The National Register of Historic Places Portal
The National Register of Historic Places is primarily a tool to recognize the historical significance of a building, structure, object, site, or district. Listing in the National Register does not directly restrict private property owners from the use of their property. Some states, however, might have state or local laws that become effective when a place is listed on the National Register. In contrast, a local historic district often has enabling ordinances at the municipal level that restrict certain kinds of changes to properties and thereby encourages those changes that are sensitive to the historic character of an area.
Any individual can prepare a National Register nomination although historians and historic preservation consultants are often employed for this work. The nomination contains basic information on the type of significance embodied in the building, structure, object, district, or site. The State Historic Preservation Office receives National Register nominations and supplies feedback to the individual preparing the nomination. A description of the various aspects of social history and commerce, architectural styles and ownership of the property is also part of the nomination.
Article
Manzanar is most widely known as the site of one of ten concentration camps where over 110,000 Japanese Americans were imprisoned during World War II. Located at the foot of the Sierra Nevada in California's Owens Valley between the towns of Lone Pine to the south and Independence to the north, it is approximately 230 miles (370.1 km) northeast of Los Angeles. Manzanar (which means “apple orchard” in Spanish) was identified by the United States National Park Service as the best-preserved of the former camp sites, and it is now the Manzanar National Historic Site.
Long before the first prisoners arrived in March 1942, Manzanar was home to Native Americans, who mostly lived in villages near several creeks in the area, and then to the ranchers and miners who established the town of Manzanar in 1910, but had abandoned the town by 1929 after the City of Los Angeles purchased the water rights to virtually the entire area. As different as these groups might seem, they are tied together by the common thread of forced relocation. Learn more...
Selected Picture
Photo credit: Fcb981
Biography
Frank Lloyd Wright (June 8, 1867 – April 9, 1959) was one of the most prominent and influential architects of the first half of the 20th century. He not only developed a series of highly individual styles over his extraordinarily long architectural career (spanning the years 1887-1959), he influenced the whole course of American architecture and building. To this day he probably remains America's most famous architect. Learn more...
Things you can do
- Join the WikiProject.
- Expand: stubs - Category:National Register of Historic Places stubs
Review and Comment
Categories
|
Did you know?
- ...that the Old Sycamore Hospital (pictured), founded in 1899, was designed and funded by the first female doctor in Sycamore, Illinois?
- ...that "Antietam" is misspelled on the facade of the Civil War Memorial in DeKalb County, Illinois?
- ...that the Potawatomi tribe believed that the natural pond in the backyard of the Chauncey Ellwood House in Sycamore, Illinois was once a watering hole for native buffalo?
- ...that the 1916 Lorado Taft work, The Soldiers' Monument, constructed for $21,000, is now worth over $1,000,000?
- ...that the George's Block in Sycamore, Illinois once hosted talks from the likes of Horace Greeley, Bayard Taylor and Charles Sumner?
