HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011/07/19 Item 08 Attachment A Appendix_N_NRB_22_Evaluating_Nominating_PropertiesNATIONAL REGISTER
BULLETIN
Technical information on the the National Register of Historic Places:
survey, evaluation, registrafion, and preservation of cultural resources
U.S. Department of the Interior
Nafional Park Service
Cultural Resources
Natlonal Register, History and Education
Guidelines for Evaluating and Nominating
Properties that Have Achieved Significance
Within the Past Fifty Years
The mission of the Department of the Interior is to protect and provide
access to our Nation's natural and cultural heritage and honor our trust
responsibilities to tribes.
This material is partially based upon work conducted under a cooperative
agreement with the National Conference of State Historic Preservation Officers
and the U.S. Department of the Interior.
Cover
When constructed in 1927, Central High School, Pulaski County, Little Rock,
Arkansas, was named the "Most Beautiful High School Building in the Country."
Designed by architect John Parks Almond, Central High School is exceptionally signifi-
cantfor architecture and for its role in the 1957 school desegregation crisis. Pictured
here in front of the building are members of the National Guard called out by Arkansas
governor Orval Faubus on September 2, 1957. (Library of Congress Prints and Photo-
graphs Division, LC-U9-2015-C-23)
NATIONAL REGISTER
BULLETIN
Guidelines for Evaluating and Nominating
Properties that Have Achieved Significance
Within the Past Fifty Years
by
MARCELLA SHERFY
W. RAY LUCE
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Revised 1990;1996;1995
Originally published 1979
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE ............................................................................................................................................................................................... .. ii
ACK NOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................................................................................. iii
I. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................................................................... ..1
II. HISTORIC CONTEXT .............................................................................................................................................................. .. 3
III. SCHOLARLY EVALUATIONS ............................................................................................................................................... .. 4
IV. FRAGILE OR SHORT-LIVED RESOURCES ......................................................................................................................... .. 5
V. TIME ............................................................................................................................................................................................ .. 6
VI. COMPARATIVE EVALUATION OF THE SIGNIFICANCE OF A PROPERTY ............................................................ .. 8
VII. ASSOCIATION WITH LIVING PERSONS ........................................................................................................................... ..9
VIII. PROPERTIES IN HISTORIC DISTRICTS .............................................................................................................................. 10
IX. JUSTIFYING THE IMPORTANCE OF PROPERTIES THAT HAVE ACHIEVED SIGNIFICANCE IN THE PAST
FIFTY YEARS ............................................................................................................................................................................. 11
X. EXAMPLES ................................................................................................................................................................................. 12
XI. SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................................................................. 15
XII. SUGGESTED READINGS ........................................................................................................................................................ 16
XIII. NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION .................................................................................................. 17
XIV. NATIONAL REGISTER BULLETINS .................................................................................................................................... 1S
i
PREFACE
When it was established in 1966,
the National Register of Historic
Places provided official recognition
For the nation's heritage and encour-
aged public participation in the pro-
tection oFhistoric places. The framers
of the 1966 Act envisioned the Na-
tional Register as a broad list of his-
toric properties that reflected "the
spirit and direction of the Nation." In
order to assure historical perspective
and avoid judgments based on cur-
rent or recent popular trends, the 50-
year period was established as a
guide for evaluating the historic re-
sources worthy of preservation.
However, the National Register Crite-
ria for Evaluation provided for the
recognition of historic places that
achieved significance within the past
50 years; a property of that vintage
may be eligible if it is of exceptional
importance at the national, State, or
local level.
Over the past three decades, Crite-
ria Consideration G has proved a rea-
sonable test for the historic signifi-
cance of properties achieving signifi-
cance within the past 50 years. As of
the end of 1994, 2,035 properties (out
of approximately 64,000 total listings)
had been listed in the National Regis-
ter under Criteria Consideration G.
Of these, 4641isted properties reflect
some aspect of the nation's history
since 1950, and 77 of these places ex-
clusively reflect some aspect of our
history since 1974. Many of these
properties are recognized for their ex-
traordinary role in our nation's his-
tory; however, approximately one-
third are listed for their exceptional
importance in community history.
Since it was first published in 1979,.
this bulletin has guided the evalua-
tion of properties from the Depression
era and the World War II period. This
edition moves on to the next major
period of time: the post-World II era.
Depending on the historical event or
pattern of events, significant persons,
or architectural movements, the post-
World War II period can stretch
through the mid-1960s (Civil Rights
Movement); the mid-1970s (end of the
Vietnam war); the early 1980s (end of
the Modern Movement in architec-
ture); the late 1980s (end of the Cold
War); or some other logical end date.
This bulletin's third update is is-
sued at a time when several other or-
ganizations-such as the Association
for Preservation Technology, the Na-
tional Trust for Historic Preservation,
and the Society for Commercial Ar-
cheology-have expressed increased
interest in the recent past through
special publications on the subject.
The conference, "Preserving the Re-
cent Past;' held March 30-April 1,
1995, in Chicago, Illinois, is another
important indicator of popular and
professional commitment to preserv-
ing significant historic properties of
the recent past. Directed by the late
H. Ward Jandl, the conference served
as an important forum for discussing
a wide range of issues associated with
historic properties of the 20th century.
