Why Waterford was Designated a National Historic
Landmark
By Brown Morton, Prince B. Woodard Chair, Historic Preservation, Mary
Washington College
In April, 1970, the Secretary of the Interior determined that the
Waterford Historic District possessed national significance and he
designated the Waterford Historic District a National
Historic Landmark.
This is the highest designation of historic significance possible
in the United States of America.
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View of the hills to the West
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The criteria for such a designation is expressed thusly: "National
significance is ascribed to districts, sites, buildings, structures
and objects that possess exceptional value or quality in illustrating
or interpreting the heritage of the United States in history, architecture,
archeology, engineering and culture, and that possess a high degree
of integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship,
feeling and association. This places the Waterford Historic District
on the same level of significance as Independence Hall, Mount Vernon
and the Alamo.
Why? The Waterford Historic District was determined by the Secretary
of the Interior and his Advisory Board to possess an extraordinary
balance between the buildings and structures of the village and the
absolutely unspoiled agricultural setting that surround the village.
This unspoiled agricultural setting, indeed, constituted, historically,
the very economic life-blood of the village.
It is this balance between buildings and open space that sets Waterford
apart from other rural communities whose edges have been compromised.
It is this balance that gives Waterford its national significance.
Prior to 1970 the Waterford Historic District had been listed already
in the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic
Places.
Background
In London in 1945 in the ashes of World War II the Constitution of
UNESCO [The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization
was adopted. The unforgettable preamble was composed by the American
writer Archibald Macleish. The preamble begins:
" Since war begins in the minds of men, it is in the minds of men that
the defenses of peace must be constructed."
The document goes
on to establish that the preservation of the cultural heritage of mankind
constitutes one of those "defenses of peace." Ten
years prior to the establishment of UNESCO, the United States Congress
passed the Historic Sites Act of 1935. This act declared [for the first
time in our legislative history] that preserving the American cultural
heritage was a matter of National Policy.
It is in this same act that the Secretary of the Interior was given
the authority to survey and evaluate our heritage and to designate
particular sites and buildings as possessing "exceptional value
as commemorating or illustrating the history of the United States." This activity of designating certain properties as possessing significance
to the nation as a whole, marks the beginning of what we now call the
National Historic Landmarks program.
In 1966, preservation as a national policy was further enunciated
by Congress in the National
Historic Preservation Act of 1966. This act
expanded our national list of historic properties beyond only those
determined to possess national significance. The newly expanded National
Register of Historic Places now included sites of state and local
significance as well.
On March 4th, 2003, the President issued an new Executive
Order titled Preserve America, once again demonstrating our national
commitment to preserve the cultural heritage of the United States.
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