Topics
|
Panorama
Photo credit: IvoShandor
Good articles
Good articles
1761 Milestone • 5th Avenue Theatre • Acors Barns House • Admiral David G. Farragut • Albany City Hall • Alden Tavern Site • All Saints' Episcopal Church (Briarcliff Manor, New York) • Allenville Mill Storehouse • Ambler's Texaco Gas Station • American Gothic House • American Thermos Bottle Company Laurel Hill Plant • Anderson Street (NJT station) • Anshei Israel Synagogue • Apple River Fort • Applewood Farm • Arrowhead (Herman Melville House) • Arroyo Seco Parkway • Art's Auto • Ashland Mill Bridge • Ashlawn • Astronomical Observatory (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) • Aurora Bridge • Avery Homestead • Avery House (Griswold, Connecticut) • Avery Point Light • Ballard Carnegie Library • Baltimore–Washington Parkway • Barlow Road • Barrington Civic Center Historic District • Battery White • Battle of Great Bridge • Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1832) • Battle of Hubbardton • Battle of Kettle Creek • Battle of Short Hills • Beechwood (Vanderlip mansion) • Ben's Chili Bowl • Benjamin Church House (Bristol, Rhode Island) • Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House • Benjaminville Friends Meeting House and Burial Ground • Berkshire No. 7 • Blackford County Courthouse • Blackledge River Railroad Bridge • Bristol County Jail • Bristol Customshouse and Post Office • Broadway Hollywood Building • Brook Farm • Camak House • Canterbury Castle (Portland, Oregon) • Capon Lake Whipple Truss Bridge • Carpenter House (Norwich, Connecticut) • Casa de Estudillo • Central Troy Historic District • Chana School • Charles Payne House • Chicago Theatre • Christ Episcopal Church (Waltham, Massachusetts) • Chrysler Building • Civil War Memorial (Sycamore, Illinois) • Collyer Monument • Colorado State Highway 74 • Columbus (Providence, Rhode Island) • Congregation Beth Israel (Meridian, Mississippi) • Constitution Square Historic Site • Crane and Company Old Stone Mill Rag Room • Croton Dam (Michigan) • Daniel S. Schanck Observatory • Dayton Project • DeKalb County Courthouse (Illinois) • Division Street Bridge (Rhode Island) • Dowse Sod House • Dupont Circle Fountain • East Midwood Jewish Center • Edward Bellamy House • Edward M. Cotter (fireboat) • Eisenhower National Historic Site • Ellwood House • Elmer S. Dailey • Elmwood (Cambridge, Massachusetts) • Entranceway at Main Street at Roycroft Boulevard • Entranceways at Main Street at Lamarck Drive and Smallwood Drive • Fabyan Windmill • Falkner Island Light • Fifth Ward Wardroom • Fire Station No. 23 (Los Angeles, California) • Fire Station No. 4 (Pawtucket, Rhode Island) • First Ward Wardroom • Five Mile Point Light • Fort Scott National Historic Site • Foster-Payne House • Fraser Mansion • Fuller Houses • Garden City High School (Kansas) • General John A. Rawlins • General Philip Sheridan • George Gordon Meade Memorial • George Rogers Clark National Historical Park • Giant Dipper • Great Captain Island Light • Greens Ledge Light • Gurdon Bill Store • Hampton National Historic Site • Hartford City Courthouse Square Historic District • Hebron Church (Intermont, West Virginia) • Heller House • Historic districts in the United States • House at 130 Mohegan Avenue • Hudson County Courthouse • Hull House • Immaculate Conception Catholic Church (Celina, Ohio) • Indiana State House • Indiana World War Memorial Plaza • Jerome, Arizona • John Day Fossil Beds National Monument • John Deere House and Shop • John F. Adams House • Joseph Carpenter Silversmith Shop • Joseph F. Glidden House • Joseph Webb House • Kingsley Plantation • Kinne Cemetery • Kirkpatrick Chapel • Kīlauea • Lahaina Banyan Court Park • Lee's Ferry • Liberty Arming the Patriot • Lincoln Theatre (Washington, D.C.) • Literary Hall • Longfellow House–Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site • Lynde Point Light • Major General George B. McClellan • Major General George Henry Thomas • Major General John A. Logan • Marian Cruger Coffin • Marmes Rockshelter • Marquette Building (Chicago) • Marshall Field and Company Building • McDonald Ranch House • Mesa Verde National Park • Milwaukee Avenue