The properties that have been listed
under Criteria Consideration G illus-
tratepublic recognition of these places
as truly historic. We thank these indi-
vidualsand organizations and the
publication s original authors for their
continued interest in the subject.
Carol D. Shull
Keeper, National Register of Historic
Places
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Interior, Graceland, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee. Graceland, listed on the
National Register in 1991, is exceptionally significant because of its association with
Elvis Presley, who revolutionized popular entertainment in the United States during
the 1950s and 1960s. (Jennifer Tucker, Tennessee Historical Commission, 1991)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This bulletin was first issued in
1979 as "How to" #2 and written by
then National Register historians
Marcella Sherfy and W. Ray Luce.
Patrick W. Andrus, historian with the
National Register of Historic Places,
and the authors revised the text and
produced the 1990 version of the bul-
letin, renamed National Register Bul-
letin 22, which included a discussion
of historic properties of the World
41~ar II period. The examples cited in
this third edition of the bulletin are
derived largely from the essay that
Carol D. Shull and Beth L. Savage pre-
pared for the "Preserving the Recent
Past" conference of 1995: "Trends in
Recognizing Places for Significance in
the Recent Past," which summarized
recent listings of properties under Cri-
teria Consideration G. The National
Park Service prepared this bulletin
pursuant to the National Historic
Preservation Act of 1966, as amended,
which duects the Secretary of the In-
terior to develop and make available
information concerning historic prop-
erties. Guidelines for Evaluating and
Nominating Properties that have
Achieved Significance Within the Past
Fifty Years was developed under the
general editorship of Carol D. Shull,
Keeper of the National Register of
Historic Places. Beth L. Savage and
Sarah Dillard Pope coordinated the
publication of the fourth edition of
this bulletin. Tanya M. Velt, Rama R.
Badamo, Antoinette J. Lee and Mary
M. Kell produced earlier versions.
Comments on this publication maybe
directed to: Keeper of the National
Register of Historic Places, National
Park Service, 1849 C Street, NW, NC
400, Washington, D.C. 20240.
iii
I. INTRODUCTION
Properties that have achieved sig-
nificance within the past 50 years may
be listed in the National Register of
Historic Places, according to the Na-
tional Register Criteria for Evaluation,
only if they are of "exceptional impor-
tance;' or if they are integral parts of
districts that axe eligible for listing in
the National Register. This principle
safeguards against listing properties
which are of only contemporary, fad-
dish value and ensures that the Na-
tional Register is a register of historic
places.
The Criteria for Evaluation are not
designed to prohibit the consideration
of properties whose unusual contribu-
tion to the development of American
history, architecture, archeology, en-
gineering, and culture can clearly be
demonstrated. The Criteria for Evalu-
ation provide general guidance on
National Register eligibility. How-
ever, the 1966 National Historic Pres-
ervation Act did not assume that sig-
nificance could. be a matter of rigid,
objective measurement. It specifically
encourages the recognition of locally
significant historic resources that, by
appearance or association with per-
sons or events, provide communities
with a sense of past and place. The
historical value of these resources will
always be a combined matter of pub-
lic sentiment and rigorous, yet neces-
sarily subjective, professional assess-
ment. Hence the Criteria for Evalua-
tion, including their discussion of
properties of recent significance, were
written to offer broad guidance based
on the practical and philosophical in-
tent of the 1966 Act.
As a general rule, properties that
have achieved significance within the
past 50 years are not eligible for Na-
tional Register listing because the Na-
tional Register is intrinsically a compi-
lation of the Nation's historic re-
sources that are worthy of preserva-
tion. The National Register does not
include properties important solely
for their contemporary impact and
visibility, and it rarely is possible to
evaluate historical impact, role, or
relative value immediately after an
event occurs or a building is con-
structed. The passage of time is nec-
essary inorder to apply the adjective
"historic" and to ensure adegaate per-
spective. To be a useful tool for pub-
lic administration, the National Regis-
ter cannot include properties of only
transient value or interest. The pas-
sage of time allows our perceptions to
be influenced by education, the judg-
ment of previous decades, and the
dispassion of distance. In nominating
properties to the National Register,
we should be settled in our belief that
they will possess enduring value for
their historical associations, appear-
ance, or information potential.
Fifty years is obviously not the
only length of time that defines "his-
toric" or makes an informed, dispas-
sionate judgment possible. It was
chosen as a reasonable, perhaps popu-
larly understood span that makes pro-
fessional evaluation of historical value
feasible. The National Register Crite-
ria for Evaluation encourage nomina-
tion of recently significant properties
if they are of exceptional importance
to a community, a State, a region, or
the Nation. The criteria do not de-
scribe "exceptional;' nor should they.
Exceptional, by its own definition,
cannot be fully catalogued or antici-
pated. It may reflect the extraordi-
The fnteru>r of the Drafting Studio at Tatiesin West, Maricopa County, Arizona,
illustrates the unique method of architectural training available at Taliesin West,
which had exceptional influence on post-World War If architectural design in the
United States. (Courtesy of the Taliesin West Foundation, 1964)
nary impact of a political or social
event. It may apply to an entire cat-
egory of resources so fragile that sur-
vivors of any age are unusual. It may
be the function of the relative age of a
community and its perceptions of old
and new. It may be represented by a
building or structure whose develop-
mental or design value is quickly rec-
ognized as historically significant by
the architectural or engineering pro-
fession. It may be reflected. in a range
of resources for which a community
has an unusually strong associative
attachment. Thus a complete List of
exceptionally significant resources
cannot be prepared or precise indica-
tors of exceptional value prescribed.
