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The Apartment Building, also known as the Rockefeller Building, is
one of three extant buildings that were constructed as part of the
U.S. Naval Radio Station, Winter Harbor, Maine, in 1934. The
current project is focused on the Apartment Building and immediate
adjacent landscape as identified in Project Management Information
System (PMIS) 134906. The U.S. Naval Radio Station - Apartment
Building (Bldg 1), Historic Structure Report (HSR) identifies
significant historic features of the building and provides guidance
for the treatment of the building. The project included archival
research at the local and regional level, along
"Vital Signs Monitoring," provides the minimum infrastructure
needed to track the overall condition of natural resources in parks
and to provide early warning of situations that require
intervention. The scientifically sound information obtained through
this systems-based program has multiple applications for management
decision-making, park planning, research, education, and promoting
public understanding of park resources.
"Vital Signs Monitoring," provides the minimum infrastructure
needed to track the overall condition of natural resources in parks
and to provide early warning of situations that require
intervention. The scientifically sound information obtained through
this systems-based program has multiple applications for management
decision-making, park planning, research, education, and promoting
public understanding of park resources.
Apostle Islands National Lakeshore (APIS) is composed of a group of
21 islands in western Lake Superior and part of the Bayfield
Peninsula of northern Wisconsin. Disturbances, or distinct changes
in vegetation cover, are an important part of how this ecosystem
functions. Monitoring these disturbances through time will provide
information regarding historic disturbance regimes compared to
present and future conditions and trends. For this analysis,
disturbances in and around APIS were delineated for six years,
2004-2009, using a combination of Landsat satellite imagery and
high resolution aerial photos. A set of computer algorithms were
employed (LandTrendr), in conjunction with a dense time series of
Landsat imagery (one set for each year) to track vegetation changes
in and around the park. LandTrendr was used to identify apparent
disturbances, after which high resolution imagery (airphotos) was
used for photo interpretation to substantiate evidence of a
disturbance, and hence, validate whether the disturbance occurred.
For each validated disturbance, we identified the agent of change
(fire, forest harvest, development, flooding due to beaver
activity, and blowdowns) in addition to the year of occurrence, and
starting and ending vegetation classes.
This book details the importance of standardized methods for
monitoring programs, the review recommended the development and use
of a written protocol, including detailed Standard Operating
Procedures (SOPs). The present document seeks to address this key
recommendation.
Fort Pulaski National Monument (NM) at Cockspur Island, Georgia,
preserves a striking masonry fortification significant in American
military history. Visitors to Form Pulaski NM learn how the golden
age of coastal fortification ended on April 11, 1862, when the fort
failed to withstand bombardment by Union forces who attacked it
during the American Civil War using newly developed rifled canon.
Other interesting themes relating to Fort Pulaski include its use
as a prison for captured Confederate soldiers and as the site where
John Wesley, founder of American Methodism, landed on Cockspur
Island in 1736. Robert E. Lee also began his military career at
Fort Pulaski by helping to oversee construction of the remarkable,
once state-of-the-art example of "third system" coastal
architecture. Of course, Fort Pulaski has also served as a location
marking important moments in local history. However, several years
passed after the United States Army abandoned the military post in
1879 before efforts to preserve the fort became serious. The War
Department's announcement of the fort's selection as a potential
national monument in 1915 and the proclamation of its official
monument status in 1924 began a series of restoration efforts. When
Fort Pulaski NM was transferred to the National Park Service (NPS)
in 1933, the labor of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
transformed the neglected fort and grounds into a place for the
public to visit. Since then the 5,623-acre national monument has
been carefully managed and maintained, although a temporary period
of neglect beset the part between 1942 and 1948 when the site
reverted to War Department management. This administrative history
provides an overview of Fort Pulaski from the Colonial Period to
the present with attention focused upon the origins, development,
and management of the site as a unit of the national park system.
This Condition Report for the Fort Hill Rural Historic District of
Cape Cod National Seashore reviews previous documentation of the
cultural landscape and provides an updated evaluation of the
condition of the property as well as updated guidance for both
day-to-day and long-term landscape management and interpretation.
This report consists of a historical overview, an inventory of
existing conditions, and a review of the significance of landscape
characteristics and features. Based on this information, the report
revisits previous treatment recommendations for the site and
examines current issues and alternative solutions. With input from
property stewards, the report provides updated treatment
recommendations consistent with the Secretary of Interior's
Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties (1992). Located
in Eastham east of Route 6, the Fort Hill Rural Historic District
provides expansive views of the Nauset Marsh and Atlantic Ocean.
