HOW TO NOMINATE A NATIONAL TREASURE
May 07, 2015
HOW TO NOMINATE A NATIONAL TREASURE
What is a National Treasure?National Treasures are the threatened and endangered historic places that
tell America’s broad and diverse story. Created by the National Trust for
Historic Preservation, this program is where we take direct, on-the-ground
action to save these places and promote their significance and history.
When beginning the nomination process, make sure that the historic
resource in your area (a building, landscape, monument, or community)
meets these three criteria.
1. It must be nationally significant …… or the preservation work must have national implications. The
resource must be on or eligible for the National Register of Historic
Places, be a National Historic Landmark, or have some other type of
designation that deems its significance on a national level.
2. The historic resource must be threatened.Examples of threats that endanger a
place include closure, demolition,
inappropriate development, insufficient
protection, lack of funding, and
neglect.
3. There must be a clear role for the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
The National Trust offers technical assistance in advocacy, marketing,
planning, legal assistance, development, heritage tourism, and other
areas of preservation to help save the threatened resource.
Keep in mind:Success stories are always encouraging and often inspire people to get
involved in helping to save a place. Because the National Treasures
program does just that, here are some guidelines to keep in mind when
going through the nomination process.
Variety is good.The National Trust loves to receive a wealth of applications and encourages
people to nominate diverse and unique places. It creates variety within the
revolving portfolio of National Treasures, and helps us reach a broad audience.
Patience is appreciated.The National Trust encourages patience with the application process, as this
is a highly competitive national program. National Treasures nominations
receive multiple levels of review within the National Trust, and the process
can take some time.
Each campaign is unique.It’s important to remember that no two National Treasures are the same. Each
campaign has a different background story and will likely require different
approaches. For example, some campaigns might focus heavily on marketing
strategies, while others might require legal advocacy.
Example: Terminal IslandSignificance: WWI and II shipbuilding center, birthplace of tuna canning
industry.
Threat: Demolition
Campaign Goals: Save the industrial buildings & encourage adaptive reuse.
Campaign Strategy: Legal advocacy
(Read more about the successful Terminal Island campaign here.)
Nominate your own National Treasure.If there’s a threatened historic resource in your area that you think deserves
a “National Treasures” title, nominate it here. The National Trust has been
preserving and protecting America’s historic places for more than 60 years,
and with your help, we can continue the mission in new and inventive ways.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation works to save America’s
historic places. Preservation Tips & Tools helps others do the same
in their own communities.
For more information, visit blog.preservationnation.org.
Photos courtesy: Oka Tai-Lee, Flickr; Emw, Wikimedia; Cathy, Flickr; Relentlessly, Flickr; Eli Pousson, Flickr; Ines Hegedus-Garcia, Flickr; Franz Neumeier, Flickr; Steph Matthews, Flickr; Greg Bishop, Flickr.