The following discussion offers guid-
ance for the reasoning and evaluation
applicable to properties that have
achieved significance in the past 50
years. It also offers direction on pre-
paring Statements of Significance for
National Register nominations (Sec-
tion S of the National Register regis-
tration form, NPS Form 10-900) of
such properties.
As the home of fhe American Bandstand program from 1952 to 1963, fhe 1947 WFIL
Studio in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is exeeptianaliy significant in fhe early
development of the television industry. (Susan Shearer, 1986)
II. HISTORIC CONTEXT
All National Register nominations
should be based upon an understand-
ing of the historic context with which
the nominated resource is related.
Historic context refers to all of those
historic circumstances and factors
from which the property emerged.
Knowledge of historic context permits
us to understand the relative impor-
tance of the resource in question.
Evaluating a property within its his-
toric context ensures accuracy in un-
derstanding its role and in making
comparisons among similar resources.
As defined in Webster's dictionary,
context is comprised of the "interre-
lated conditions in which something
exists or occurs." An understanding
of the context of a historic resource is
based on knowledge of the time, his-
torical theme, and geographical area
with which the property is associated.
This involves understanding, among
other things, the social, political, eco-
nomic, artistic, physical, architectural,
or moral environment that accounted
for the presence of, as well as the
original and current nature of, the re-
source. Historic context will vary
with resources. It may be as simple as
sites associated with the lumber in-
dustry in a particular county in the
late 19th century, or as complex as the
development of a national railroad
line which was created by one set of
physical, political, and economic
forces, yet had different economic, so-
cial,political, and architectural im-
pacts on local communities and geo-
graphic areas. A thorough under-
standing of historic contexts for re-
sources that have achieved signifi-
cance in the past 50 years is essential
for their evaluation. In evaluating and
justifying exceptional importance, it is
especially critical to identify the prop-
erties in a geographical area that por-
tray the same values or associations
and determine those that best illus-
trate or represent the architectural,
cultural, or historical values being
considered. Thus the first step in
evaluating properties of recent signifi-
cance is to establish and describe the
historic context applicable to the re-
source.
The primary innovation of Radburn, Bergen County, New Jersey, was the separation
of pedestrian and vehicular traffic. Radburn, planned by Clarence Sfein and Henry
Wright, was placed on the National Register in 4974 because of the exceptional
influence its plan has had and continues to have on the planning of suburbatt
communities. (Louis Di Geronimo, 1974)
III. SCHOLARLY EVALUATION
A case can more readily be pre-
sented and accepted for a property
that has achieved significance within
the past 50 years if the type of archi-
tecture or the historic circumstances
with which the property is associated
have been the object of scholarly
evaluation. 'The scholarly sources
available to assist in evaluating prop-
erties from the post-World War II era
are becoming plentiful. Journals of
architectural history, social history,
landscape architecture, landscaping,
industrial archeology, and urban de-
velopment offer solid scholarship on
many kinds of resources likely to be
encountered. Previous National Reg-
ister nominations may assist in estab-
lishing appropriate context and addi-
tionalscholarship. Papers presented
at conferences may contain research
and analysis useful fox resources of
recent origin. In short, the application
of scholarship-not popular social
commentary-does not demand the
presence of a published book. A wide
and growing array of scholarly inter-
est in historic properties can greatly
assist evaluation of recent properties.
G. Milton Small & Associates, Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina, built 1966. Designed by architect Milton Small, this
smaii office building shows Small's mastery of the language of architectural expression developed by Mies van der Rohe, a dominant
force in American building in the 1950s and 1960s. (Bill Garretf, North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1994)
IV. FRAGILE OR SHORT-LIVED
RESOURCES
Some resources acquire historical
qualities before the passage of 50
years because they either were not
built to last that long, or, by their na-
ture, are subject to circumstances that
destroy their integrity before 50 years
have elapsed. Such resources are
viewed by scholars and by the public
as "oId" even before they are 50 years
old. World War II frame temporary
buildings were often constructed to
meet temporary, intense demands for
housing or office space and were not
constructed to last long. While they
tended to be viewed as automatically
expendable, many in fact did survive
for decades after the war. Mining
structures in the Rocky Mountain
West region have a short life-span
both because the effects of weather
and because entrepreneurs did notin-
vest much in their construction in or-
der to maximize gain and/or limit fi-
nancial risks. Federal tax laws, com-
petition within industry, changing
transportation routes, and shifts in
consumer tastes have jeopardized
many early motel or motor court com-
plexes, shopping centers, and other
roadside buildings. Their rate of sur-
vivalwith integrity from the post-
4Vorld War II era is very low. Many
highways from that same era have un-
dergone "improvements° that result
in the loss of historic engineering
qualities and original materials. The
fact that a resource is jeopardized by a
specific proposed project does not, in
and of itself, render that resource
more historically important than if it
were not threatened. But one may
evaluate whether a type or category of
resources-as a whole-has faced loss
at such a rate that relatively young
survivors can be viewed as excep-
tional and historic.
