Surveying the past, present, and future of historic preservation in
America, this book features fifteen essays by some of the most
important voices in the field.
A Richer Heritage will be an
essential, thought-provoking guide for professionals as well as
administrators, volunteers, and policy makers involved in
preservation efforts.
An introduction traces the evolution of historic preservation in
America, highlighting the principal ideas and events that have
shaped and continue to shape the movement. The book also describes
the workings--legal, administrative, and fiscal--of the layered
federal, state, and local government partnership put in place by
Congress in 1966. Individual chapters explore the preservation of
designed and vernacular landscapes, the relationship between
historic preservation and the larger environmental and land-trust
movements, the role of new private and nonprofit players, racial
and ethnic interests in historic preservation, and the preservation
of our intangible cultural values. A concluding chapter analyzes
the present state of the historic preservation movement and
suggests future directions for the field in the twenty-first
century.
Contributors include preservationists, local-government citizen
activists, an architect, landscape architects, environmentalists,
an archaeologist, a real-estate developer, historians, a Native
American tribal leader, an ethnologist, and lawyers.