Buildings: the Whole Preser-
vation Catalogue. Washington, DC: The Preservation
Press,1985.
In the discussion below, publications are listed under six
headings:
].Survey and Planning Methodology
2. Examples of Preservation Plans
3. Preservation Tools and Strategies
4. Legal Reference Material
5. Examples of Survey Publications
6. General References
1. Survey and Planning Methodology
Essential Readings
National Pazk Service publications. The following
publication is available from the National Park Service.
For information contact the Regional Director in your
National Park Service Regional Office, or write: Associ-
ate Director, Cultural Resources, and Keeper, Nafional
Register of Historic Places, National Park Service, P.O.
Box 37217, Washington, DC 20013-7]27.
Secretary of the Interior s Standards a' Guidelines for
Preservation Planning, Identification, Evaluation, and
Registration. Federal Register, Thursday, September 29,
1983, pp. 44716-28 (48 FR 4471Er28). Available with
other standards and guidelines as the Secretary of fhe
Interior's Standards arui Guidelines for Archeology and
Historic Preservation.
State Historic Preservation Officer publications. The
following documents, either in published form or as
drafts or compilations of documents, should be avail-
able from the State Historic Preservation Officer of the
State applicable to a community planning survey. The
titles given blow arc generic.
Comprehensive Statewide Historic Preservation Plan.
Guidelines and standards applicable to the Comprehen-
sive Statewide Historic Properties Survey.
Advisory Council publications. The following publica-
fion is available free of charge from the Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation, 1100 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, 20004.
Identi fication o f Historic Properties: Decisionmaking Guide
for Managers. "Working With Section 106" series.
Washington, DC: Advisory Council on Historic Preser-
vationand U.S. Department of the interior, September
1988.
Specialized Readings
National Pazk Service publications
Eighmy, Jeffrey L. Archeomagnetism: AHandbook far the
Archeologist. Springfield, VA: National Technical
Information Scrvicc,1977. NTIS Publication No. PB 81-
175515.
King, Thomas F. The Archeological Survey: Methods and
Uses. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office,
1978. Stock No. 024-016-00091.
Lyons, Thomas R., and Thomas E. Avery. Remote
Sensing: A Handbook for Archeologists and Cultural
Resource Managers. Springfield, VA: National Technical
Information Scrvim,1977. NTIS Publication No. PB 88-
201694.
Mclnick, Robert Z., Daniel Sponn, and Emma Jane Saxc.
Cultural Landscapes: Rural Historic DisMcts in the National
Park System. Springfield, VA: National Technical
Information Scrvicc,1977. NTIS Publication No. PB 85-
106037 (Note: This publication deals not only with the
National Park Service, but also provides comprehensive
guidelines for identifying and evaluating rural historic
disMcts).
Morris, Stephen A. "Zoning and Historic Preservation."
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior,
National Park Service, Interagency Resources Division,
Local Preservation Scries,1989.
Salwen, Bert, and Geoffrey Gyrisco. Archeology of Black
Ameriutn Culture: An Annotated Bibliography. Washing-
ton, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park
Service, Interagency Archeology Services, n.d.
Talmage, Valerie, and Olga Chesler. The Importance of
Small, Surface, and Disturbed Sites as Resources of Signifi-
cant Archeological Data. Springfield, VA: National
Technical Information Service, 1977. NTIS Publication
No. PB 270930/AS.
I3ibliograPhY Si
Cultural Resources in Massachusetts: AModel forManage-
ment. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior,
Interagency Resources Division, Preservation Planning
Series, August 7979.
Historic Preservation Certifications Pursuant to the Tax
Reform Act of 1976, The Revenue Act of 1978, The Tax
Treatment Extension Act of 7980, and The Economic
Recovery Tax Act of 1981. Codified as 36 CFR Part 67
National Register of Historic Places: Criteria for Statewide
Historic Surveys and Plans. 36 CFR Part 60.
National Register of Historic Places Bulletins-pcriodi-
callyissued practical guides to aspects of the nomina-
tion process. U.S. Department of the Interior, National
Park Service, Interagency Resources Division, National
Register of Historic Places, P.O. Box 37127, Washington,
DC 2()013-7127.
National Register Bulletin 4: Contribution of Moved Build-
ings to Historic Districts.
National Register Bulletin 5: Tax Treatments for Moved
Buildings.
National Register Bulletin 7: Definition of Boundaries for
Historic Units of the National Park System.
National Register Bulletin 8: Use of Nomination Documents
in the Part I Certi fuation Process.
National Register Bulletin 12: Definition of National Register
Boundaries for Archeological Properties.
National Register Bulletin 13: How to Apply National
Register Criteria to Post Offues.
National Register Bulletin 15: How to Apply the National
Register Criteria for Evaluation.
National Register Bulletin 16: Guidelines for Completing
National Register of Historic Places Fauns. 16A: Haw to
Complete the National Register Registration Form and 16B:
Hcnu to Complete the National RebtisterMultiple Property
Documentation Form.
National Register Bulletin 17: Certification of Stateand local
Statutes and Historic Districts.
National Register Bulletin 18: How fo Evaluate and Nomi-
nate Designed Historic Landscapes.
National Register Bulletin 19: Policres acrd Procedures for
Processing National Register Nominations.
National Register Bulletin 20: Nominating Historic Vessels
and Shipwrecks fo the National Register of Historic Places.
National Register Bul/etin 21: How fo Esfab}ish Boundaries
for National Register Properties.
National Register Bulletin 22: Guidelines for Evaluating and
Nominating Properties That Have Achieved Significance
Within the Cast Fifty Years.
National kegister Bulletin 23: How to Improve the Quality of
Photos for National Register Nominations.
National Register Bulletin 24: Guidelines for Local Surveys:
A Basis for Preservation Planning.
National Register Bulletin 26: Certified Local Governments in
the National Historrc Preservation Program.
National Register Bulletin 28: Using the UTM Grid System
fo Record Historic Sites.
National Register Bulletin 29: Guidelines for Restricting
Information about Historic and Prehistoric Sites.
National Register Bulletin 30: Guidelines for Evaluating and
Documenting Rural Landscapes.
National Register Bulletin 32: Guidelines far Evaluating and
Documenting Properties Associated With Significant
Persons.
National Register Bulletin 34: Guidelines for Evaluating and
Nominating Historic Aids to Navigation.
National Register Bulletin 35: National Register Casebook
Examples of Documentation.
National Register Bulletin 38: Guidelines for Evaluating and
Documenting Traditional Cultural Properties.
National Register Bulletin 39: Researchinga Historic
Building.
Publications of others.
Adams, Katherine. Investing in Volunteers: A Guide to
Effective Volunteer Management. Washington, DC: The
Preservation Press, ] 985.
American Folklife Center. The Process of Field Research:
Final Report on the Blue Ridge Parkway Folklife Project.
Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1981.
Bartis, Peter T. Folklifeand Fieldwork A Layman's Intro-
duction to Field Techniques. Washington, DC: American
Folklife Center, 1979.
Blumenson, John J. G. IdentifyingAmerican Architecture:
A Pretoria! Guide to Styles and Terms, 1600-1945. Nash-
ville, TN: American Association for State and Local
History, 1981.
Brace, Paul. Archaeological Resources and Land Dwelop-
ment: AGuide to Assess Impact. Washington, DC: Ameri-
canSociety of Landscape Architects, Landscape Archi-
tecture Technical Information Series 7,1984.
