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Secretary Kempthorne Selects New U.S. World
Heritage Tentative List
From: interior_news@ios.doi.gov Date:
1/22/2008 Office of the Secretary - FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contacts:
Gerry Gaumer gerry_gaumer@nps.gov
or 202-208-6843 Shane Wolfe shane_wolfe@ios.doi.gov or
202-208-6416
Washington, D.C. - Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne
today announced his selection of 14 U.S. sites to be included on a new United
States World Heritage Tentative List. The 14 properties on the new list will
now be eligible to be considered for nomination by the United States to the
UNESCO World Heritage List, which recognizes the most significant cultural and
natural treasures on the planet.
"I am pleased to be able to take the necessary first step so
that these truly significant American natural and cultural properties can be
considered for the most prestigious international recognition accorded to
properties of global importance," Kempthorne said. "Each of these sites is
important to Americans as well as others around the world."
World Heritage Sites are designated under the World Heritage
Convention. The United States was the prime architect of the Convention, an
international treaty for the preservation of natural and cultural heritage
sites of global significance proposed by President Richard M. Nixon in 1972,
and was the first nation to ratify it. There are 851 sites in 140 of the 184
signatory countries. Currently there are 20 World Heritage Sites in the United
States already listed.
The new sites announced on the United States World Heritage
Tentative List can be considered over the next 10 years for formal nomination
by the United States as World Heritage Sites.
Each of the properties included on the new U.S. World
Heritage Tentative List is described below.
Neither inclusion in the Tentative List nor inscription as a
World Heritage Site imposes legal restrictions on owners or neighbors of sites,
nor does it give the United Nations any management authority or ownership
rights in U.S. World Heritage Sites, which continue to be subject to U.S. law.
The preparation of a Tentative List is a necessary first
step in the process of nominating a site to the World Heritage List, because a
country cannot nominate a property unless it has been on its Tentative List for
a minimum of a year. Countries also are limited to nominating no more than two
sites in any given year.
The new Tentative List replaces an outdated one prepared in
1982 and contains a diverse collection of natural and cultural sites, located
in 15 States and one U.S. Territory. They include one that is being proposed
for both natural and cultural values. The owners include, among others, several
Federal agencies, state governments, private foundations, and religious groups.
The list is scheduled to be formally submitted to the UNESCO World Heritage
Centre by February 1, 2008.
Secretary Kempthorne included these properties in the
Tentative List after receiving applications from the owners of 35 sites, all of
whom applied voluntarily. In order to be included, a proposed site had to meet
several U.S. prerequisites in addition to appearing to meet the stringent World
Heritage criteria of international importance; the U.S. prerequisites included
the written agreement of all property owners to the nomination of their
property, general support from stakeholders, including elected officials, and a
prior official determination that the property was nationally important (such
as by designation as a National Historic or National Natural Landmark). The
World Heritage nomination criteria can be found on the National Park Service
Office of International Affairs website http://www.nps.gov/oia/
The applications were evaluated by National Park Service
staff, non-government experts on the World Heritage nomination process, and the
U.S. National Commission for UNESCO. The public had the opportunity to comment
on the proposals for the Tentative List.
http://home.nps.gov/applications/release/Detail.cfm?ID=770
Nearly all the comments received from Federal, State, and local government
executive and legislative officials, and other stakeholders supported the
inclusion of sites in their States and communities.
Because UNESCO asks countries to wait a year before
submitting nominations from their tentative lists, the first time that any U.S.
World Heritage nominations drawn from the new List could go forward would be at
the beginning of 2009 with consideration by the World Heritage Committee likely
in the summer of 2010. The Committee, composed of representatives of 21 nations
elected as the governing body of the World Heritage Convention, makes the final
decisions on which nominations to accept on the World Heritage List at its
annual meeting each summer.
The National Park Service manages all or parts of 17 of the
20 U.S. World Heritage Sites currently listed, including Yellowstone National
Park, the Everglades, and the Statue of Liberty, and serves as the principal
technical agency for the U.S. Government to the Convention. In 2005, the U.S.
won a fourth term on the World Heritage Committee and will serve until 2009.
