IX. NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION
The quality of significance in American history, architecture, archeology,
engineering, and culture is present in districts, sites, buildings,
structures, and objects that possess integrity of location, design,
setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association, and:
- that are associated with events that have made a significant contribution
to the broad patterns of our history; or
- that are associated with the lives of persons significant in our
past; or
- that embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period,
or method of construction, or that represent the work of a master,
or that possess high artistic values, or that represent a significant
and distinguishable entity whose components may lack distinction;
or
- that have yielded or may be likely to yield information important
in prehistory or history.
NATIONAL 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 fifty
years shall not be considered eligible for the National Register.
However, such properties will qualify if they are integral parts of
districts that do meet the criteria or if they fall within the following
categories:
- a religious property deriving significance from architectural
or historical importance; or
- a building or structure removed from its original location, but
which is significant primarily for architectural value, or which
is the surviving structure most importantly associated with a particular
person of event; or
- a birthplace or grave of a historical figure of outstanding importance
if there is no other appropriate site or building directly associated
with his productive life; or
- 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; or
- a reconstructed building when accurately executed in a suitable
environment and presented in a dignified manner as part of a restoration
master pan, and when no other building or structure with the same
association has survived; or
- a property commemorative in intent if design, age, tradition,
or symbolic value has invested it with its own historical significance;
or
- a property achieving significance within the past fifty years
if it is of exceptional importance.
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