Bd Ilibliography
Bureau of land Management Visual Resource Mar~.ae-
ment Program. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the
Interior, Bumau of Land Management, n.d.
Bureau of Land Management, Social Effects Project.
Guide to Social Impact Assessment. Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Manage-
ment,1982.
Cerny, James W. "Scenic Analysis Assessment" Critical
Reviews in Environmental Control, 4:2. June 1974.
Clay, Grady. Close-Up: How to Read the American City.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980.
Collier, John, Jr. Visual Anthropology: Photography as a
Research Method. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston,
1967.
Dunaway, David K., and Willa K. Baum, eds. Oral
History: An Interdisciplinary Anthology. Nashville, TN:
American Association for State and Local History,1984
Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Historic
Preservation Section. Historic Preservation Handbook.
Atlanta: Georgia Department of Natural Resources,
1976.
Getzels, Judith, and Charles Thurow, eds. Rural arul
Small Town Planning. Chicago: American Planning
Association, 1978.
Hams, Cyril M. Historic Architecture Sourcebook. New
York: McGraw-Hi11,1977.
Ives, Edward D. The Tape-Recorded Interview: A Manual
for Field Workers in Folklore and Oral History. Knoxville
University of Tennessee Prcss, 1980.
Jacobs, Alan B. Making City Planning Work. Chicago:
American Planning Association, 1978.
Jackson, Donald C., and T. Allan Comp. Truss Br¢lge
Types: A Guide to Dating and Identifying. Technical Lea0et
No. 95. Nashville, TN: American Association for State
and Local History, 1977.
Jolly, Brad. Videotaping Local History. Nashville, TN:
American Association for State and Local History,1982
Kidder-Smith, Gwrge E. Architecture of the United States.
New York: Doubleday, 1981.
King, Thomas F., Patricia P. Hickman, and Gary Bcrg.
Anthropology in Historic Preservation: Caring for Culture's
Clutter. New York: Academic Press, 1977.
Kyvig, David E., and Myron A. Marty. Nearby History:
Exploring the Past Around You. Nashville, TN: American
Association for State and Local History, 1982.
Library of Congress. National Union Catalogue of Manu-
script Collections. Washington, DC: Library of Congress,
1959-84.
Liljlcbad, Sue Ellen, and Charles M. Brown. A Guide fo
Historic Preservation Research and Preservation Planning in
Alaska. Anchorage: Office of History and Archeology,
Alaska Division of Parks, 7976.
Lynch, Kevin. The Image of the City. Cambridge: MIT
Press, 1960.
. What Time is This Place? Cambridge: MIT
Press, 7972.
MacFarlane, Alan. Reconstructing Historical Communities
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977.
Mantell, Michael A., Stephen F. Harper, and Luther
Propst. Creating Successful Communities: A Guidebook to
Growth Management Studies. Washington, DC: Island
Press, 1990.
Massachusetts Historical Commission. Archeology and
Public Planning. Boston: Massachusetts Historical
Commission, 1976.
. Historic Properties Survey Manual. Boston:
Massachusetts Historical Commission, n.d.
Massey, James C. How to Organize an Architectural
Survey, rev. ed. Washington, DC: National Trust for
Historic Preservation, 1971.
Mayer-0akes, William J., and Alirn W. Portnoy, eds.
Scholars as Contractors. Washington, DC: U.S. Govern-
mcntPrinting Office,1979. Stock No.024-016-00707-9.
McAlester, Virginia and Lce. A Field Guide to American
Houses. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1984.
McKee, Harley]. Recording Historic Buildings. Washing-
ton, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.
Morgan, William N. Prehistoric Architecture in the Eastern
United States. Cambridge: MIT Press, 7980.
Mueller, James W., ed. Sampling in Archeology. Tuscon:
University of Arizona Press, 1975.
Murtagh, William J. "The Meaningful Assessment of the
Built Environment" Architectural Preservation Forum,
December ]979.
Murtagh, William J., and Ciulio C Argon. Historic
Districts: /dentifrcation, Social Aspects, and Preservation.
Washington, DC: National Trust for Historic Prcscrva-
tion,1975.
[3ibliography g7
National Historical Publications and Records Commis-
sion. Directory of Archives and Manuscript Repositories.
Washington, DC: National Historical Publicatons and
Records Commission, 1978.
National Research Council, Environmental Studies
Board. Assessing Cultural Attributes in Planning Water
Resources Projects: Report of the Panel on Cultural Attributes
in Water Resources Projects. Washington, DC: National
Research Council, 1982.
Nevada Division of Historic Preservation and Archaml-
ogy. Procedures Manua] for Compiling a Statewide Inven-
tory of Cultural Resources. Carson City: Nevada Depart-
ment of Conservation and Natural Resources, ]978.
New York State Parks and Recreation, State Board for
Historic Preservation. Historic Resources Survey Manual,
rev. ed. Albany: New York State Parks and Recreation,
1974.
Poppeliers, John, S. Allen Chambers, and Nancy B.
Schwartz. What Style Is It? Washington, DC: The
Preservation Press, 1977.
Rudofsky, Bcmard. Streets for People: A Primer fur
Americans. Carden City, NY: Doublcday,1969.
Society for American Archeology. "Guidelines for the
Preparation and Evaluation of Archwlogical Reports; °
Chapter 3, The Management of Archeological Resources: The
Airlie House Report. Washington, DC: Society for Ameri-
can Archeology, 1977.
South Dakota Office of Cultural Preservation. Historic
Sites Survey Handbook. Vermillion, SD: Office of Cultural
Preservation,1973.
State I-Iistorical Society of Colorado. GuidelimsHistory
and Archerology. Denver: State Historical Society of
Colorado, n.d.
. So-You Have a Nomination to the National
Register. Denver: State Historical Society of Colorado,
1973.
Stokes, Samuel N., Elizabeth Watson, Genevieve P.
Keller, and J. Timothy Keller. Saving America's Country-
side: AGuide to Rural Conservation. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1989.
Texas Historical Commission. Resource Planning Process
for Texas. Austin: Texas Historical Commission, 7981.
Townsend, Frederick E. "A Selected and Annotated
Bibliography on the Remote Sensing of Historical and
Archeological Sites." In Historic Preservation and the
Cultural Landscape: An Emergency Ia' Use Planning
Concern. Edited and compiled by William H. Tishler and
Randy Garber. Madison: Department of Landscape
Architecture/ Environmental Awareness Center,
University of Wisconsin, 1976.
U.S. Geological Survey. Guide to Obtaining USGS Informa-
tion. Circular 900, Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
the Interior, U.S. Gwlogical Survey, 1985.
Weinstein, Robert A., and Larry Booth. Collection, Use and
Care of Historical Photographs. Nashville, TN: American
Association for State and Local History, 1977.
Weitzman, David. Traces of the Past: A Field Guide fo
History on Your Doorstep. New York: Scribnci's, 1980.
Wells, Camille, cd. Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture.
Annapolis, MD: Vernacular Architecture Forum, 1982.
Whiffen, Marcus. American Architecture Since 1780: A
Cuule to Styles. Cambridge MIT Press, ]981.
Whiffen, Marcus, and Frederick Koeper. American
Architecture 1607-1976. Cambridge: MIT Press, ]981.