Built In 791?, the AFRICAN QUHEN did not achieve fame unti1.1951 when it played
a starring role in the hit film of the same name. The vessel is currently located in
Monroe Counly, Florida. (Arthur Lemon, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater
1Zeseareh, 1951)
The Baltimore-Washington Parkway in Anne Arundel and Prince George's counties,
Maryland, was constructed between 1942 and 1954 as a component of a national
parkway systcnn. (Sara Amy Leach, Apri1,1988)
V. TIME
There are several specific issues re-
lating to time that should be ad-
dressed in evaluating a less than 50-
year-old property. The 50 year period
is an arbitrary span of time, designed
as a filter to ensure that enough time
has passed to evaluate the property in
a historic context. FIowever, it was
not designed to be mechanically ap-
plied on a year by year basis. Gener-
ally, our understanding of history
does not advance a year at a Hme, but
rather in periods of time which can
logically be examined together. For
example, events that relate to the Cold
War can best be evaluated in relation
to other events or properties from the
same period. This means that our
ability to evaluate properties moves
forward in uneven leaps of years.
It should be determined whether
the period under consideration calls
for a routine historical. evaluation or
whether the period needs to be
viewed in the context of exceptional
importance. Withoutsuchadetermi-
nation, certain properties which have
just passed the 50-year point might be
given greater value, and those just
less than 50 years old might be inap-
propriately ascribed less importance,
when the resources should have been
evaluated together to determine their
relative significance. Several such pe-
riodshave been examined since the
National Historic Preservation Act
was passed in 1966. The 50-year pe-
riod at that fime did not yet include
World War I. Soon after the law was
passed properties related to the First
World War were evaluated-but that
evaluation only made sense when ex-
amined for the entire war, not on a
yearly basis. Similar leaps have been
involved with the "Roaring Twenties"
and the Depression and the Federal
government's response to it. During
the past 20 years we have been able to
evaluate and list properties, in many
categories, constructed or achieving
significance during those years, in-
cluding: Federal projects during the
Depression and World War II, the de-
velopment of air transportation, Art
Deco and the International styles of
architecture, scientific advances, and
sites related to numerous political
and social events and individuals.
'there is now sufficient perspective to
enable an evaluation of a number of
properties related to the post-World
War II era. Some topics for evalua-
tion under Criteria Consideration G
include post-World War II develop-
ment projects; the growth of subur-
ban subdivisions, shopping malls and
commercial strip development; the
expansion of educational, recre-
ational, and transportation facilities;
the Civil Rights movement; the ad-
vent of the United States space pro-
gram; the Vietnam War; and the im-
pact of historic preservation on
American cities, towns, and rural ar-
eas. An evaluation of some of these
categories of resources before others
might be possible, either because spe-
cific scholarly studies are available, or
there exists general historical knowl-
edge about the period or the signifi-
cance of the resource. A second con-
sideration regarding time is that the
appropriate date from which to
evaluate a property for exceptional
significance is not always the date of
construction, but rather, the point at
which the property achieved signifi-
cance. The significance of an architec-
turally important property can be
charted from the time of its construc-
tion. But the significance of proper-
ties important for historical associa-
Nuclear Energy, sculpture by Henry Moore commemorates the first controlled
nuclear chain reaction. The site, on the campus of the University of Chicago, was
declared a National Historic Landmark in 1983. Chicago, Cook County, Itlinois
(Blanche H. Schroer, National Park Service, May 1975)
lions with important events or per-
sons should be dated from the time of
the event or the period of association
with a historically important indi-
vidual. For example, Flannery
O'Connor's home, Anadalusia, in
Milledgeville, Georgia, is significant
for its associafion with O'Connor. She
was renowned as a short-story writer
of the post-World War II generation,
who used the Southern landscape as a
major force in shaping her fiction. The
period of significance clearly begins in
1951 when she moved there, rather
than the early 20th century when the
complex of buildings was con-
structed. Thus, although a property
maybe more than 50 years of age, if it
is significant solely for a reason that
dates from within the past 50 years, it
must be exceptionally important to be
listed in the National Register.
"Third, the more recently a property
has achieved significance, generally,
the more difficult it is to demonstrate
exceptionalimportance. The case for
exceptional importance is bolstered
when there is a substantial amount of
professional, documented materials
on the resource and the resource type.
A property listed in the National Reg-
ister 10 or 15 years after it has
achieved significance requires clear,
widespread recognition of its value to
demonstrate exceptional importance.
For example, Dulles International
Airport Terminal, Loudoun County,
Virginia, built in 1962, was deter-
mined eligible for the National Regis-
ter in 1978. That action was based on
the ability to evaluate the building
compared with other modern build-
ings and recent airports. Dulles Air-
port was immediately recognized as
one of the most important post-World
War II American architectural master-
pieces and one of the most innovative
airport designs. A 1976 American In-
stitute of Architects' poll selected the
building as the third most significant
building in the Nation's first 200
years. The building has been widely
recognized in professional publica-
tions as exceptionally important in the
history of American architecture.