General information about the Tentative List process is
posted on the Office of International Affairs website at
http://www.nps.gov/oia/topics/worldheritage/tentativelist.htm
The earlier National Park Service preliminary staff report, including summaries
of information on all 35 sites that were considered for the Tentative List, is
available at: http://www.nps.gov/oia/TLEssayFinal.pdf
The original Applications submitted to the National Park Service for the
candidate sites can be found at
http://www.nps.gov/oia/NewWebpages/ApplicantsTentativeList.html
For further information, please contact Stephen Morris,
Chief, Office of International Affairs at
stephen_morris@nps.gov or
202-354-1802 or Gerry Gaumer in the National Park Service's Office of Public
Affairs at gerry_gaumer@nps.gov or 202-208-6843.
The U.S. World Heritage Tentative List 2008
CULTURAL SITES (9):
Civil Rights Movement Sites, Birmingham and Montgomery,
Alabama
These three historically African-American churches: Dexter
Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church in Montgomery and the Bethel Baptist and
16th Street Baptist Churches in Birmingham were the locations of iconic events
in the mid-20th century civil rights movement for African-Americans, a movement
that both drew from and has had a profound influence on human rights movements
elsewhere in the world, particularly regarding non-violent social change. The
key events were the 1955-56 Montgomery bus boycott led by Rev. Martin Luther
King, Jr., of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church; the 1965 voting rights march from
Selma, Alabama to Montgomery that ended at that church, the 1963 street
demonstrations in Birmingham inspired in part by Rev. Fred Lee Shettlesworth of
Bethel Baptist Church, and the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Church that
killed four young girls. The churches remain in the ownership of their
congregations.
Dayton Aviation Sites, Ohio
These are four sites associated with the Wright Brothers'
pioneering efforts in human flight, in and around the city of Dayton, where
they constructed and tested the Wright Flyer III, the first airplane that could
take off, fly until it exhausted its fuel supply, land safely, and do so
repeatedly. Huffman Prairie was a cow pasture when the Wrights began to use it
in 1904 for test flights; it remains an open landscape on the Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base. The small 2-story brick building that housed the Wright Cycle
Company and Wright & Wright Printing in 1895-97 today houses exhibits and
National Park Service offices. The Wright Flyer III is enshrined in Wright
Hall, a building constructed in the 1940s specifically to house it. Hawthorn
Hill, a 2-1/2 story brick mansion, was Orville Wright's home between 1914 and
1948. All of these sites except Hawthorn Hill are part of Dayton Aviation
Heritage National Historical Park, a unit of the National Park System, although
Huffman Prairie is owned by the U.S. Air Force and Wright Hall by Dayton
History. Hawthorn Hill is owned by the Wright Family Foundation.
Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks, Ohio
Nine archeological sites containing more than 40 monumental
ceremonial earthworks in precise geometric shapes reflect the sophisticated
Native American Ohio Hopewell culture during the Woodland Period (1,000-2,000
years ago). They are located within three archeological preserves in the
south-central portion of the State, one in each of three of the principal
northern tributary valleys of the Ohio River -- the Little Miami, the Scioto,
and the Muskingum. They include Fort Ancient State Memorial, between Cincinnati
and Dayton; the five sites in Hopewell Culture National Historical Park, near
Chillicothe, a unit of the National Park System; and the Newark Earthworks
State Historic Site in the cities of Newark and Heath. These are among the
largest earthworks in the world that are not fortifications or defensive
structures, and they contain extensive deposits of finely crafted artifacts.
Their scale is imposing by any standard: the Great Pyramid of Cheops would have
fit inside the Wright Earthworks; four structures the size of the Colosseum of
Rome would fit in the Octagon; and the circle of monoliths at Stonehenge would
fit into one of the small auxiliary earthwork circles adjacent to the Octagon.
Jefferson (Thomas) Buildings (Poplar Forest and Virginia
State Capitol), Virginia
These two buildings are proposed as a joint extension to the
World Heritage listing that includes Monticello and the University of Virginia.
Like those two, they reflect Jefferson's familiarity with Classical Greek and
Roman, Renaissance, and French late 18th century architecture. The Virginia
State Capitol in Richmond (1785-98), as the first adaptation of the Roman
temple form to a governmental building, has been enduringly influential in the
use of Classical models for such structures. It remains the State Capitol
today; it also served as the Confederate Capitol for most of the Civil War.
