Department of Historic Resources (www.dhr.virginia.gov) For Immediate Release May 30, 2019
Contact: Randy Jones Department of Historic Resources; 540-578-3031; Randy.Jones@dhr.virginia.govBy virtue of the authority vested by the Constitution of Virginia in the Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia, there is hereby officially recognized:
NATIONAL HISTORIC PRESERVATION MONTH 2019 WHEREAS, Virginians are justly proud of the Commonwealth’s rich, diverse history and a prehistory that extends into the past roughly 16,000 years (or more); and WHEREAS, that legacy gave rise to one of the earliest state historical societies in 1831; the first national preservation movement in the 1850s; one of the earliest statewide private preservation organizations in 1889; the nation’s first historical highway marker program in 1927; and WHEREAS that legacy also propelled creation of the Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission in 1966, predecessor of today’s Department of Historic Resources (DHR), and the Commonwealth’s innovative Preservation Easements and the Virginia Landmarks Register (VLR) that same year; and WHEREAS, since 1966 property owners, local groups, and jurisdictions have partnered with DHR or its predecessor agencies to list more than 3,100 individual sites and nearly 600 districts on the VLR and the National Register of Historic (NRHP), with an emphasis in recent decades on listing sites associated with the history of Virginia Indians, African Americans, women, and other minorities, thereby highlighting the significant contributions these populations have made to the tapestry of the Commonwealth’s and the nation’s history; and WHEREAS, since 1966, Virginia property owners have donated to the Commonwealth more than 600 easements, preserving more than 40,000 acres in Virginia affiliated with historic houses, buildings, archaeological sites, and battlefields, while keeping these lands in private ownership; and WHEREAS, interest in the Commonwealth’s archaeology has resulted in its unique Threatened Sites program and an innovative certification program to train avocational archaeologists; annual and semi-annual fields schools co-sponsored by DHR, the Archeological Society of Virginia, and Council of Virginia Archaeologists, that attract dozens and dozens of volunteers annually—all initiatives that facilitate, in a race against time, investigations along Virginia’s extensive shorelines where sea level rise is obliterating prehistoric and Contact- and Colonial-era archaeology; and WHEREAS, scholars, historians, archaeologists, and others routinely use DHR’s Archeological Collections of more than six million artifacts, and the DHR Conservation Lab to research Virginia history and prehistory; and WHEREAS, heritage tourism adds more than $7.5 billion annually to Virginia’s economy, and tax credit rehabilitations of Virginia’s historic buildings has leveraged more than $4.5 billion in private investment, resulting in tens of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in rehabilitation and post-rehabilitation spending rippling across the state’s economy; and WHEREAS, it is important to celebrate all of Virginia’s history, especially in 2019, the 400th anniversary of the first representative legislative assembly in the New World, and, significantly, the arrival of the first recorded Africans to English North America, which DHR is commemorating with publication of A Guidebook to Virginia’s African American Historical Markers that reproduces the texts of more than 300 signs; now THEREFORE, I, Ralph S. Northam, do hereby recognize May 2019, as NATIONAL HISTORIC PRESERVATION MONTH in our COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, and I call this observance to the attention of all our citizens.Programs
DHR has secured permanent legal protection for over 700 historic places - including 15,000 acres of battlefield lands
DHR has erected 2,532 highway markers in every county and city across Virginia
DHR has registered more than 3,317 individual resources and 613 historic districts
DHR has engaged over 450 students in 3 highway marker contests
DHR has stimulated more than $4.2 billion dollars in private investments related to historic tax credit incentives, revitalizing communities of all sizes throughout Virginia