Associated with author Flannery O'Connor's productive career, 1951-1964,
Andalusia, Milledgeville, Baldwin County, Georgia, is where O'Connor lived and did
mosf of her writing. (James R. Lockhart, Georgia Department of Natural Resources,
June, 1979)
VI. COMPARATIVE
EVALUATION OF THE
SIGNIFICANCE OF A PROPERTY
After determining the theme and
appropriate time or chronological pe-
riod with which a property is associ-
ated, the geographic limits of the
property's context must be estab-
lished. Exceptional importance does
not necessarily mean national signifi-
cance; rather, it is a measure of a
property's importance within the ap-
propriate historic context, whether the
geographic scale of that context is lo-
cal, State, or national. In other words,
is the property best understood
within the framework of a commu-
nity, ariver valley, a region, the State,
or the Nation? In evaluating and jus-
tifying exceptional importance, it is
critical to identify the properties in a
geographical context that portray the
same values or associations and deter-
mine those that best illustrate or rep-
resent the historical, architectural, cul-
tural, engineering, or archeological
values in question. The scope or level
(local, State, or national) at which this
evaluation is made is directly related
to the geographic level or "scale" of
the property's historic context. For
example, properties whose impor-
tance relates only to local mining ac-
tivities need only be compared to oth-
ers found in that locality to determine
their comparative value.
VII. ASSOCIATIONS WITH
LIVING PERSONS
On rare occasions, properties asso-
ciated with individuals still living
have been listed in the National Reg-
ister. However, the nomination of
such properties is strongly discour-
aged in order to avoid use of the Na-
tional Register listing to endorse the
work or reputation of a living per-
son. Periodically, however, sufficient
scholarship and evidence of histori-
cal perspective exist to list a property
associated with living persons whose
active life in their field of endeavor is
over. In Yhese instances, sufficient
time must have elapsed to assess both
their field and their contribution in a
historic perspective. For example,
two properties in Columbus, Ohio, as-
sociated with the folk artist Elijah
Pierce were listed in the National Reg-
ister even though the artist was stilt
alive and had achieved significance
within the past 50 years. It was dem-
onstrated that Mr. Pierre's body of
work was widely recognized as being
exceptionally important within the
realm of folk art. The buildings (his
residence and barbershop/art gallery)
were the only extant properties associ-
ated with the artist and that association
was long standing (30-40 years). At the
time of the nomination Mr. Pierce was
92 years old, and it was unlikely that
he would produce additional works
which would require a major re-evalu-
ation pf his contribution to folk art.
For further guidance on this topic see Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Properties Associated with Significant Persons.
One of America's preeminent folk artists, woodcarver Elijah Pierce, b. 1892, worked in this barber shop/art gallery and &ved in the
adjacent residence in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio, for more than thirty years. Because of the exceptional importance of
Pierre's work, the Elijah Pierce Residence and Gallery was fisted the National Register while Pierce was still living. (Kojo Kamau,
July,19S2)
VIII. PROPERTIES IN
HISTORIC DISTRICTS
Under the National Register Crite-
ria there are two ways that a property
that has achieved significance within
the past 50 years can be eligible for
the National Register. First, as dis-
cussed above, a property can be indi-
vidually listed if it is exceptionally
important. Properties can also qualify
if they are an "integral part" of a his-
toric district that qualifies for Na-
tional Register listing.
Properties that are integral parts of
a district do not need to be individu-
ally eligible for the National Register
or of individual exceptional impor-
tance. An explicit explanation must,
however, be given as to how they
qualify as integral parts of the district.
This is demonstrated by documenting
that the property dates from within
the district's defined period of signifi-
cance and that it is associated with
one or more of the district's defined
areas of significance.
Properties less than 50 years old
maybe integral parts of a district
when there is sufficient perspective to
consider the properties as historic.
This is accomplished by demonstrat-
ing that: (a) the district's period of
significance is justified as a discrete
period with a defined beginning and
end; (b) the character of the district's
historic resources is clearly defined
and assessed; (c) specific resources in
the district are demonstrated to date
from that discrete era; and, (d) the
majority of district properties are over
50 years old. In these instances it is
not necessary to prove exceptional im-
portance of either the district itself or
of the less-than-50-year-old proper-
ties. Exceptional importance still
must be demonstrated for districts
where the majority of properties or
the major period of significance is less
than 50 years old, and for less-than
50-year-old properties that are nomi-
nated individually.
Historic districts with less-than-50
year-old properties that share ele-
ments of historical and architectural
significance of the districts illustrate
the policy discussed above. For ex-
ample, some historic districts repre-
sent planned communities whose
plan, layout of the streets and lots,
and original construction of homes all
began more than 50 years ago. Fre-
quently, construction of buildings
continued into the less-than-50-year
period, with the later resources result-
ing from identical historical patterns
as the earlier buildings and represent-
ing acontinuation of the planned
community design. In instances
where these later buildings make up
only a small part of the district, and
reflect the architectural and historic
significance of the district, they can be
considered integral parts of the dis-
trict (and contributing resources)
without showing exceptional impor-
tance of either the district or the less-
than-50-year-old buildings.
While some districts have a unified
historic and/or architectural develop-
ment, it is important to recognize that
integral does not mean that a district
must have homogeneous resources or
significance. Districts can also include
diverse resources that represent the
area's development over time. A
commercial or residential area, for ex-
ample, may form a unified whole, but
have resources built in a variety of
styles over a long period of time. In
such acontext, apost-World War II
movie theater or recreation facility
may have increased significance be-
cause these are important buildings
and represent that period of the
district's history. Thus such buildings
often are integral parts of districts in
which they are located.