White, William H., Jr. The Social Li fe of Small Urban Spaces.
Washington, DC: The Conservation Foundation, 7980.
Wiggington, Eliot, ed. The Foxfi're Book. Garden City, NY:
Doubleday, 1972 (subsequent volumes published
semiannually-annually).
Wright, Russell. A Guide to Delineating Edges of Historic
Districts. Washington, DC: National Trust for Historic
Prescrvalion,1976.
2. Examples of Preservation Plans
Since prexrvation plans arc not always published, it is
often not easy for those outside the community or State
to which they apply to review them. Copies of some
State Historic Preservation Plans are available from the
National Park Service by inquiring of the Regional
Director serving your area. To dote-mine the availability
o(prescrvation plans discussed below, it is suggested
that the relevant State Historic Preservation Offimr be
contacted. State Historic Preservation Offimr addresses
can be found in Appendix V.
Since preservation plans often have multiple authors or
compilers, or do not list authors as such, the following
plans arc listed in alphabetical order by title.
An Archaeological Preservation Plan for Charleston, South
Carolina, by Martha Zierdcn and Jeanne A. Calhoun.
Charleston, SC: Charleston Museum Archaeological
Contributions No. 8, 1984.
Based on extensive archivaY research and study of the
results of archeological excavations carved out in
advance of construction projects in various parts of the
88 i3ibliography
city, this study identifies the general locations in which
different kinds of historic archeological resources
(remains of fortifications, antebcllumplanters homes,
commercial establishments, piers, slave and free black
residences, etcJ are likely to be found underground, and
indicates them on maps.lt goes on to outline a series of
research questions to guide archaeological research in
the city. Recommendations for linking archeological
studies with planning arc relatively weak, but the
volume is a good example of the mobilization of
archival and archeological data to indicate where
development planning should exercise caution to avoid
dama~~ing archeological resources.
Austin Historic Preseroation Plan. Charles Hall Page and
Associates, Inc. San Francisco: Charles Hall Page and
Associatcs,198fl.
This plan, prepared on the basis of relatively little
survey data, provides a basis for further survey and
inventory work. The plan focuses solely on architecture,
without discussion of archmlogical resources. It pro-
vides an overview of the city's history, and goes on to
discuss such preservation tools as the use of building
codes, tax incentives, and zoning. It proposes the
establishment of acity-wide inventory program, and
offers implementation recommendations. Appendices
are provided on local architatural styles, standards for
granting certificates of appropriateness, and rehabilita-
tion guidelines.
The Cache River Archeological Project: An Experiment in
Contract Archeology. Michael B. Schiffer and John H.
House, assemblers. Fayetteville, AR: Arkansas Archeo-
logical Survey Research Series No. 8,1975.
A classic study involving the use of archival research
and controlled sample field surveys to determine the
probable distribution and nature of archeological sites
over a large (approximately 2,000 square mile) rural
area, this plan was stimulated by proposed Flood control
construction projects of the U.S. Army Corps of Engi-
neers. Similar techniques could be applied to the study
of archeology of a rural county or other substantial land
area. The project was not an intensive archmlogical
survey; instead it focused specifically on prehistoric
archwlogy, guided by an explicit research design.
Several aspects of the Cache River Project arc discussed
in Schiffer's and Cummerman's Consenration Archeology.
College Hill Demonstration Study. Providence, RI: City
Planning Commission in cooperation with the Provi-
dence Preservation Society and the Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 1967.
Onc of the earliest comprehensive plans for renewal of a
historic area based on a survey, this study has served as
4he model for many subsequent surveys. It includes an
excellent section on the area's historic architecture and
on the cil}~s development. Careful analysis of the
physical, social, and economic charactcrisfics of the azea
provides the basis for general and detailed proposals. Its
numerical evaluation system has also been a model for
others; the scope and timetable of overall mnewal
programs are developed and detailed. The design
proposals seem outdated, but do not mitigate the
historical importance of this study.
Cultural Resources in Massachusetts: A Model for Manage-
ment. Massachusetts Historical Commission. Washing-
ton, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior, 1979.
The first comprehensive State Historic Pmservation
Plan developed along the lines advocated by the
National Park Service in its Resource Protection Plan-
ning Process (RP3), this is still among the most available
example of such a plan. It provides a description of
methodology and orientation, an overview of the State's
history leading to the establishment of historic contexts
(study units), an evaluation of the levels of existing
knowledge concerning different classes of resources,
and patterns of their destruction, leading to the identifi-
cation of needs for policy changes and the establishment
of preservation priorities.
Cultural Resources Management Plan for Killers Pond State
Park, by Cara L. Wise. Dover, DE: Delaware Division of
Parks and Recmation, ]984.
This brief publication is a good example of a simple plan
for the pmservation of historic (in this case, all amheo-
logicaU resources in a lightly developed recreation area
of modest size. The plan is based on an intensive survey
of the park, which is reported in the publication. The
plan outlines priorities for preservation in place and
prescribes a series of decision-making steps to be
followed in the event a project is planned that might
disturb the archeological site. It goes on to set forth a
modest interpretive plan, including preparation of a
flyer and additions to a nature trail.
Green Springs, Louisa County, Virginia A Land Use Study.
Meade Palmer. Warrenton, VA: 1973.
This study presents a land use plan for a rural historic
area which includes a brief section on the communit~s
historical development, landscape character, and its
visual and architectural character. The study focuses
primarily on a physical survey of the land (geology,
soils, hydrology, etc.) as these suggest the parameters
for future development.
Hampton: An Archeological and Historical Overrrieru of a
Proposed Strip MineTract in South Central Arkansas.
Timothy C. Klinger, assembler. Fayetteville, AR:
Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Report l9,
1979.
This study is an example of the use of archival research,
interviews with local residents and artifact collectors,
Bibliography 89
and very small-scale field reconnaissance to develop
initial predictions about the nature and distributions of
historic propertes in a rural area of about 36,000 acres.
Although the study was motivated by an impending
coal surfam mine, the approach would be applied in
other circumstances involving areas of similar scale and
type. See also Settlement Predictions in Sparta.
Historic and Archeological Resources of the Boston Area.
Boston: Massachusetts Historical Commission, 1982.
A fallow-up study to the Massachusetts Model for
Management (sm above), this study focuses on Boston
and its hinterland. It is comprehensive in that both the
existing built environment and the subsurface archeo-
logical resources are examined in all communities of the
area, using archival research and compilation of data
from numerous surveys of particular areas. General
locations in which different kinds of historic properties
representing different aspect's of the area's history and
prehistory are likely to be found arc identified. Gencrali-
zationsarc offered about the patterns of property
survival that characterize urban cores versus peripher-
ies. Recommendations are largely directed toward the
Massachusetts Historical Commission itself, but some
recommendations are offered for management of
particular areas and kinds of resourms in particular
political subdivisions. The approach is strongly rr
scarchoriented, as it is designed to guide the
Commission's survey efforts. As a general management
document, it seems to give short shrift to the social and
humanisfic value of historic properties. This emphasis
does not detract from its value, however, as an example
of how archival and partial survey data on a large,
dynamic urban area can be organized to provide
structure to an ongoing survey effort.
Historic and Architectural Conservation Element. San Luis
Obispo, CA: City of San Luis Obispo, n.d.