The 100-acre property includes Fort Hill rising 50 feet in
elevation, Skiff Hill to the north rising 48 feet in elevation,
Fort Hill Trail and Red Maple Swamp Trail. Notable features include
the long stone walls, stone boundary markers, a sharpening rock
used by Native Americans, and numerous archeological sites. The
area was once two large farmsteads, which were owned by the Knowles
family and their relatives by marriage, the Penniman family, from
the 1740s through the 1940s. Much of the land was farmed up until
the 1950s and acquired by the National Park Service in 1963. The
Fort Hill area contains three National Register listings and one
National Landmark designation. The Captain Edward Penniman house
and barn were listed in the National Register in 1976. A portion of
the Fort Hill area was included in the Nauset Archeological
District in 1991 and designated as part of a National Landmark in
1992. A 100-acre area was listed as the Fort Hill Rural Historic
District in 2001. The 100-acre area of the Fort Hill Rural Historic
District roughly corresponds with the boundaries of the former
Knowles and Penniman properties, extending to the edge of the marsh
on the south and east boundaries, to Hemenway Road to the north,
and the park boundary to the west. The district is significant in
the areas of architecture, agriculture and community development
during the period of 1786 to 1943. The district is located within
Cape Cod National Seashore but also contains two privately-owned
historic properties. The district contains four contributing
buildings (three homes and a barn), one contributing archeological
site, seven contributing structures (stone walls and foundations),
and six contributing objects (property markers, landscape features,
and the Native American sharpening stone). Non-contributing
resources in the district are primarily associated with Park
Service visitor facilities, which date to the 1960s. Maintenance of
the open landscape has been an ongoing challenge for the Park
Service. In 1995 the Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation
documented the site as part of the Cultural Landscape Report for
Fort Hill. The report contains guidance to inform the park's
General Management Plan and for the protection and long-term
maintenance of the Fort Hill landscape. Specific recommendations
relate to parking, removal of vegetation, additional plantings, and
maintaining the open landscape. In 1998 the park prepared the Site
Plan and Environmental Assessment for Fort Hill as well as the Cape
Cod National Seashore Prescribed Burn Plan, Fort Hill 1999-2004.
Both documents provide greater specificity for prescribed burn and
mowing areas. Several years have elapsed since the park began
implementing the recommendations from these reports. This Condition
Report will evaluate the effectiveness of these recommendations and
the existing historic character of the Fort Hill Rural Historic
District.
The Interagency Standards for Fire and Fire Aviation Operations
states, references, or supplements policy for Bureau of Land
Management, U.S. Forest Service, U.S Fish and Wildlife Service and
National Park Service fire and fire aviation program management.
Original source policy is stated or referenced throughout this
handbook. This handbook attempts to quote verbatim, rather than to
paraphrase policy that is stated elsewhere. It also attempts to
limit duplication of source policy when a reference will suffice.
Interagency Standards for Fire and Fire Aviation Operations is
intended to comply with and support the Review and Update of the
1995 Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy (January 2001) and the
Guidance for Implementation of Federal Wildland Fire Management
Policy (February 13, 2009) and other existing federal policy. The
Interagency Standards for Fire and Fire Aviation Operations
provides fire and fire aviation program management direction for
Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, and National Park Service managers.
This discussion of typical furnishings in ranch houses of western
Dakota or eastern Montana during the last two decades of the
nineteenth century was completed to fulfill the requirements of RSP
H-1 from Theodore Roosevelt National Memorial Park. This unit of
the National Park System on the western edge of North Dakota honors
the activities of Theodore Roosevelt in that part of the west
between 1883 and 1899. Roosevelt's active involvement in Dakota
ranching lasted less than five years, but he visited his Elkhorn
Ranch nearly every autumn on hunting trips. Roosevelt last saw the
land where "the romance of my life began" in 1903. The spell of the
North Dakota Badlands along the Little Missouri caught Roosevelt
during his first extended stay in the region. The Badlands of the
Little Missouri River possessed curious fantastic beauty and savage
desolation in Roosevelt's eyes when he saw them in 1884.
