[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 36, Volume 1]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 36CFR65.4]
[Page 351-352]
TITLE 36--PARKS, FORESTS, AND PUBLIC PROPERTY
CHAPTER I--NATIONAL PARK SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
PART 65_NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS PROGRAM--Table of Contents
Sec. 65.4 National Historic Landmark criteria.
The criteria applied to evaluate properties for possible designation as
National Historic Landmarks or possible determination of eligibility for
National Historic Landmark designation are listed below. These criteria
shall be used by NPS in the preparation, review and evaluation of National
Historic Landmark studies. They shall be used by the
Advisory Board in reviewing National Historic Landmark studies and preparing
recommendations to the Secretary. Properties shall be designated National
Historic Landmarks only if they are nationally significant. Although assessments
of national significance should reflect both public perceptions and professional
judgments, the
evaluations of properties being considered for landmark designation are
undertaken by professionals, including historians, architectural historians,
archeologists and anthropologists familiar with the broad range of the nation's
resources and historical themes. The criteria applied by these specialists
to potential landmarks do not define
significance nor set a rigid standard for quality. Rather, the criteria
establish the qualitative framework in which a comparative professional
analysis of national significance can occur. The final decision on whether
a property possesses national significance is made by the Secretary on the
basis of documentation including the comments and recommendations of the
public who participate in the designation process.
[[Page 352]]
(a) Specific Criteria of National Significance: The quality of national significance is ascribed to districts, sites, buildings, structures and objects that possess exceptional value or quality in illustrating or interpreting the heritage of the United States in history, architecture, archeology, engineering and culture and that possess a high degree of integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling and association, and:
(1) That are associated with events that have made a significant contribution
to, and are identified with, or that outstandingly represent, the broad
national patterns of United States history and from which an understanding
and appreciation of those patterns may be gained;
or
(2) That are associated importantly with the lives of persons nationally
significant in the history of the United States; or
(3) That represent some great idea or ideal of the American people;
or
(4) That embody the distinguishing characteristics of an architectural type
specimen exceptionally valuable for a study of a period, style or method
of construction, or that represent a significant, distinctive and exceptional
entity whose components may lack individual distinction;
or
(5) That are composed of integral parts of the environment not sufficiently
significant by reason of historical association or artistic merit to warrant
individual recognition but collectively compose an entity of exceptional
historical or artistic significance, or outstandingly commemorate or illustrate
a way of life or culture; or
(6) That have yielded or may be likely to yield information of major scientific
importance by revealing new cultures, or by shedding light upon periods
of occupation over large areas of the United States. Such sites are those
which have yielded, or which may reasonably be expected to yield, data affecting
theories, concepts and ideas to a major degree.
(b) Ordinarily, cemeteries, birthplaces, 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 and properties that have achieved significance within the past
50 years are not eligible for
designation. Such properties, however, will qualify if they fall within
the following categories:
(1) A religious property deriving its primary national significance from
architectural or artistic distinction or historical importance; or
(2) A building or structure removed from its original location but which
is nationally significant primarily for its architectural merit, or for
association with persons or events of transcendent importance in the nation's
history and the association consequential; or
(3) A site of a building or structure no longer standing but the person
or event associated with it is of transcendent importance in the nation's
history and the association consequential; or
(4) A birthplace, grave or burial if it is of a historical figure of transcendent
national significance and no other appropriate site, building or structure
directly associated with the productive life of that person exists; or
(5) A cemetery that derives its primary national significance from
graves of persons of transcendent importance, or from an exceptionally distinctive
design or from an exceptionally significant event; or
(6) A reconstructed building or ensemble of buildings of extraordinary national
significance when accurately executed in a suitable environment and presented
in a dignified manner as part of a restoration master plan, and when no
other buildings or structures with the same association have survived; or
(7) A property primarily commemorative in intent if design, age, tradition,
or symbolic value has invested it with its own national historical significance;
or
(8) A property achieving national significance within the past 50 years
if it is of extraordinary national importance.
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