This plan, an official clement of the city's general plan,
represents the history of the development of the city,
and organizes the discussion of the cit}~s urban environ-
mentaround the architectural styles represented there.
It identifies critica] structures and general areas of
conservation concern. It analyzes potential opportuni-
ties for and constraints on preservation, and rccom-
mendscity policies and altcrnafives.
Historic Richmond, Toward Architectural Preseroation.
Richmond, IN: City Planning Commission,1970.
A publication designed for a community with little
preservafion acfivity, this report covers the survey of
Richmond's architecture and history and includes a
survey of resident and tourist attitudes. It also outlines
the range of preservation activities available to the
communities and recommends which of these should be
undertaken. The report also indudcs a good section on
legal controls for preservation purposes.
Historic Survey and Appendix. San Antonio, TX: City
Planning Dcpartment,1972.
Primarily a visual study intended to stimulate greaten
awareness of the visual quality of the city, this study
employs photography extensively: shots of single
buildings, details, and streets. The appendix explains
survey methodology, cataloguing and use of data-index
cards and maps, and evaluation system. Its broad
survey criteria include natural and archeological
resources as well as buildings. The appendix also
includes a comprehensive Becton entitled "Historic
Preservation and the Law for San Antonio;' which
trams the effects of Federal, State, and municipal laws
that relate to preservation conmms and the amount of
latitude these laws allow.
Iliruaster's Heritage. Lancaster, PA: Lancaster County
Planning Commission, 1972.
This study is an example of preservation at the county
level. The study clearly defines the reasons for preserva-
tion; presents Federal, State, and local preservation
activities, and includes selected examples from a
county-wide inventory of historic sites. It includes good
summaries of Icgal controls and education efforts.
Chapter 7 emphasizes the importance of area preserva-
tionand idenfifies four kinds of areas: major significance
areas, significant areas, interest areas, and large rural
historic areas. The final chapter defines the need for a
county-wide program to encourage mrai and commu-
nity preservation. Coals suggested for planning com-
missionsinclude the development of zoning ordinances,
restructured tax systems, and environmental review
procedures.
Marshall, A Plan for Preservation. Marshall, MI: Marshall
Historical Society,1973.
This publication presents the results of a community
architectural survey. An explanation of local architec-
tural styles and an explanation of the methodology of
the survey are emphasized. Based on the survey,
treatment areas are suggested and long and short range
activities for community preservation arc recom-
mended. The book is outstanding for its graphic quality.
Our Lasting Heritage: An Historical and Archeological
Preservation Plan for Central Solana County. Solano
County, CA: Central Solano County Cultural Heritage
Commission, ]977.
An example of a plan for a largely agricultural county,
addressing both architectural and archeological re-
sources, this plan was developed largely by local people
with professional assistance. Based on partial survey
data, the plan organizes information on known historic
properties with reference to chronological periods from
the Indian Presence through Recent History and
describes the known resources of different cities and
40 Bibliography
parts of the county. It goes on to present an action
program for the Cultural Heritage Commission that
emphasizes public education, regulation of develop-
ment, and research.
Pioneer Square Historic District Plan. Seattle, WA: Office
of Urban Conscrvation,1974.
A sophisticated study of a recognized historic commer-
cialdistrict, this plan includes careful analysis of the
existing urban setting. Space use, parking, traffic,
transportation, resident population, and housing
provide the basis for development proposals. Commu-
nications guidelines and project specifications for
continued redevelopment of the area are also included.
A Plan for Historic Preservation in Denver. Robert Carper.
Denver, CO: Denver Planning Office, 1974.
This series of publications mvcrs a comprehensive
program for municipal preservation activities. The plan
itself is intended for use by various councils, commis-
sions,agencies, and citizens' groups. Besides explaining
inventory criteria, the publication includes sections on
preservation at national, State, and local levels, preser-
vation philosophy, various kinds of prescrvaton
legislation, ordinances, and preservation financing. It
also outlines methods used to accomplish preservation
objectives. Appendices include an "Inventory of Denver
Architecture; "'Survey Manual; "'Procedural
Manual;'and 'Troject Record"
Prehistoric Resources of Easf-Central New England: A
Preliminary Predictive Study. Dena F. Dincauze and
Judith Mcycr. Washington, DC U.S. Department of the
Interior, National Park Service, Interagency Archeologi-
cal Services, 1976.
This study presents a regional overview based on
background research into prehistoric environments,
documentation of known prehistoric site distributions,
and ethnographic settlement patterns. Projections of
possible differential sensitivity areas arc made, and
impacts of past, current, and probable future programs
of land modification arc discussed. State laws and
programs are analyzed for effectiveness in dealing with
such impacts, and recommendations are offered.
Preservation and Rehabilitation of a Historic Carnmercial
Area: A Demonstration Study of a Water front Historic
District. New Bedford, MA: Ncw Bedford Development
Authority in cooperation with the Ncw Bedford City
Planning Department and the Waterfront Historic Area
Lcagvc,1967.
This study is one of the first comprehensive design
plans based on the area's existng physical and historic
character. It includes a summary of the area's historic
development, background information on historic
prescrvaton, a statement of goats, specific design
recommendations and developmental standards, a
summary of methods of implementation, and an
analysis of relative costs and benefits.
Preservation Plan, Lowell, Massachusetts. Lowell: Lowell
Historic Preservation Commission, 1980.
This is an example of a plan for a small tity with major
historical interpretive opportunities, in this case, the
Local Historic Preservation District, being developed by
the National Park Service for the interpretation of the
Industrial Revolution in the nineteenth century. The
major strength of this plan lies in the way it shows how
park interpretive development can be integrated with,
and made supportive of, community development and
the maintenanm of sooal and architectural integrity.
The plan promotes incentives for maintenance and
rehabilitation of buildings in and around areas to be
interpreted, and active involvement of the community
in all aspects of the interpretive program.
Riverfront Development Plan and Historic Preservation Ptan.
Jefferson County, MO: Planning and Zoning Conunis-
sion,1970.
This planning study includes the history and analysis of
development potential of rivcrfront areas. A historic
district is proposed (and a copy of an ordinance in-
cluded)based on initial identification of historic sites
and areas. The best section, however, includes analysis,
recommendations, and proposals for revitalizing
rivcrfront areas. Techniques discussed include acquisi-
tion of easements.
The Russell Wright Report. Alexandria, VA: Department
of Planning and Regional Affairs, 1970.
The report is a complete examination of the rating
system used in evaluating the architectural significance
of buildings in historic Alexandria, and in developing
priorities for pmserving them.
Sacramento "Old City": A Preservation Program. Sacra-
mento, CA: Sacramento Historic Structures Advisory
Commission, 1974.
Prepared before substantial survey had been under-
taken, this plan establishes goals and objectives for the
city historic preservation program, and recommends
actions to facilitate survey, registration, and a variety of
protective activities and incentives to encourage reha-
bilitation.
Salem, Massachusetts, Historic Area Study. Salem: MA:
Salem Planning Board and Massachusetts Department
of Commerce, 1963.
One of a series of eight reports of a communit)/s
comprehensive planning programs, this report trams
the development of the area, maps buildings by style,
Bibliography 9t
evaluates their quality, and defines potential conscrva-
tionareas. The report also includes a general land use
and circulation plan, makes specific recommendations
with regard to the regulation of historic districts, and
outlines development options in the historic areas
(which are covered in greater detail in some of the other
reports).