10
IX. JUSTIFYING THE
IMPORTANCE OF PROPERTIES
THAT HAVE ACHIEVED
SIGNIFICANCE IN T'HE PAST
FIFTY YEARS
The National Register nomination
documentation for properties of re-
cent significance must contain deliber-
ate, distinct justification for the "ex-
ceptional" importance of the resource.
The clarity and persuasiveness of the
justification is critical for registering
properties that have gained impor-
tance in the past 50 years.
The rationale or justification for
exceptional importance should be an
explicit part of the statement of sig-
nificance. It should not be treated as
self-explanatory. Nominations must
make a persuasive, direct case that the
grounds-the historic contex{-for
evaluating a property's exceptional
importance exist and that the prop-
erty being nominated is, within that
context, exceptional. This justification
must address two issues at the begin-
ning of a nomination's Statement of
Significance. The first section should
contain, as described in Flow to Com-
plete the National Register Regisfration
Form, a straightforward description of
why the property is historically sig-
nificant-with direct reference to the
specific relevant National Register
Criteria. Detailed guidance on this
topic is contained in Guidelines far Ap-
plying the National Register Criteria for
Evaluation. The second section should
contain the justification as to why the
property can be determined to be of
exceptional importance. It must dis-
cuss the context used for evaluating
the property. It must demonstrate
that the context and the resources as-
sociated with it can be judged to be
"historic." It must document the exist-
ence of sufficient research or edrdence
to permit a dispassionate evaluation
of the resource. Finally, it must use
the background just presented to
summarize the way in which the re-
source is important.
Fooks,1949-1951)
11
The Onondaga County War Memorial in Syracuse, New York, was erected in the post-World War era as a "living memorial" fo
those who served in fhe armed forces. It is an exceptional example of contemporary concrete thin shell vault construction. (John H:
X. E~i;AMPLE S
The following properties, whose
period. of significance extends to less
than 50 years ago, have been listed in
or determined eligible for the Na-
tional Register. The list is not exhaus-
tive, but is intended to illustrate the
range of such. Natfonal Register prop-
erties. The thematic approach, that is,
studying all or most of the properties
related to a historic theme in a given
area may be used in nominating
groups of historic properties associ-
ated with the post-World War II era.
The Multiple Property Documenta-
tion Form is an excellent way to
evaluate and nominate groups of
properties. While all properties must
meet at least one of the National Reg-
ister Criteria, many qualify for more
than one. Criterion A recognizes
properties that have made a signifi-
cant contribution to the broad pat-
terns of our history. Criterion B al-
lows the listing of properties that are
associated with the lives of persons
significant in our past. Criterion C
recognizes properties that are archi-
tecturally significant. And Criterion
D applies to properties that have
yielded or maybe likely to yield in-
formation important in prehistory or
history. (See section XIII. National
Register Criteria for Evaluation.)
Under National Register Criterion
A, properties associated with a variety
of exceptionally important historic
events have been listed. For example,
the inception of the American space
program can now be viewed in a his-
toric perspective. Properties in the
National Register associated with the
space program include research cen-
ters, such as the Propulsion and Struc-
tural Test Facility at the George C.
Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama, and the Zero
Gravity Research Facility at the Lewis
Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio;
launch sites, including Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station in
Florida, and Space Launch Complex
10 at Vandenberg Air Force Base in
Lompoc, California; flight control fa-
cilities, such as the Apollo Mission
Control Center in Houston, Texas;
and space vehicles such as the Saturn
V in Huntsville, Alabama.
The Fleischmann Atmospherium
Planetarium in Reno, Nevada is ex-
ceptionally important under Criterion
A for its role in scientific research and
education in Nevada. It was the first
planetarium in the nation to feature a
360-degree projector capable of pro-
viding horizon-to-horizon images,
and through time-lapse photography,
show an entire day's weather in a few
minutes. In another example, the Stu-
dent Center of Alaska Pacific Univer-
city in Anchorage, Alaska, served as
the site of the 1971 Alaska Federation
of Natives conference, which led to
the momentous Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act of 1971. This act repre-
sented the largest compensation ever
paid to Native settlement claims. This
property was evaluated as exception-
ally important under Criterion A.
In Topeka, Kansas, the Monroe
School, now known as the Brown v.
Board of Education National Historic
Site, is significant as the property as-
sociated with the 1954 Landmark
United States Supreme Court case,
Brown v. Board of Education. In that
decision, a state's action in maintain-
ing segregation by providing "sepa-
12
The Titan IIICBM Missile Site 8 (571- 7) in Pima County, Arizona, was listed m the
National Register an 1992. This view shows a simulated vapor detection check by
propellant transfer technicians. (Daaid K. Stumpf, 1992)
rate but equal" public facilities was
found unconstitutional. As a result,
the 21 States with segregated public
schools were forced to desegregate
them. In 1994, the property was
added to the National Park System.
Under National Kegister Criterion
B, the homes of exceptionally impor-
tant persons, representing many fields
of endeavor have been recognized.