Poplar Forest is Jefferson's rural retreat in Bedford County that was begun
before he retired from the U.S. presidency in 1809. Just south of the remains
of a grove of poplars that gave the place its name is the 2-story brick house
built in a perfect octagon around a central cube. Poplar Forest is owned by a
non-profit corporation dedicated to its preservation and restoration.
Mount Vernon, Virginia
George Washington's long-time home, with its associated
gardens and grounds, together form a remarkably well-preserved and extensively
documented example of a plantation landscape of the 18th-century American
South, based on English models but modified and adapted to the American
context. The estate was at the heart of a large plantation operation that
included hundreds of slaves. There is a core of 16 surviving 18th-century
structures situated within a landscape of associated gardens, fences, lanes,
walkways, and other features, situated along the Potomac River, that changed
and developed over many years in Washington's family. Washington and his wife
are also buried here. The Mount Vernon Ladies Association has owned and
maintained the property for 150 years.
Poverty Point National Monument and State Historic Site,
Louisiana
This vast complex of earthen structures is on a bayou near
the west bank of the Mississippi River. It is an integrated complex of three or
four earthen mounds, six enormous concentric semi-elliptical earthen ridges, a
large flat plaza, and several borrow areas constructed 1,700-1,100 years ago.
It was the largest and most elaborate settlement of its time in North America
and was built by a foraging society of hunter-gatherers, not a settled
agricultural people, which makes it without parallel in world archeological and
ethnographic records, challenging anthropology's basic assumptions about
hunter-gatherer societies. It may be the largest hunter-gatherer settlement
that has ever existed and its design was absolutely unique. How and why such a
society could have so totally transformed the landscape is still not
understood.
San Antonio Franciscan Missions, Texas
The modern city of San Antonio, Texas, has grown up around
this group of five Spanish Roman Catholic mission properties including some 80
structures that were built in stages from 1724 to 1782 on "open village" plans
within walled compounds. The Franciscan missions are a remarkable concentration
of surviving structures that superbly represent the Spanish colonial influence
in this part of the New World. The religious, economic and technological
systems of the missionaries created settled communities that became the basis
of the region's ethnically diverse society. One of the missions, San Antonio de
Valero (the Alamo), is under the charge of the Daughters of the Republic of
Texas as a historic site. The other four (Missions Concepcion, San Jose, San
Juan, and Espada, including Rancho de las Cabras) are, with various auxiliary
features, included in San Antonio Missions National Historical Park, a unit of
the National Park System; their churches are still used by the Roman Catholic
Church.
Serpent Mound, Ohio
Serpent Mound, in Adams County, a State memorial, is the
largest documented surviving example of a prehistoric effigy mound in the
world. It is both the acme of prehistoric effigy mound-building in the world
and part of the tradition of effigy mound building among some American Indian
cultures of the present Eastern United States. This sinuous earthen embankment
more than 1200 feet long includes an oval feature at one end, that may be the
serpent's eye, part of its head, or a secondary object, such as an egg, grasped
in its open jaws. Indications are that Serpent Mound was built by the Fort
Ancient Culture about the year 1120. Serpent Mound embodies fundamental
spiritual and cosmological principles of an indigenous ancient American Indian
culture and was aligned astronomically to mark the passage of the seasons.