Historic District • Minnehaha Park (Minneapolis) • Mission House (Stockbridge, Massachusetts) • Mount Hope Estate • Mount St. Peter Church • Mummy Cave • My Old Kentucky Home State Park • Nathaniel Backus House • National Register of Historic Places • New Bedford Historic District • New Harmony Toll Bridge • New York State Route 431 • North Bank Depot Buildings • Ogle County Courthouse • Old Bacon Academy • Old Jeffersonville Historic District • Old Louisville • Old Pine Church • Old Stone House (Washington, D.C.) • One South Broad • Oregon Iron Company • Oregon Public Library • Oxford College of Emory University • PRR 460 • PRR 4859 • Pacific Tower (Seattle) • Palisades Interstate Parkway • Pensacola Dam • Petersen Rock Garden • Piedmont Park • Pike-Pawnee Village Site • Ponce Cathedral • Pond Eddy Bridge • Pony Express • Portland City Hall (Oregon) • Potter-Collyer House • Presidio of Santa Barbara • Priscilla Dailey • Rancho Camulos • Renaissance Blackstone Hotel • Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals • Rika's Landing Roadhouse • Riverside and Avondale • Roanoke Building • Rohm and Haas Corporate Headquarters • Rookery Building • SS Winfield Scott • Saint Leonard Catholic Church (Madison, Nebraska) • Samson Occom Bridge • Samuel Hahnemann Monument • Saturn V Dynamic Test Vehicle • Scarborough Historic District • Schulze Baking Company Plant • Skinners Falls–Milanville Bridge • Sleepy Hollow Country Club • Smith-Harris House (East Lyme, Connecticut) • Southworth House (Cleveland, Ohio) • Spirit of the American Doughboy • Strang School District No. 36 • Sycamore Historic District • Taliesin (studio) • Tower Building of the Little Rock Arsenal • U-Drop Inn • USS Massachusetts (BB-59) • USS Monitor • USS Philadelphia (1776) • USS Tecumseh (1863) • USS Texas (BB-35) • USS Utah (BB-31) • Union Stock Yards • Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington • Valley View (Romney, West Virginia) • Virginia House • W.E.B. Du Bois Boyhood Homesite • Waller Hall • Washington Monument • Washington Park (Chicago park) • Washington Park Historic District (Albany, New York) • Washington Square Park (Chicago) • Wells Fargo Building (Philadelphia) • Wendover Air Force Base • West Cornwall Covered Bridge • Westinghouse Air Brake Company General Office Building • Winslow Ames House • World War I Memorial (East Providence, Rhode Island) • World's littlest skyscraper • Yale Union Laundry Building
Featured articles
Featured articles
Baltimore City College • Benedict Arnold's expedition to Quebec • Beth Hamedrash Hagodol • Black Moshannon State Park • Broad Ripple Park Carousel • Capon Chapel • Chaco Culture National Historical Park • Cherry Springs State Park • Chicago Board of Trade Building • Clemuel Ricketts Mansion • Cogan House Covered Bridge • Colton Point State Park • First Roumanian-American Congregation • Forksville Covered Bridge • Fort Dobbs (North Carolina) • Fort Ticonderoga • Fort Yellowstone • Fountain of Time • Geology Hall • Hanford Site • Hillsgrove Covered Bridge • History of Baltimore City College • History of the Yosemite area • Hoover Dam • Horseshoe Curve (Pennsylvania) • Johnstown Inclined Plane • Joseph Priestley House • Kinzua Bridge • Mackinac Island • Manzanar • Mauna Loa • Michigan State Capitol • Monadnock Building • Monte Ne • Mount St. Helens • New Orleans Mint • Oakwood Cemetery (Troy, New York) • Oregon State Capitol • Pennsylvania State Capitol • Pithole, Pennsylvania • Plunketts Creek Bridge No. 3 • Pulaski Skyway • Red River Trails • Ridge Route • Shimer College • Sonestown Covered Bridge • Statue of Liberty • Tech Tower • The Avery Coonley School • Trinity (nuclear test) • USS Arizona (BB-39) • USS Constitution • USS Massachusetts (BB-2) • USS Missouri (BB-63) • USS New Jersey (BB-62) • USS Wisconsin (BB-64) • United States Military Academy • Utah State Route 128 • Worlds End State Park
Featured lists
List of National Historic Landmarks in Alabama • List of National Historic Landmarks in Indiana • List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan • List of lighthouses in Connecticut
Related portals
Wikimedia
- What are portals?
- List of portals
- Featured portals