National Historic Preservation Act (Other Keyword)
1-25 (120 Records)
The 2008 DoD Historic Buildings Conference focused specifically on historic buildings and structures, based on DoD mission needs and feedback from the greater DoD cultural resource community.
2008 DoD Historic Building Conference After-action Report - Report (Legacy 08-387) (2008)
An after-action report for the 2008 DoD Historic Buildings Conference, which focused specifically on historic buildings and structures, based on DoD mission needs and feedback from the greater DoD cultural resource community.
2016 Cultural Resources Survey for the Proposed North-South Runway Expansion, United States Air Force Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska (2016)
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER), has proposed to extend the northern end of the existing north-south runway. As the proposed project is an undertaking on federal lands with federal funds, Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) (Public Law 89-665; 54 U.S.C. 300101 et seq.) requires a cultural resources survey to identify and assess potential impacts to National Register of Historic Places (NRHP)-eligible historic properties within the project’s Area of Potential...
Addendum to Grave Identification Survey, Fort Lee Adams Roudabout, Prince George County, Virginia (2011)
This is an addendum to a previous project (Matternes et al. 2010) that addressed the location of an unmarked African-American cemetery on property owned by Prince George County and adjacent to U.S. Army Fort Lee Military Reservation in Prince George County, Virginia. The purpose of the addendum project was to determine whether cultural features, particularly historic period graves, were present in the established triangular median between Jefferson Park Road and Adams Avenue. At the time of the...
Annual Report to Congress on the Federal Archaeological Program FY1983 and FY1984 (1986)
This report was prepared for the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and the House Interior and Insular Affairs Committee of the United States Congress. It was prepared pursuant to section 5(c) of the Archeological and Historic Preservation Act of 1974: (Public Law 93-291; 74 Stat. 220; 16 U.S.C. 469-469c) and section 13 of the Archaeological Resources Protection Ac.t of 1979 (Public Law 96-95; 93 Stat. 721; 16 U.S.C. 470aa). Under these Acts, the Secretary of the Interior is directed...
Annual Report to the State Historic Preservation Office Fiscal Year 2012 (2012)
The protocol between Bureau of Land Management-Alaska (BLM) and the Alaska State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO) calls for an annual report to provide basic information to the SHPO on the year's cultural resource management activities. This report contains the required information from the BLM's Anchorage Field Office (AFO) for the 2012 federal fiscal year (October 1, 2011 through September 30, 2012). The report is organized alphabetically by quadrangle name, and separates the Section 106...
Antiterrorism Measures for Historic Properties (Legacy 03-176)
The objectives of this study were to: identify common circumstances in which Unified Facilities Criteria (UFC) 4-010-01 undertakings for minimum antiterrorism (AT) standards for DoD building will conflict with the requirements of the NHPA, and; develop specific guidelines that will help installation command, AT, cultural resources, and facilities personnel to rapidly resolve those conflicts in a way that satisfies both sets of requirements.
Antiterrorism Measures for Historic Properties - Report (Legacy 03-176) (2006)
The objectives of this study were to: identify common circumstances in which Unified Facilities Criteria (UFC) 4-010-01 undertakings for minimum antiterrorism (AT) standards for DoD building will conflict with the requirements of the NHPA, and; develop specific guidelines that will help installation command, AT, cultural resources, and facilities personnel to rapidly resolve those conflicts in a way that satisfies both sets of requirements.
Archaeological Subsurface Surveys of Potential Mortuary Areas and Select Parcels on the Fort Lee Military Reservation, Prince George County, Virginia (2011)
This investigation addressed three parcels, broken into four project areas to determine the potential for unmarked subsurface archaeological features with a particular emphasis on identifying unmarked graves. Area 1, located on the periphery of U.S. Army Fort Lee Military Reservation in eastern Virginia, was adjacent to an unmarked cemetery (Laboring Sisters of the Vineyard, 44PG0543) on property currently owned by Prince George County. Areas 2A, 2B and 3 were on parcels in the immediately...
Archaeological Subsurface Surveys, Fort Lee Military Reservation, Prince George County (FL2011.018)
This investigation addressed the location of an unmarked cemetery on property currently owned by Prince George County, adjacent to U.S. Army Fort Lee Military Reservation in eastern Virginia. Historical research indicated that the burial ground was associated with the laboring Sisters of the Vine Burial Association who used it as a cemetery in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Relic fences and property boundary markers indicated where the probable cemetery property boundaries...
Archeological and Historic Data Recovery Program Fiscal Year 1975 (1975)
The Secretary’s Report to Congress provides information to several audiences—Congress, the archeological and historic preservation community, and the American public—about the ways that Federal agencies meet the challenges of archeological resource stewardship. While much work remains to be done, the information in these reports demonstrates that Federal agencies are making progress in locating and protecting sites, caring for collections, and initiating public involvement in these...
Archeological and Historic Data Recovery Program FY1976 (1976)
An expanded Federal mandate in archeology and historic preservation, resulting in vast new responsibilities for the Interagency Archeological Program, was vested in the Secretary of the Interior by the Archeological and Historic Preservation Act of 19711- (Public Law 93-290. Current program responsibilities include prompt and thoroughly professional responses to executive and legislative calls for the protection and preservation of the Nation's historic heritage as well as to the technical...
