January/February
2004
And Miles
to Go
Once again the National Park Service, overwhelmed
and underfunded, finds itself on a treacherous road.
The potholes are political as well as economic. By
John G. Mitchell
The
French Connection
A deadly Civil War clash between North and South off
the coast of Normandy left behind artifacts and art.
By Margaret Foster
Look Homeward, Orville
Ten years after Kitty Hawk, the surviving Wright brother
moved to Hawthorn Hill, the Dayton mansion that would
serve as his refuge for the rest of his life.
By Lester A. Reingold
Departments
Place: A father's
maps point the way to personal discovery.
By Patsy Sims More
Place essays >>
The
Short Answer: How historic preservation relates
to architecture and to the development of cities,
in the words of The New Yorker's architecture
critic, Paul Goldberger
Traveler:
There are fewer people and cows, but little else
has changed in the home place of the last U.S.
president from Vermont.
By Robert Wilson
Preservation
News
The Catholic church begins closing Manhattan parishes
Transitions
In
Virginia, a historic Blue Ridge town copes with
development within and without Yikes!
in Chicago Mexico
threatens to destroy an American ferry disabled
in a Baja port Who's
News
Books:
Cherishing the many survivors of that very American
building type, the one-room schoolhouse
By Adam Goodheart
Reporter: San Francisco's
Presidio and Crissy Field, integral pieces of a vast
national park, go separate ways in their evolution
as urban resources. By James
Conaway
Back
Page: The work of the Civilian Conservation
Corps lives around us. By
Dwight Young
Your
Trust
Information for members
and friends of the National Trust
Woodlawn Cemetery surveys interiors Properties:
Oatlands fights sprawl NPS,
Trust create western-parks center Profile:
Joseph Hall Year
two for HGTV project Arnold
Berke's NTHP
More Trust >>
Historic
Properties for Sale
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