The Charlie Parker House in New
York City is significant as the home of
Charlie "Bird" Parker, creator of a
jazz genre known as "be-bop;' be-
tween 1950 and 1954. During his resi-
dency at the house, his career as a jazz
master and prominent recording artist
was established. The Silver Spring,
Maryland home of Rachel Carson was
designated a National Historic Land-
mark. Occupied by her from 1956 to
her death in 1964, the house is where
she wrote Silent Spring which drew
public attention to the poisoning of
the earth and catapulted her to the
forefront of the environmental protec-
tion movement. Carson designed and
oversaw the construction of the house
to provide the domestic environment
she needed for writing.
Under National Register Criterion
C, properties of recent vintage have
been shown to have an exceptional
impact at a variety of scales. The Le-
ver House building in New York City,
constructed between 1950-1952, is ar-
chiteeturally significant as one of the
country's first corporate expressions
of the International style in post-
World War II America. The Norris
and Harriet Coambs "Lustron House"
built in Chesterton, Indiana, in 1950 is
of exceptional architectural impor-
tance at the local level as a rare and
intact example of a significant manu-
factured housing type employing an
unusual building material. The
Lustron House was constructed with
a steel framing system to which por-
celain enameled steel panels were at-
tached. The house fits into the prefab-
ricated housing tradition well estab-
lished by firms such as Alladin and
Sears in the early 1900s. The
Onondaga County War Memorial,
constructed in Syracuse, New York,
between 1949 and 1951, is of excep-
tional architectural importance at the
local level as an early example of a
"living memorial" erected in the post-
World War Ii era to commemorate
duty in the armed services.
Important feats of engineering con-
structed within the past 50 years also
have been recognized in the National
Register, such as the Gateway Arch in
St. Louis, Missouri, designed in 1947
and constructed between 1963 and
1968, and listed under Criterion C.
The 1956 Solar Building in Albuquer-
que, New Mexico, was listed in the Na-
tional Register in the area of engineer-
ingbecause it was an early solar-heated
commercial building, the equipment for
which survived largely intact. It was
constructed when active solar-energy
systems were still considered experi-
mental.
It is often challenging to evaluate ar-
chitectural properties of the post-World
War II era one at a time. Several States
have effectively used a thematic ap-
proach and the Multiple Property
Documentation Form to evaluate and
nominate groups of properties that
usually qualify under Criterion C as
examples of particular architectural
styles or methods of construction. The
National Register listed several resi-
dences in North Carolina nominated
under the name "Early Modern Archi-
tecture Associated with North Carolina
State University School of Design."
13
Completed in the spring of 1950, this pre-(xibricated, all-metat Lustron House, Porter County, Indiana, was considered by many at
the tfine to be the house of the future. (8everly Oaermeyer, April, 1992)
Dating from 1950 to 1968, the nomi-
nated buildings employed structural
innovations, were publicized widely
in national and regional architectural
periodicals, and form a distinctive
body of work with identifiable traits
from the beginning to the end of the
period of significance.
In a similar fashion, the State of
Iowa prepared the "Iowa Usonian
Houses by Frank Lloyd Wright MPS."
Constructed between 1948 and 1960,
the nominated properties grew out of
Wright's second great productive pe-
riod in his long career. The Usonian
house "offered the hope that middle-
income families could build afford-
able homes of great architectural qual-
ity during times when Americans
faced unprecedented demands for af-
fordable, single-family housing." The
properties share the physical qualities
of "a rigid geometry, horizontal de-
tailing, warm colors, 'natural' materi-
als, and a solid, sheltering character."
The Iowa Usonian houses illustrate
Wright's creative approaches to cost
control through standardization and
use of common materials.
Sites nominated to the National
Register under Criterion D, because
they "have yielded or may be likely to
yield information important in prehis-
tory or history;' are also very difficult
to justify if they are derived from ac-
tivities of the past 50 years. Scholarly
information sufficient to determine
the comparative value of recent ar-
cheological sites tends to be very lim-
ited. It is especially difficult to deter-
mine what kinds of information can
be derived from site remains as op-
posed to that available in written
records, oral testimony, and photo-
graphs. This cautionary point does
not constitute a prohibition of all such
nominations, but it does illustrate the
need for justifying and documenting
the exceptiona] importance of recent
archeological sites.
14
XI. SUMMARY
The National Register Criteria for
Evaluation encourage the listing of a
property that has achieved signifi-
cance within the past 50 years only if
it is of exceptional importance or if it
is a contributing part of a National
Register eligible district. While that
language sounds restrictive, the crite-
ria are general principles that are ap-
plied in specific contexts. The criteria
discussion of recently significant
properties is not intended to bar con-
sideration of many resources that can
be judged unusually important in the
recent development of American his-
tory, architecture, archeology, engi-
neering, or culture. However, the cri-
teria and National Register program
require that nominations for such
properties demonstrate that sufficient
historical perspective and scholarly,
comparative analysis exist to justify
the claim of exceptional importance.
15
XII. SUGGESTED READINGS
Albrecht, Donald. World War II and the
American Dream: How Wartime
Building Changed a Nation. Cam-
bridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1995.
Kelly, Barbara M. Expanding the
American Dream: Building and Re-
building Levittown. Albany, N.Y.:
State University of New York
Press, 1993.
Shiffer, Rebecca A., editor. "Cultural
Resources From the Recent Past;'
CRM, Vol. 16, 1993 (special issue).