Wright (Frank Lloyd) Buildings, Arizona, California,
Illinois, New York, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin
These ten properties are among the most iconic, most intact,
most representative, most innovative and most influential of the more than 400
Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) designs that have been erected. They span almost
sixty years of his efforts to create an "organic architecture" that attracted
widespread international attention and powerfully affected the course of modern
architecture around the world as well as in the United States. The properties
include the two Taliesins (his long-time homes with studios and schools); three
residences he designed for others, two office complexes, a place of worship, a
museum, and a governmental complex. They are:
Taliesin West (1938), Scottsdale, Arizona
Hollyhock House (1919-21), Los Angeles, California
Marin County Civic Center (1960-69), San Rafael, California
Frederick C. Robie House (1908-10), Chicago, Illinois
Unity Temple (1905-08), Oak Park, Illinois
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (1956-59), New York, New York
Price Tower (1953-56), Bartlesville, Oklahoma
Fallingwater (1936-38), Mill Run, Pennsylvania
S. C. Johnson and Son, Inc., Administration Building and
Research Tower, Racine, Wisconsin (1936-39; 1943-50)
Taliesin (1911 and later), Spring Green, Wisconsin
MIXED NATURAL AND CULTURAL SITE (1): Papahanaumokuakea
Marine National Monument, Hawaii
This 1,200-mile-long string of islands and adjacent waters
represents the longest, clearest, and oldest example of island formation and
atoll evolution in the world. A marine national monument designated in 2006, it
is jointly managed by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the State of Hawaii. The
monument is a vast area running northwest from the island of Kauai. Scattered
in the deep ocean are some 10 small islands with reefs and shoals. In this
remote and still relatively pristine part of the Pacific, marine life remains
abundant and diverse, with a large number of species found nowhere else in the
world and a wide array of threatened and endangered species. Native Hawaiians
reached these islands at least 1,000 years before any other people and planted
settlements on some of them, where there are important archeological sites. The
islands retain great cultural and spiritual significance to Native Hawaiians.
The islands figured as well in the European exploration of the Pacific and in
Pacific whaling, communications, and early aviation. One of them, Midway,
became the focus of its namesake battle in June 1942 -- the turning point of
World War II in the Pacific.
NATURAL SITES (4):
Fagatele Bay National Marine Sanctuary, American Samoa
This refuge is a small pristine bay on the large Samoan
island of Tutuila. It does not include immediately adjacent shorelands. The
refuge is a fringing coral reef ecosystem within an eroded volcanic crater. The
Bay contains a vast array of tropical marine organisms, including corals,
marine mammals, and threatened and endangered species, including hawksbill and
green sea turtles. The Bay is a vibrant tropical reef marine ecosystem, filled
with populations of coral reef fish and marine invertebrates. The scenic beauty
of the bay and its surroundings are also exceptional. Fagatele Bay is
administered by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, Georgia
This refuge, managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
embraces the vast bulk of the Okefenokee Swamp, a large intact swamp that is
the source of two rivers, one that flows into the Atlantic and the other into
the Gulf of Mexico. The refuge also has extensive and essentially undisturbed
peat deposits. Okefenokee is one of the world's largest naturally driven
freshwater ecosystems with a diversity of habitat types and rich and diverse
flora and fauna.
Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona
This large national park, on the southern part of the
Colorado Plateau, is most notable for vast, colorful, and well preserved
deposits of petrified wood. There are exceptionally large deposits of it in
five areas termed "forests." The park, with its scenic vistas and spectacles of
colorful rocks, is one of the premier places in the world for the study of the
ecosystem of the Late Triassic Epoch some 205-225 million years ago. In
addition to the largest deposits of petrified wood in the world, the park
contains important fossils of other plants and animals, including dinosaurs.
White Sands National Monument, New Mexico
This property, a unit of the National Park System at the
northern end of the Chihuahuan desert, protects vast dunes of gypsum sand that
have engulfed more than 176,000 acres -- along with plants and animals that
have adjusted to this environment. White Sands National Monument is the world's
largest and best protected surface deposit of gypsum sand.
U.S. World Heritage Sites (with dates of inscription)
Mesa Verde National Park (1978)
Yellowstone National Park (1978)
Everglades National Park (1979)
Grand Canyon National Park (1979)
Independence Hall (1979)
Kluane / Wrangell-St Elias / Glacier Bay /
Tatshenshini-Alsek (1979, 1992, 1994)
Redwood National and State Parks (1980)
Mammoth Cave National Park (1981)
Olympic National Park (1981)
Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site (1982)
La Fortaleza and San Juan National Historic Site in Puerto
Rico (1983)
Great Smoky Mountains National Park (1983)
Statue of Liberty (1984)
Yosemite National Park (1984)
Chaco Culture (1987)
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park (1987)
Monticello and the University of Virginia in Charlottesville
(1987)
Pueblo de Taos (1992)
Carlsbad Caverns National Park (1995)
Waterton Glacier International Peace Park (1995)
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