Archeological and Historical Data Recovery Program FY1977 and FY1978 (1979)
Archeology, involving those remains usually hidden beneath the earth's surface, is a complex data-gathering science. And because archeological remains are considered a cultural rather than a physical resource, their importance is often misunderstood and underestimated. Archeological remains are actually as much a physical resource as historic buildings and, as such are as vulnerable to destruction from intensive human activity (Figs. 1, 2). Although man has inhabited North America for perhaps...
Archeological and Historical Data Recovery Program FY1979 (1979)
This report is submitted pursuant to section 5(c) of Public Law 93-291, the Archeological and Historic Preservation Act of 1974. It is the responsibility of the Secretary of the Interior to coordinate all federal survey and recovery activities authorized under Public Law 93-291, and to report on the scope and effectiveness of this law in directing federal archeological data recovery activities to the Interior and Insular Affairs Committees of the United States Congress. In fulfilling their...
Archeology and the United States Federal Government (1989)
Written by Francis P. McManamon and George S. Smith, this paper focuses on the development and organization of the Federal Archeology Program under the National Historic Preservation Program. Beginning in the early nineteenth century, the United States government became concerned for the preservation of important archeological properties - leading to the development of the Federal Archeology Program and a wide range of agencies and activities at the national, state and local levels. McManamon...
Army Alternate Procedures (2001)
The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation approved technical and administrative amendments to the Army Alternate Procedures. Those Army Alternate Procedures set forth a process that Army installations can follow in order to meet their historic preservation review responsibilities under the National Historic Preservation Act. The main purposes of the amendments are to conform the Alternate Procedures to the Army’s internal reorganization and clarify its exemption regarding designated surface...
Army Program Comment for Capehart and Wherry Era Army Family Housing and Associated Structures and Landscape Features (1949-1962) (2001)
The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation approved a Program Comment that facilitates the Army's compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act with regard to management of its inventory of Capehart and Wherry Era family housing and associated structures and landscape features. Executed – May 31, 2001; Expiration – None.
Army Program Comment for Inter-War Era Historic Housing, Associated Buildings and Structures, and Landscape Features (1919-1940) (2020)
The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation issued a program comment for the U.S. Department of the Army that sets forth the way in which the Army complies with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act for its inventory of Inter-War Era historic housing management actions, including: maintenance, repair, rehabilitation, renovation, abatement, mothballing, demolition, replacement construction, new construction, lease and conveyance. Executed – September 4, 2020; Expiration –...
Army Program Comment for World War II and Cold War Era (1939-1974) Ammunition Production Facilities and Plants (2006)
This Program Comment provided the Department of the Army with an alternative way to comply with its responsibilities following management actions on World War II and Cold War Era Army Ammunition Production Facilities and Plants that may be eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places (Facilities and Plants): ongoing operations, maintenance and repair, rehabilitation, renovation, mothballing, cessation of maintenance, new construction, demolition, deconstruction and salvage,...
Army Prototype Programmatic Agreement Regarding Building Interiors (2011)
The Department of the Army developed, in concert with the ACHP, a Prototype Programmatic Agreement (PA) for the interiors of National Register contributing buildings and individually eligible buildings. The Army determined that a Prototype PA would provide Cultural Resource Managers at Army installations an additional tool to use in meeting their responsibilities under Section 106 for these federal facilities, and to streamline the consideration of these interiors. The Army has more than 20,000...
Assessment of National Register Eligibility for the Granite Reef Diversion Dam Southside Gatekeeper's House, Maricopa County, Arizona (2019)
Recent improvements made to the Gatekeeper's House at Granite Reef Dam were evaluated to determine if the building is still a contributing element to the National Register of Historic Places listing, Salt River Project Diversion and Conveyance System Historic District. The Southside Gatekeeper's House is significant under Criterion A for its importance to the operation and maintenance of the Granite Reef Diversion Dam. The property possesses good integrity of design, materials, and workmanship,...
Building 32448 (ANC-04181) Determination of National Register of Historic Places Eligibility (2016)
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) has proposed to demolish Building 32448 (formerly 62-160) Munitions Maintenance Operations facility, an individual Quonset hut that was constructed in 1942. As the proposed project is an undertaking on federal lands with federal funds, a cultural resource survey of the project's Area of Potential Effect (APE) and a determination of the building's National Register of Historical Places (NRHP) eligibility were required under Section 106 of the National...
The Built Environment of Cold War Era Servicewomen (Legacy 05-194)
This study examines the history and evolution of the built environment of Cold War era servicewomen to provide a historic context for use in identifying and evaluating aspects of historic buildings, landscapes, and properties associated with Cold War Era servicewomen that may be eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
The Built Environment of Cold War Era Servicewomen - Report (Legacy 05-194) (2006)
This study examines the history and evolution of the built environment of Cold War era servicewomen to provide a historic context for use in identifying and evaluating aspects of historic buildings, landscapes, and properties associated with Cold War Era servicewomen that may be eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
Celebrating the National Historic Preservation Act: The Making Archaeology Public Project (2016)
Over the last fifty years, a great deal of archaeological research has come about due to the passage of the National Historic Preservation Act. The Society for Historical Archaeology, the Society for American Archaeology, and the Register of Professional Archaeologists– in partnership with the American Cultural Resources Association and the Archaeological Legacy Institute (home of The Archaeology Channel) are supporting a nationwide initiative to highlight some of the important things we have...