Jackson, Lesley. 'Contemporary': Archi-
tectureand Interiors of the 1950s.
London: Phaidon Press Ltd, 1994.
Jackson, Michael. "Preserving What's
New." APT Bulletin, Vol. XXIII,
1991 (special issue).
Jackson, Michael, editor. Commercial
Archeology Bibliography: Resources
for the Road. Washington, D.C.: The
Society for Commercial Archeol-
ogy, 1995.
Longstreth, Richard, "When the
Present Becomes the Past;' in Pasf
Meets Future, Antoinette J. Lee, edi-
tor. Washington, D.C.: The Preser-
vation Press, 1992.
Luce, W. Ray, "Kent State, White
Castles, and Subdivisions: Evaluat-
ing the Recent Past;' in Preserving
the Recent Past, Deborah Slaton and
Rebecca A. Shiffer, editors. Wash-
ington, D.C: Historic Preservation
Education Foundation, 1995.
Rowe, Peter G. Making a Middle Land-
scape. Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT
Press, 1991.
Shull, Carol D. and Beth L. Savage,
"Trends in Recognizing Places for
Significance in the Recent Past;' in
Preserving the Recent Past, Deborah
Slaton and Rebecca A. Shiffer, edi-
tors. Washington, D.C.: Historic
Preservation Education Founda-
tion, 1995.
Slaton, Deborah and Rebecca A.
Shiffer. Preserving the Recent Past.
Washington, D.C.: Historic Preser-
vation Education Foundation, 1995.
16
Frank Lloyd Wright's Morin County Civic Center, Morin County, California, completed in 1958, is an ideal government complex in
a beautiful suburban setting. (Aaron Green, Woodbridge, 1990)
XIII. NATIONAL REGISTER
CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION
The National Register's standards
for evaluating the significance of
properties were developed to recog-
nize the accomplishments of all
people who have made a contribution
to our country's history and heritage.
The criteria are designed to guide
State and local governments, federal
agencies, and others in evaluating po-
tential entries in the National Register
Criteria for Evaluation: The quality
of significance in American history,
architecture, archeology, engineering,
and culture is present in districts,
sites, buildings, structures, and objects
that possess integrity of location, de-
sign, setting, materials, workmanship,
feeling, and association, and:
A. that are associated with events that
have made a significant contribu-
tion 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 charac-
teristics of a type, period, or
method of construction, or that
represent the work of a master, or
that possess high artistic values, or
that represent a significant and dis-
tinguishable entity whose compo-
nents may lack individual distinc-
tion; or
D. that have yielded, or maybe likely
to yield, information important in
prehistory or history.
Criteria Considerations: Ordi-
narily 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 his-
toric buildings, properties primarily
commemorative in nature, and prop-
erties that have achieved significance
within the past 50 years shall not be
considered eligible for the National
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 pri-
mary significance from architec-
tural or artistic distinction or his-
torical importance; or
b. a building or structure removed
from its original location but
which is significant primarily for
architectural value, or which is the
surviving structure most impor-
tantly associated with a historic
person or event; or
c. a birthplace or grave of a historical
figure of outstanding importance if
there is no other appropriate site
or building directly associated
with his or her productive life; or
d. a cemetery that derives its primary
significance from graves of persons
of transcendent importance, from
age, from distinctive design fea-
tures, or from association with his-
toric events; or
e. a reconstructed building when ac-
curately executed in a suitable en-
vironment and presented in a dig-
nified manner as part of a restora-
tion master plan, and when no
other building or structure with
the same association has survived;
or
f. a property primarily commemora-
tive in intent if design, age, tradi-
tion, or symbolic value has in-
vested it with its own historical
significance; or
g. a property achieving significance
within the past 50 years if it is of
exceptional importance.
17
XIV. NATIONAL REGISTER
BULLETINS
The Basics
How to Apply National Register Criteria for Evaluation
Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Form
Part A: How to Complete the National Register Form *
Part B: How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form
Researching a Historic Property
Property Types
Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Historic Aids to Navigation
Guidelines for Identifying, Evaluating and Registering America's Historic Battlefields
Guidelines for Evaluating and Registering Historical Archeological Sites
Guidelines for Evaluating and Registering Cemeteries and Burial Places
How to Evaluate and Nominate Designed Historic Landscapes
Guidelines for Identifying, Evaluating and Registering Historic Mining Sites
How to Apply National Register Criteria to Post Offices
Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Properties Associated with Significant Persons
Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Properties That Have Achieved Significance Within the Last Fifty Years
Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Rural Historic Landscapes
Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Traditional Cultural Properties
Nominating Historic Vessels and Shipwrecks to the National Register of Historic Places
Technical Assistance
Contribution of Moved Buildings to Historic Districts; Tax Treatments for Moved Buildings; and Use of Nomination
Documentation in the Part I Certification Process
Defining Boundaries for National Register Properties*
Guidelines for Local Surveys: A Basis for Preservation Planning
How to Improve the Quality of Photographs for National Register Nominations
National Register Casebook: Examples of Documentation *
Using the UTM Grid System to Record Historic Sites
The above publications may be obtained by writing to the National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service,
1849 C Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20240. Publications marked with an asterisk (*) are also available in electronic
form on the World Wide Web at www.cr.nps.gov/nr, or send your request by a-mail to nr_reference@nps.gov.
18