Register of Historic Places...
...cont'd from page 4
- Be associated with important events that have contributed
significantly to the broad pattern of our history.
- Be associated with the lives of persons significant
in our past.
- Embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period
or method of construction; or represent the work
of a master; or possess high artistic values;
or represent a significant and distinguishable
entity whose components may lack individual distinction.
- Have yielded, or may be likely to yield, information
important in prehistory or history.
Besides meeting one or more of these National
Register criteria, a property must also have integrity of
location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling
and association. This means that if a property has been
dramatically altered or its setting has been lost, it is
probably not eligible for the Register.
Criteria Considerations
Ordinarily, 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 historic buildings, properties primarily
commemorative in nature and properties that have achieved
significance within the last 50 years shall not be considered
eligible for the National Register. However, properties will
qualify if they are integral parts of districts that do meet
the criteria, or if they fall within one or more of the following categories:
- A religious property deriving primary significance
from architectural or artistic distinction or historical importance.
- A building or structure removed from its original
location but which is significant for architectural
value, or which is the surviving structure most
importantly associated with an historic person or event.
- A birthplace or grave of an historical figure of
outstanding importance if there is no other appropriate
site or building directly associated with his or her productive life.
- A cemetery that derives its primary significance from
graves of persons of transcendent importance,
from age, from distinctive design features or
from association with historic events.
- A reconstructed building when accurately executed in a
suitable environment and presented in a dignified
manner as part of a restoration master plan, and
when no other building or structure with the same
association has survived.
- A property primarily commemorative in intent if design,
age, tradition or symbolic value has invested
it with its own historical significance.
- A property achieving significance within the past 50 years
if it is of exceptional importance.
Texas Historical Commission
National Register Coordinator
P.O. Box 12276, Austin, TX 78711-2276
Phone: 512/463-5853, Fax: 512/475-3122
www.thc.state.tx.us
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