| Making it all Register
What does a listing on the National
Register of Historic Places really mean?

Story from the archives
by Elizabeth Benjamin / Apr. 16, 2004

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Listed on the National Register of Historic
Places, the John Wolf Kemp House, outside Albany, N.Y.,
was demolished in May 2003. (Stacy Weber, Panamerican Consultants,
Inc./Michael Hoffman)
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It only took one bulldozer to quickly reduce a nearly
200-year-old house on a busy thoroughfare outside Albany, N.Y.,
to a pile of rubble last May. Built in 1805, the timber-frame
property had been one of the last remnants of the days when working
farms, not shopping centers, strip malls, or housing developments,
dominated the city's suburbs.
The John Wolf Kemp House was one of some 77,000
listings on the National
Register of Historic Places, which the National Park Servicenot
the National Trustadministers. But that designation couldn't
stop the building's owner from razing it to make way for a $12
million extended-stay hotel.
The belief that inclusion on the register renders
historic structures or sites impervious to demolition or change
is a widely-held misconception, as is the idea that owners are
restricted from making alterations to properties once they're
listed. Such myths can prevent the register from being as effective
as it might be in bringing acclaim to historic properties and
offering a measure of protection through mandated review to significant
buildings and landscapes that stand in the way of federally funded
projects, experts say.
"The register really exists to protect historic
property owners from a government action that would impede or
devalue the nature of their property," says New York State
Parks Commissioner Bernadette Castro, who is a member of the federal
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, which comments on projects
that would affect National Register-listed properties. "But
there is confusion, and it is unfortunate. If your property is
on the National Register, it does not mean you cannot paint your
house any color you'd like," Castro continued. "It does
not in any way mean you can't sell your property or pass it on
to your heirs. Some people even think they have to let the public
into their house once it's on the register. We get that question
all the time."
In fact, properties that are deemed eligible for
the register but not formally listed on it still receive the same
consideration from the Advisory Council. So in the case of nervous
owners, anxiety is unwarranted: Whether they agree to have their
property listed or not, the limited protection that the register
affords will be extended to them.
In the past five years, 272 properties have been
removed from the register, but not necessarily because they were
demolished. The Park Service subtracts buildings from the register
not only when they are destroyed but when they're dramatically
changed or moved from their original location. However, since
sites are only taken off if a change in their status is brought
to the Park Service's attention, there are no exact figures of
how many register properties are lost annually.
Authorized under the National Historic Preservation
Act of 1966, the National Register exists to assist in public
and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect historic
and archaeological resources, according to its official Web site.
Properties listed on the register include districts, sites, buildings,
structures, and objects that are significant in American history,
architecture, archaeology, engineering, and culture.
To be eligible for the National Register, a structure
or site should be associated with significant historic events
or people or embody distinctive architectural characteristics
of a specific period. Generally, the candidates must have achieved
significance more than 50 years ago to be considered for inclusion.
Historic buildings that have been relocated or reconstructed are
generally not eligible.
Listing on the register gives a property special
consideration by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation
if it would be in any way affected by projects that the federal
government—or those that would use federal funding or require
federal licensing—undertake. The council does not have the power
to prohibit changes to a register property, but it does ensure
that historic values are considered in the federal planning process.
In addition, the council can suggest mitigation, such as documentation
of a building or landscaping around a new development, prior to
changes taking place.
Being on the register also makes owners of commercial
property—including rental property—eligible for federal tax credits
and qualifies them for federal assistance funds for preservation,
when money is available. Most states have set up a parallel state-level
register to which properties listed on the National Register are
automatically added and the same oversight standards apply.
When the National Register was created, the nation
was booming, and Americans were paying little attention to the
potential value of historic properties. Urban renewal—which usually
meant widespread demolition—and the federal highway program were
in full swing, so the National Historic Preservation Act and the
subsequent creation of the National Register were significant
breakthroughs for preservationists.
"It created a check-and-balance system that
we never had in this country before," says William J. Murtagh,
who was the register's inaugural "keeper," a position
he held for 14 years. "Before, preservationists had no legal
part of the planning dialogue. Now, preservation is no longer
the purview of a volunteer constituency; it's a formal part of
the planning process."
At its inception, says Murtagh, the register "was
never considered to be anything but a restriction of what the
federal government could do to us and our property using tax dollars.
It has absolutely no restriction on what the private individual
does with his property."
Listing a property on the National Register can
provide owners with intangible benefits as well, supporters say.
It draws attention to a site, giving it a cache that could increase
its value, or, in the case of an historic hotel or landmark, attract
more visitors and boost business.
"We think the recognition is the most important
incentive" for owners to list their properties on the National
Register, says Carol Shull, its current keeper. "The recognition
of the register can bring people to a community because they know
the buildings there have historical integrity," she says.
"It also can change the way communities view themselves by
getting local people to support and preserve significant structures
and landscapes."
In the end, it is local officials, not the federal
or state governments, that wield the real power over the future
of historic buildings and sites through zoning laws and historic
districts, which sometimes set up strict guidelines about what
owners can and cannot do with their properties—from restrictions
on everything from paint color to windows.
"You can put a building on the National Register
one day and demolish it the next," says Frank Quinn, director
of Historic Preservation for Heritage Ohio. "It's the local
listing, through a review board or district commission, that really
maintains the physical appearance of a building."
Elizabeth Benjamin, a staff writer for the Times
Union in Albany, N.Y., is a frequent contributor to Preservation.
This story was originally published on September
26, 2003.
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