The Sautee and Nawochee River Valleys: A Preservation
Study, by Allen D. Stovall, ASLA. Sautee-Nacoochm,
GA: SautcrNacoochee Community Association, ]982.
This award-winning study approaches the historic
resources of two rural Georgia valleys from a mmpro-
hensive standpoint guided by the principles of land-
scape architecture. Archival and field data on archeol-
ogy, history, architecture, land use, scenic qualities, and
natural resources are systematically organized and
combined to provide a composi to picture of the valleys'
cultural values. Threats to their integrity and legal and
financial opportunities for control of threats are cam
fully analyzed. Extensive community involvement in
the study is documented. A comprehensive and detailed
preservation plan is the result, containing both general
and specific recommendations for actions by individuals
and local, county, and State governments to restrain
dove-opment and ensure that it is compatible with the
historic and cultural character of [he two valleys.
Settlement Predictions in Sparta, by Robert H. Lafferty III,
et. al. Fayetteville, AR: Arkansas Archeological Survey
Research Series No. 14, ]981.
A follow-up study to the Hampton report (scr above),
this publication further documents archival research
and a ]0`% sample field reconnaissance, resulting in a
sophisticated prediction of the distribution of historic
properties of different types throughout the 36,000 acres
study area.
Southampton Village: Planning for Preservation. New York:
Buckhurst Fish Hutton Katz for Southampton Associa-
tion,1983.
This is an example of a plan developed by a concerned
community organization in response to perceived
threats. The Southampton Association was concerned
about a proposed master plan that called for substantial
expansion of retail marketing in certain historic areas of
the community, and arranged for development of a
prescrvafion plan to analyze alternatives. The plan
summarizes the communit}~s historical development,
describes historic and existing patterns of land use,
discusses the specific issues for historic preservation
raised by the master plan, and offers recommendations
for economically viable alternatives that will preserve
historic properties, architectural design qualities,
Farmland, open space, and beach access.
The Southern Santa Clara Valley: A General Plan for
Archeology. Thomas F. King and Patriaa P. Hickman.
San Francisco: A.E. Tmganza Anthropology Museum,
San Francisco State University, 1973.
This plan is a regional archeological study designed to
assess the indirect impacts of a large water importation
project. Background research and sample fieldwork
permitted the prediction of canes of differential sensitiv-
ityfor prehistoric sites, and a more general discussion of
historic properties. Pertinent Federal and State laws and
the general plans of local counfies and cities are ana-
lyzed, leading to recommendations for planning actions
to protect all kinds of archeological properties A
summary discussion of the project is provided in
Schiffer and Gummcrman's Conservat{on Archeology (see
General Sources below).
The Tulsa Historic Preservation Ptan Report. Tulsa, OK:
Tulsa Historic Preservation Office, 1980.
Based on architectural surveys, this plan identifies 17
historic preservation areas in the city, and prescribes
achievable preservation targets and policies for achiev-
ing them. It outlines legal and financial implementation
tools applicable to each.
Urban Design and Historic Preservation for Columbia.
Columbia, SC: Central Midlands Regional Planning
Council and the City of Columbia, 1974.
This study explains and illustrates proposed designs for
scleded historic areas of the city. Emphasis is on linMng
several discrete areas through the use of improved
landscaping, street furniture, etc., on the mnnecHng
streets.
Urban Design Plan. San Francisco, CA: San Francisco
Department of City Planning, 1972.
This plan was prepared as a result of a two-year study
by the Department of City Planning as a part of a master
plan to guide public and private development as it
affects the design of the city. Based on studies by varied
consultants, resident polls, and other planning studies,
four topics were selected as important: city pa ttem,
conservation, major new development, and neighbor-
hood environment. Each of these receives in~epth
study in this publication, based on a review of human
needs, a statement of overall objective, a description of
fundamental principles, and formulation of policies.
Sections of principles and policies could provide models
for other communities.
The Urban Design Plan, Historic Hill, Newport, Rhode
Island. Newport, Rhode Island: Redevelopment Agency
of the City of Newport, 1971.
A detailed plan for a historic city center based on
thorough survey and analysis of the city's architec-
92 Bibliography
ture, public spaces, roads, signs, etc., this study
includes consideration of land and building uses,
architectural and historical significance, and struc-
tural conditions that provide further basis for design
proposals. Good statements of preservation and
development objectives and design criteria arc
included, as well as maps and sketches for individual
areas and properties.
Vieux Caere Historic 17istrict Demonstration Study. Vols 1-
7. New Orleans, LA: Bureau of Government Research
for the City of New Orleans, 1968.
An extremely thorough study in seven volumes, the
plan and program for the preservation of Vieux Cane is
supplemented by a series of more technical publications:
(1) Environmental Survey, (2) Legal and Administrative
Report, (3) Economic and Social Study, (4) Vieux
Carre-Its Plan, Its Growth, and Its Architecture, (5)
Central Business District Traffic Study, (6) Eva]uation of
4he Proposed Riverfront Expressway. The main plan
and program include a brief review of Volume D, the
history of architecture of the Vieux Carre.
Woodbury, Connecticut, A New England Townscape.
Woodbury, CT: Old Woodbury Historical Socicty,1975.
A small, handsome study of a rural New England town
intended to generate local interest in preservation, this
study includes a discussion of the specific aspects of the
townscape, amenities, land use, and historic character
are based on a community survey. The study also
explains the survey itself, summarizes the economics of
local preservaton, and recommends a program of
historical research and cultural rural landscape study.
3. Preservation Tools and Strategies
National Pazk Service publications
Curtis, John Obed. Moving Historic Buildings. Spring-
field, VA: National Technical Information Service, ]979.
NTIS No. PB 85-180792.
Gayle, Margot, David W. Look, and John G. Waite.
Metals in America's Historic Buildings: Uses and Preserva-
tion Methods. Springfield, VA: National Technical
Information Scrvim, 1978. NTIS Publication No. PB 90-
206269.
Gyrisco, Geoffrey M. Legal Tools to Protect Archeological
Sites. In ]1593, Fall ]980.
Weiss, Norman R. Exterior Cleaning of Historic Masonry
Buildings. Springfield, VA: National Technical Informa-
tion Scrvicc. NTIS No. PB 85-180818.
Secretary of the Interior's Standards and Guidelines for
Historical, Architectural, and Archeologrcal Documentation
Professional Qualificativns Standards. (Theabove are
available as part of The Secretary of the Interior's Standards
and Guidelines for Archeology and Historic Preservation).
National Regvster of Historic Places 36 CFR Part 60.
Secretary of thelnterior's Standards far Historic Preservation
Projects, with Guidelines for Applying the Standards.
Economics of Revitalizatiom A Decisionmaking Guide far
Local Officials. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the
Interior, National Park Service, Interagency Resources
Division, January 1981.
Federal Tax Provisions to Encourage Rehabilitation of
Historic Buildings: An Assessment of Their E ffect.
National Register Bu11eHn 17: Certification of State and Local
Statutes and Historic Districts. Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of the Interior, National Park Service.
Historic Preservation Certifications Pursuant to the Tax
Reform Act of 1976, the Revenue Act of 1978, the Tas
Treatment Extension Act of 1980, and the Economic Recovery
Act of 1981 36 codified as CPR Part 67.
Preservation Briefs:
Preservation Brief No. 1: The Cleaning and Wateryroof
Coating of Masonry Buildings.