This publication was prepared to satisfy the research needs as
enumerated in Historical Resource Study Proposal FOSU-H-4, The
First Two Forts, 1776-1904, and so much of Historical Resource
Study Proposal FOSU-H-1, Historical Base Maps, Fort Moultrie, as
applies to the first two forts. This report documents the
structural history of the Revolutionary Fort Moultrie and the
1794-1804 fort. Fort Moultrie is well-known to students of American
History. On two occasions actions centering on the fort had
important and far reaching repercussions for our country. On June
28, 1776, American Patriots posted behind the palmetto and sand
parapets of the fort repulsed, with heavy losses, a formidable
British naval squadron. This victory came at an important time for
the Americans. Until this moment, General George Washington in 1176
had accomplished little beyond hurrying the British evacuation of
Boston. The American army sent to overrun Canada had collapsed. Now
word came of a victory in the South. News of the success reached
Philadelphia shortly after the Declaration of Independence had been
proclaimed. Now independence might become something beyond the bold
statements set forth on parchment. Then in December 1860 Major
Robert Anderson, when threatened by South Carolina Secessionists,
evacuated Fort Moultrie and transferred its garrison to Fort
Sumter. Three and one-half months later, South Carolina
artillerists from Fort Moultrie participated in the bombardment of
Fort Sumter, which sparked the Civil War. There have been three
Fort Moultries. The first of these was the palmetto and sand fort
of the American Revolution, which the South Carolina assembly named
in honor of Col. William Moultrie, following the repulse of the
British fleet. Fort Moultrie, No. 1, disappeared in the
post-Revolutionary years. Tradition has it swallowed by the sea. In
1794, when war with Great Britain appeared imminent, the Congress
appropriated money for coastal defenses. Construction was started
on Fort Moultrie, No. 2. With the easing of tensions following the
Jay Treaty, work was suspended. The fort, a typical First System
work, was completed in 1798 during the Quasi-War with France. Fort
Moultrie, No. 2, was battered by high tides in 1803 and wrecked by
the hurricane of 1804. Four years later, in 1808, when war again
threatened with Great Britain, the construction of Fort Moultrie,
No. 3, was commenced. A masonry work of the Second System, the fort
was completed and garrisoned in December 1809. This is the Fort
Moultrie of today, although it was greatly modified during the
Civil War, the years 1872-1876, and between 1897 and 1903. There
are no surface remains of the first two Fort Moultries, and this
study is designed to provide information as to the structural
history of these two forts. The location of these two forts will be
pinpointed in hopes that an archeological investigation will be
undertaken and their foundations exposed.
Built in the decade or so before the First World War and now used
as administrative offices for Fort Pulaski National Monument, the
Quarantine Attendants' Quarters is the only historic structure
remaining from the quarantine station established by the City of
Savannah on Cockspur Island in 1889 and operated by the U. S.
Public Health Service after 1899. Although the building has
recently undergone extensive rehabilitation, this historic
structure report was commissioned "to guide park management and
staff in making the critical decisions concerning the
interpretation, protection, and preservation of this historic
resource." Historical research for this report began with a search
of the archival records of Savannah City Council, which included
"Minute Books, 1822-1864," held by the Georgia Historical Society,
and "Records of the Committee on Public Health, 1861-1932," and
"Quarantine Books, Quarantine Reports of Arrival of Vessels,
Quarantine Station Reports, Contracts 1852-1957," all held at the
City Hall Records Center. These and historic photographs in the
park's collection provided documentation that the present structure
is not the original residence constructed by the City of Savannah
in 1891, as had been previously believed. Analysis of numerous
historic maps, photographs, and NPS planning documents from the
late 1930s support dating the building's construction to the first
two decades of the twentieth century, most likely around 1912, but
additional historical research will be necessary to document its
construction more precisely. In particular, the records of the U.
S. Public Health Service in the Philadelphia branch of National
Archives would likely allow more precise dating of the building and
perhaps provide original plans and specifications. Additional
research in Navy records could document the extensive
rehabilitation that the building underwent in 1942 and 1943, the
results of which are now one of the building's more significant
features. The last building associated with the quarantine station
that operated on Cockspur Island from 1889 until 1937, the
Quarantine Attendants' Quarters also represents a long history of
non-military use of the island. Quarantine stations existed on
Cockspur Island or across the sound at Lazaretto Creek off and on
for most of two centuries, and lighthouse keepers came and went for
almost as long. While Fort Pulaski's significance is of paramount
importance, interpretation of other aspects of the island's
military history is also possible, with the Navy's adaptation of
the quarantine station during World War II changing the face of
Cockspur Island almost as much as construction of the fort had done
a hundred years earlier. Development of an historic resource study
that focused on the island's use for quarantine would be
particularly helpful in providing a context for understanding and
interpreting the present building.
The Apartment Building, also known as the Rockefeller Building, is
one of three extant buildings that were constructed as part of the
U.S. Naval Radio Station, Winter Harbor, Maine, in 1934. The
current project is focused on the Apartment Building and immediate
adjacent landscape as identified in Project Management Information
System (PMIS) 134906. The U.S. Naval Radio Station - Apartment
Building (Bldg 1), Historic Structure Report (HSR) identifies
significant historic features of the building and provides guidance
for the treatment of the building. The project included archival
research at the local and regional level, along with building
investigation and research. Includes color and black and white
photographs.