Preservation Brief No. 2: Repointing Mortar /oints in
Historic Brick Buildings.
Preservation Brief No. 3: Conserving Energy in Historic
Buildings.
Preservation Brief No. 4: Roofing for Historic Buildings.
Preservation Brief No. 5: The Preservation of Historic Adobe
Buildings.
Preservation Brief No. 6: Dangers of Abrasive Cleaning to
Historic Buildings.
Preservation Brief No.7: The Preservation of Historic Glazed
Architectural Terra-Cotta.
Preservation Brief No. 8: Aluminum and Vinyl Siding on
Historic Buildings.
Preservation Brief No. 9: The Repair of Historic Wooden
Windows.
Preservation Brief No. ]0: Exterior Paint Problems on
Historic Woodwork.
Preservation Brief No. 11: Rehabilitating Historic Storefronts
Preservation Brief No. 12: The Preservation of Historic
Pigmented Structural Glass (Vitroliteand Carrara Glass).
[3ibliogaPhY 93
Preservation Brief No. 13: The Repair and Thermal Upgrad
ing of Historic Steel Windows.
Preservation Brief No. 14: New Exterior Additions to Historic
Buildings: Preservation Concerns.
Preservation Brief No. 15: Preservation of Historic Concrete:
Problems and General Approaches.
Preservation Brief No. 16: The Use of Substitute Materials on
Historic Building Exteriors.
Preservation Brief No. 17: Architectural Character-
Identifying the Visual Aspect of Historic Buildings as an Aid
to Preserving Their Character.
Preservation Brief No. I8: Rehabilitating Interiors in Historic
Buildings-Identifying Character-Defining Elements.
Preservatn~n Brief No. 19: The Repair and Replacement of
Historic Wooden Shingle Roc~(s.
Preservation Brief Na. 20: The Preservation of Historic Barns.
Preservation Brief No. 21: Repairing Historic Flat Plaster-
Wallsand Ceilings.
Preservation Brief No. 22: The Preservation and Repair of
Historic Stucco.
Preservation Brief No. 23: Preserving Historic Ornamental
Plaster.
Advisory Council publications (sec above for availabil-
ity).
Federal Tax Law and Historic Preservation: A Report to the
President and Congress. Washington, DC: Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation, November, ]983.
Treatmentof Archeological Properties. Washington, DC:
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, February,
1981.
Federal Historic Preservation Case Law. Washington, DC:
Advisory Council on Historic Prexrvation, July 1985,
GPO Stock No. 052-(103-010(H)-3.
Publications of others.
American Association for State and Local History.
Directory of Historical Societies and Agencies in the United
States and Canada. Nashvillq TN: American Association
for State and Local History, eleventh edition, 1978.
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6ibliogaphy 95
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4. Legal Reference Material
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96 9ibhography
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5. Examples of Survey Publications
Benchiey, Elizabeth D. An Overview of the Prehistoric
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Brandywine Conservancy. Protecting Historic Properties:
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De artment of Research and Planning. Duluth's Legacy,
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Department of Zoning and Planning. Historical Preserva-
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Environmental Research Croup. South Philadelphia
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Greater Portland Landmarks. Portland. Portland, ME:
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Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority. Historic
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Landmarks Heritage Preservation Commission. A
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Omaha, NE: Landmarks Heritage Preservation Com-
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Maryland Historical Trust. Inventory of Historic Sites in
Calvert County, Charles County, and Saint Manfs County,
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Mathis, Mark A. (assembler). North Carolina Statewide
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Minnesota Historical Society. Minnesota Statewide
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Monroe County Historical Commission.19th Century
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County Historical Commission, n.d.
6i6liograP~Y 97
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Peterson, Dan. Petalumds Architectural Heritage.
Petaluma, CA: City of Petaluma, 1978.
Planning Department. Historic Preservation Inventory.
Grand Rapid, MI: Planning Department, 1973.
Rhode Island Historical Preservation Commission.
Pawtuxet Village, Cranston and Warwick, Rhode Island.
Providence: Rhode Island Historical Preservation
Commission, 1973.
. Special Report. (A series begun in 1974;
many on surveys arc now available}.
. Warren, Rhode IslanA. Providence Rhode
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Southeastem Illinois Regional Planning and Develop-
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Syracuse University School of Architecture. Architecture
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University School of Architecture, 1964.
Tacoma Department of Community Development.
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Department of Community Devclopment,1982.
Topeka-Shawnee County Metropolitan Planning
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Fleming, John, et al. Penguin Dctionary of Architecture.
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Hale, Richard W., Jr., Methods of Research for the Amateur
Historian. Nashville, TN: American Association for State
and Local History, 1969.
King, Thomas F., Patricia P. Hickman, and G. Berg.
Anthropology in Historic Preservation: Caring for Culture's
Clutter. New York: Academic Press, Inc., 1977.
McCimsey, Charles R. Pu61ic Archeology. Seminar Press,
1972.
McHargue, Gmrgess and Michael Roberts. A Field Guide
to Conservation Archeology in North America. New York:
Lippincott, 1977.
McKee, Harley J. Amateur's Guide to Terms Commonly
Used in Describing Historic Buildings. Rochester, NY:
Landmarks Society of Western New York, ]970.
National Park Service, American Association of State
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Urban Aesthetics Commission. Racine Architectural .Landmark Yellow Pages. Washington, DC:
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University of Arizona, College of Architecture. Barrio
Historico. Tuscon: University of Arizona, College of
Architecture, 1972.
U.S. Department of Transportation. A Nation in Motion:
Historic American Transportation Sites. Washington, DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1976.
Wacamaw Reb~onal Planning and Development
Council Environmental, Historical, and Recreational Atlas
of the Wacamaw ReSnon. Cwrgetown, SC Wacamaw
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Smith, Michael J. Heritage Projects: A Practical Guide For
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6. General References
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Search for Pattern and Process. New York: Academic
Press, 1983.
South, Stanley. Method and Theory in Historarn! Archeol-
ogy. New York: Academic Press, 1977.
98 BibBogcaphy
Talmage, Valerie, and Olga Chester. The Importance o f
Srnall, Surface, and Duturbed Sites as Resources of Signifi-
cant Archeological Data. Springfield, VA: National
Technical Information Service, 1977. NTIS Publication
No. PB 270930/AS.
Thomas, David J. Predating the Past. New York: Holt,
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National Register of Historic Places, 1976. Washington, DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1976.
.The National Register o f Historic Places. Vo1.II.
Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, ]978.
Whiffen, Marcus. American Architecture Since 1780: A
Guide to Styles. Cambridge: MIT Press, 7981.
Williams, Norman, Jr., Edmund H. Kellogg, and Frank
B. Gilbert, eds. Readings in Historic Preservation. New
Brunswick, NJ: Center for Urban Policy Research,
Rutgers University, 1983.
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ogy. Washington, DC: National Trust for Historic
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Preservation in Small Towns: AManual of Practice. Nash-
ville, TN: Association for State and Local History, 1980.
Bibliography 99
Appendix V Contacts
Listed below arc major nationa] contacts for aspects of
historic preservation survey and planning.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
For the National Register of Historic Places, Historic
American Buildings Survey, Historic American Engi-
neering Record, Preservation Assistance Division,
Archeological AssistanceDivision, contact:
Associate Director, Cultural Resources,
Keeper, National Register of Historic Places
National Park Service
P.O. Box 37127
Washington, DC 200]3-7127
or one of the regional offices of the National Park
Scrvicr,
Alaska Regional Office
National Park Scrvicc
2525 Gambcll Strcrt
Anchorage, AK 99503
Phone (907)257-2684
Mid-Atlantic Regional Office
National Park Service
143 South Third Street
Philadelphia, PA 19]06
Phone: (215) 597-7013
Rocky Mountain Regional Office
National Park Service
12795 Wcst Alameda Parkway
P.O. Box 25287, Denver Fcx9cral Center
Denver, CO 80225-2500
Phone: (303) 234-2500
Southeast Regional Office
National Park Service
75 Spring Street, SW
Atlanta, GA 30303
Phone: (404)841-5185
Western Regional Office
National Park Service
60(l Harrison Strmt, Suite 550
San Francisco, CA 94102-1372
Phone: (415) 484-3985
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation
Old PostOfficc Building
1 ] 00 Pennsy]vania Avenue, N.W., Suite 802
Washington, DC 20004
Denver, CO 80225-2500
Phony. (202) 786-0503
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF STATE HISTORIC
PRESERVATION OFFICERS
Hall of States
444 North Capitol Street, Suite 332
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: (202) 624-5465
STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICERS
Alabama
State Historic Preservation Officer
Alabama Historical Commission
725 Monroe Strmt
Montgomery, AL 36130-5101
Phone: (205) 242-3184
FAX: (205) 242-3]28
Alaska
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Parks
Office of History & Archeology
P.O.Box 107001
Anchorage, AK 99510-7001
Phonc:(907)762-2622
FAX: (907) 762-2535
American Samoa
Historic Preservation Offimr
Department of Parks Bc Recreation
Government of American Samoa
Pago Pago, AS 96799
Phone (684) 699-9614
FAX: (684) 69911427
Arizona
State Historic Preservation Officer
Arizona State Parks
800 W. Washington, k475
Phoenix, AZ 85007
Phone: (602)5421}0(19
FAX: (602)542-0180
100 Contacts
Arkansas
State Historic Preservation Officer
Arkansas Historic Preservation Program
225 E. Markham, Suite 200
Little Rock, AR 72201
Phone: (501) 324-9346
PAX: (501)324-9345
California
State Historic Preservation Officer
Offim of Historic Preservation
Department of Parks & Recreation
P.O. Box 942896
Sacramento, CA 94296-0001
Phone (916)653-6624
FAX: (9l6) 653-9824
Colorado
State Historic Preservation Officer
Colorado Historical Society
1300 Broadway
Denver, CO 80203
Phonc:(303)866-2136
FAX: (303) 866-5739
Connecticut
State Historic Preservation Officer
Connecticut Historical Commission
59 South Prospect Strme
Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: (203)566-3005
Delaware
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Historical & Culkural Affairs
P.O.Box1401
Hall of Records
Dover, DE 19901
Phone (302) 739-5313
District of Columbia
State Historic Preservation Officer
District Building
1350 Pennsylvania Avenuq NW
Washington, DC 20004
Phone (202) 727~i365
FAX: (202) 727-8040
Horida
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Historical Resources
Department of State
R.A. Gray Building
500 S. Bronough Street
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250
Phone: (904)488-1480
FAX: (904)488-3353
C,eorela
State Historic Preservation Officer
Office of Historic Preservation
205 Butler Strmt, SE
1462 Hoyd Towers East
Atlanta, GA 30334
Phone: (404)656-2840
FAX: (404)656-2285
Guam
Historic Preservation Officer
Cuam Historic Preservation Office
Department of Parks & Recreation
490 Naval Hospital Road
Agana Heights, GU 96910
Phony (671)477-9620
FAX: (671)477-2822
Hawaii
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Land & Natural Resources
P.O. Box 62]
Honolulu, HI 96809
Phone: (808) 548x550
Idaho
State Historic Preservation Officer
Idaho State Historical Society
210 Main Street
Boise,ID 83702
Phone: (208)334-2682
Illinois
State Historic Preservation Officer
Illinois Historic Preservation Agency
1 Old State Capitol Ptaza
Springficld,IL 62701-]512
Phone: (217) 785-1153
FAX: (217) 524-7525
Contacts 101
Indiana
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Natural Resources
402 West Washington Street
Indiana Government Center, South Room C-265
Indianapolis, IN 46204
Phone: (3]7)232-4020
FAX: (317) 232-8036
Iowa
State Historic Preservation Officer
State Historical Society of Iowa
Capitol Complex
East 6th & Locust Street
Des Moines,IA 50319
Phone: (615)281-8834
FAX: (515) 282-0502
Kansas
State Historic Preservation Officer
Kansas State Historical Society
120 West Tenth
Topeka, KS 666]2
Phonc:(913)296-3251
FAX: (913)296-1005
Kentuckv
State Historic Preservation Offices
Kentucky Heritage Council
12th Hoor, Capitol Plaza Tower
Frankfort, KY 40601
Phone (502)564-7005
FAX: (502) 564-6578
Louisiana
State Historic Preservation Officer
Office of Cultural Development
Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism
P.O.Box44247
Baton Rouge, LA 70804
Phony. (504) 342$200
FAX: (504)342-3207
Maine
State Historic Preservation Officer
Maine Historic Preservation Commission
55 Capitol Street, Station 65
Augusta, ME 04333
Phone: (207)289-2132
FAX: (207) 289-2861
Marshall Islands, Republic of the
Historic Preservation Officer
Secretary of the Interior and Outer Islands Affairs
P.O.Box1454
Majuro Atoll
Republic of the Marshall Islands 96960
Phone: (692)625-3413
FAX: (692)625-3412
Maryland
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Historical & Cultural Programs
Department of Housing and Community Development
100 Community Place, 3rd Floor
Crownsville, MD 21032-2023
Phone: (410) 514-06t)0
FAX: (410) 987071
Massachusetts
State Historic Preservation Officer
Massachusetts Historical Commission
80 Boylston Street, Suite 370
Boston, MA 02116
Phone (617) 727-8470
FAX: (617) 727-5128
Michigan
State Historic Preservation Officer
Bureau of History, Department of State
7l7 West Allegan Strmt
Lansing, MI 48978
Phone (5l7) 373-0511
FAX: (517) 373-0851
Micronesia, Federated States of (Chuuk, Kosrae,
Pohnpci, Yap)
Historic Preservation Offimr
Office of Administrative Services
Division of Archives & Historic Preservation
F5M National Government
P.O. Box PS 35
Palikir, Pohnpci, FSM 96941
Phone (691) 320.2343
FAX: (691)320-2597
Chuuk
Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Resources & Developmeni
Moen, Chuuk, FSM
East Caroline Islands 96942
Phone: (691)330.3309
FAX: (691)330.2232
10p Contacts
Kosrae
Historic Preservation Officer
Division of History Bz Cultural Preservation
Department of Conservation & Development
Kosrae State, FSM
East Caroline Islands 96944
Phone (691) 840-8048
FAX: (691)370-3003
Pohnpci
Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Land
Pohnpci State Government
P.O. Box ]58