This report summarizes the Phase II planning effort conducted by
the park and the US Department of Transportation's Volpe Center
(the Volpe Center) to articulate a viable park-community pilot
transit service for Morristown National Historical Park. Morristown
National Historical Park consists of four separate units that
played important roles during the Revolutionary War-Washington's
Headquarters, Fort Nonsense, Jockey Hollow Encampment Area, and New
Jersey Brigade Encampment. The combination of one-way roads, heavy
traffic, and complicated intersections makes travel between the
four units difficult, confusing, and even dangerous for out-of-town
visitors. In coordination with the park, the Volpe Center designed
and facilitated a park-community planning charrette where park
staff and stakeholders within the community discussed and proposed
alternative pilot shuttle service routes. These routes were then
analyzed and evaluated, and a recommended pilot transit service
route was articulated. The report concludes with "next steps" for
advancing the recommended pilot transit service to implementation.
This study establishes the baseline air and noise emissions for
Santa Monica before the implementation of shuttle service. The
report consists of an Introduction, a section describing Santa
Monica, a section on Air Emissions, a section on Noise Emissions, a
Results section, a Conclusions and Recommendations section, and a
References section. All input data for the air and noise emissions
prediction models are presented in Appendix A, and all outputs for
the air emissions prediction model are presented in Appendix B.
A visitor vehicle emissions study was conducted for Joshua Tree
National Park. This study was a joint effort between the NPS, the
National Park Foundation (NPF), and the Volpe National
Transportation Systems Center's Environmental Measurement and
Modeling Division (Volpe Center). The goal of this study was
two-fold: (1) Develop a park-specific baseline vehicular emissions
inventory of carbon monoxide (CO), the volatile organic compound
(VOC) category of hydrocarbons (HC), nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon
dioxide (CO2), 2.5-micron particulate matter (PM2.5), and 10-micron
particulate matter (PM10) NOTE: PM in this document indicates total
particulate matter, including exhaust PM (lead, gasoline PM,
elemental carbon, organic carbon, and sulfates), brake PM, and tire
PM]; and (2) develop a simplified methodology to produce vehicular
emissions inventories for varying visitor traffic scenarios.
As part of a National Park Service (NPS) project to evaluate
vehicular emissions in the National Parks, a visitor vehicle
emissions study was conducted for Pt. Reyes National Seashore. This
study was a joint effort between the NPS, the National Park
Foundation (NPF), and the Volpe National Transportation Systems
Center's Environmental Measurement and Modeling Division (Volpe
Center). The goal of this study was two-fold: (1) Develop a
park-specific baseline vehicular emissions inventory of carbon
monoxide (CO), the volatile organic compound (VOC) category of
hydrocarbons (HC), nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon dioxide (CO2),
2.5-micron particulate matter (PM2.5), and 10-micron particulate
matter (PM10) NOTE: PM in this document indicates total particulate
matter, including exhaust PM (lead, gasoline PM, elemental carbon,
organic carbon, and sulfates), brake PM, and tire PM]; and (2)
develop a simplified methodology to produce vehicular emissions
inventories for varying visitor traffic scenarios.
This project assesses transportation management issues at Fort
McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine in the Locust Point
area of Baltimore. Goals of the study include mitigating traffic
congestion and idling of school or tour buses, encouraging transit
modes separate from bus and automobile travel (waterborne and ferry
travel, for example), and linking alternative transport to the
potentially revitalized/expanded visitor center.
This study examines issues relevant to the implementation of an
alternative transportation system designed to facilitate the
movement of visitors throughout the park and, potentially, to sites
of historical and recreational interest located outside the
boundaries of the park. It provides an initial analysis of existing
conditions at Minute Man NHP, and then considers various
alternative transportation services (ATS) options in light of these
conditions. ATS options include shuttle, tour, pedestrian and
bicycle systems that can be implemented or expanded at Minute Man
NHP.
This report assesses opportunities for expanding Lowell National
Historical Park's historic trolley line by implementing a light
rail system reminiscent of late 19th/early 20th Century trolley
lines. This is in line with the Park Service's Transportation
Mission to preserve and protect resources while providing safe and
enjoyable access within the National Parks by using sustainable,
appropriate, integrated transportation solutions. This Plan uses as
a starting point the existing trolley system, the Park Service and
the LNHP commitment to Alternative Transportation Systems (ATS),
and the on-going efforts to revitalize the City of Lowell.
Objectives relate to mobility for visitors and residents, reducing
traffic congestion, intra-regional connectivity, economic
development, and maintaining and interpretive and educational
context. Four major routes are identified and options for these
routes evaluated, using the Objectives and Route Selection
Criteria.
This project identifies and evaluates transit service alternatives
in the Gettysburg, Pennsylvania area, including Gettysburg National
Military Park, the Borough of Gettysburg, and surrounding
townships. The report concludes that public transit would allay the
problems of resource damage due to traffic congestion and off-road
parking, which would lead to enhanced visitor experience. Based on
discussions with park service personnel and analysis of park
visitation data, Volpe recommends a time frame to utilize a transit
network during the peak-demand season. Finally, recommendations are
made as to which vehicles should be purchased, how the added
operations and maintenance costs should be funded, and the best
method of service delivery.
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