Kolonia, Pohnpci, FSM
East Caroline Islands 96941
Phony. (691) 320-2715
FAX: (691) 320-2505
Yap
Historic Preservation Officer
Office of the Governor
Colonic, Yap, FSM
West Caroline Islands 96943
Phone (69])350-2194
FAX: (691) 350-2381
Minnesota
State Historic Preservation Officer
Minnesota Historical Society
690 Cedar Street
St. Paul, MN 55101
Phone: (612) 296-2747
FAX: (612)296-]004
Mi55iS57pp1
State Historic Preservation O[ficer
Mississippi Department of Archives & History
P.O. Box 571
Jackson, MS 39205-0577
Phone (60]) 359{,850
FAX: (601)359-6905
Missouri
State Historic Preservation O(ficer
State Department of Natural Resources
205 Jefferson
P.O. Box 176
Jefferson City, MO 65102
Phone (314) 75]-4422
FAX: (314) 751-8656
Montana
State Historic Preservation Officer
Historic Preservation Office
Montana Historical Society
225 North Roberts
Helena, MT 59620-9990
Phone: (406)4447716
FAX: (406)444-2696
Nebraska
State Historic Preservation Officer
Nebraska State Historical Society
P.O. Box 82554
Lincoln, NE 68501
Phonr.(402)471~1787
Nevada
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Historic Prescrvafion & Archco1ogy
123 West Nye Lanc, Room 208
Carson City, NV 89710
Phone (702)687-5]38
New Hampshire
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Historical Resources
P.O. Box 2043
Concord, NH 03301
Phone (603)271-3483
New Tcrscy
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Environmental Protection
CN1102, 401 East State Street
Trenton, NJ 08625
Phone: (609)292-2885
FAX: (609) 292-8115
New Mexico
State Historic Preservation Officer
Historic Preservation Division
Office of Cultural Affairs
~Iilla Rivera
228 East Palace Avenue
Santa Fe, NM 87503
Phone: (505) 827{320
FAX: (SOS) 827-7308
Contacts 303
New York
State Historic Preservation Officer
Parks, P.ecreation, & Historical Preservation
Agency Building itl
Empire State Plaza
Albany, NY 12238
Phony. (518) 474-0443
FAX: (518) 474492
North Carolina
State Historic Preservation Officer
Division of Archives & History
Department of Cultural Resources
109 East Jones Street
Raleigh, NC 27601-2807
Phonc:(919)733-7305
FAX: (919) 733-5679
North Dakota
State Historic Preservation Officer
State Historical Society of North Dakota
Heritage Center
612 Eastl3oulevard Avenue
Bismarck, ND 58505
Phonc:(701)224-2667
Northern Mariana Islands, Commonwealth of the
Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Community & Cultural Affairs
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
Saipan, Mariana Islands 96950
Phonc:(670)322-9722/9556
FAX: (670) 3221058/5096
Ohio
State Historic Preservation Officer
Historic Preservation Division
Ohio Historical SociMy
1985 Velma Avenue
Columbus, OH 43211
Phone: (614)297-2470
FAX: (614) 297-2411
Oklahoma
State Historic Preservation Officer
Oklahoma Historical Society
2100 North Lincoln Boulevard
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
Phone (405)521-2491
FAX: (405)525-3272
Oreeon
State Historic Preservation Officer
State Parks & Recreation Department
525 Trade Street, SE
Salem, OR 97310
Phone: (503)378-5019
FAX: (503) 378~i447
Palau, Republic of
Historic Preservation Offimr
Ministry of Community & Cultural Affairs
P.O.Box100
Koror, Republic of Palau 96940
Phone: (680)488-2489
FAX: (680)488-1725/1662
Pennsylvania
State Historic Preservation Officer
Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission
P.O.Box1026
Harrisburg, PA 17108
Phonc:(717)787-2891
FAX: (717) 783-1073
Puerto Rico
State Historic Preservation Officer
Office of Historic Preservation
P.O. Box 82, la Fortaleza
San Juan, PR 00901
Phonc:(809)721-2676
FAX: (809) 723-0957
Rhode Island
State Historic Preservation Officer
Rhode Island Historical Preservation Commission
Old State House
150 Benefit Street
Providence, RI 02903
Phone (401)277-2678
FAX: (401) 277-2968
South Carolina
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Archives & History
P.O.Box11669
Columbia, SC 29211
Phone: (803)734-8592
FAX: (803) 734-8820
104 Contacts
South Dakota
State Historic Preservation Officer
South Dakota State Historical Society
900 Governors Drive
Pierre, SD 5750]
Phonc:(605)773-3458
FAX: (605) 677-5364
Tennessee
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Conservation
70] Broadwaq
Nashville, TN 37243-0442
Phone (615) 742-6758
FAX: (615) 7426594
Texas
State Historic Preservation Officer
Texas Historical Commission
P.O. Box 12276, Capitol Station
Austin, TX 78711
Phone (572) 4636100
FAX: (512) 4636095
Utah
State Historic Preservation Officer
Utah State Historical Society
300 Rio Grande
Salt Lakc City, UT 84101
Phone (801) 533-5755
FAX: (801) 3646436
Vermont
State Historic Preservation Officer
Agency of Development and Community Affairs
109 State Street
Montpelier, VT 05069-0501
Phone (802)828-32]1
FAX: (802) 828-3233
Virgin Islands
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Planning and Natural Resources
Nisky Center #231
No.45 A Estate Nisky
St. Thomas, USVI 00802
Phone (809) 774-3320
Vir inia
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Historic Resources
22] GovemorStmet
Richmond, VA 23219
Phone: (804)786-3143
FAX: (804) 225-4261
Washineton
State Historic Preservation Officer
Office of Archeology & Historic Preservation
l ll West 21st Avenue, KL-ll
Olympia, WA 98504
Phone (206)753-4011
FAX: (206) 586-0250
West Virginia
State Historic Preservation Officer
Department of Culture and History
Capitol Complex
Charleston, WV 25305
Phone: (304) 348-0220
FAX: (304)348-2779
Wisconsin
State Historic Preservation Officer
Historic Preservation Division
State Historical Society of Wisconsin
816 State Strmt
Madison, WI 537(X
Phone: (608) 2646500
FAX: (608)264-6404
Wyomine
State Historic Preservation Officer
Parks and Cultural Resources Division
Department of Commerce
1825 Carey Avenue
Cheyenne, WY 82002
Phone: (307) 777-7013
FAX: (307) 777-6005
Contacts 705
LOCAL HISTORIC PRESERVATION
COMMISSIONS
For information on local historic preservation comrxus-
sionsand agencies, and those States where State alli-
ances of historic preservation commissions have
formed, contact:
Nationa] Alliance of Historic Preservation
Commissions
Hall of the States
444 North Capitol Strmt, Suite 332
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: (202) 624-5465
FEDERAL AGENCY HISTORIC PRESERVATION
OFFICERS
Section ]]0(c) of the National Historic Preservation Act
directs all Federal agencies to appoint agency prescrva-
tion officers. These officials are good contacts for
infom~ation about particular agency programs in
historic preservation, and about agency projects that
may affect historic properties.
For a current listing of agency preservation officers,
contact the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation.
NATIONAL TRUST FOR HISTORIC
PRESERVATION
The National Trust for Historic Preservation is a feder-
ally chartered nationwide membership organization
that provides a wide variety of preservaion services.
For information contact:
National Trust for Historic Preservation
7785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: (202) 67314000
t06 Contacts
Ell"I