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Historic American Buildings Survey / Historic American Engineering Record: An Annotated Bibliography, 1992
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Historic American Buildings Survey / Historic American Engineering Record: An Annotated Bibliography, 1992
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I 29.74: B 47
Clemson University
3 1604 015 495 635
PUBLIC
TEM
Ft
``` 1003
CLEMSON
LIBRARY
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY/
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Park Service
Cultural Resources
REGERAL
PUBLICATION
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2012 with funding from
LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation
http://archive.org/details/historicamerican00mass
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY/
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compiled by
James C. Massey
Nancy B. Schwartz
Shirley Maxwell
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
1992
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Massey, James C.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering
Record : an annotated bibliography / compiled by James C. Massey,
Nancy B. Schwartz, Shirley Maxwell.
p. cm.
Includes index.
1. Historic buildings- United States--Bibliography--Catalogs.
2. Architecture- United States--Bibliography--Catalogs. 3. Historic
American Buildings Survey--Catalogs. 4. Historic American
Engineering Record--Catalogs. I. Schwartz, Nancy B. II. Maxwell,
Shirley. III. Historic American Buildings Survey. IV. Historic
American Engineering Record. V. Title.
Z5944. U5M39 1992 NA705
016.36369'0973--dc20
92-37310
CIP
CONTENTS
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
V
INTRODUCTION
vii
Part I. HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
1.1 1.10
HABS NATIONAL and
3
REGIONAL CATALOGS
listed chronologically
2.1 2.32
HABS STATE and
9
LOCAL CATALOGS
listed alphabetically
by state
3.1 3.12
HABS LISTS and
23
FINDING AIDS
4.1 4.87
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
27
by HABS and HABS
COOPERATORS
listed nationally and
regionally, then
alphabetically by state
5.1 5.3
HABS MICROFORM and FILMS
65
6.1 6.58
PUBLICATIONS about HABS
67
HISTORY and OPERATION
listed alphabetically
by author
7.1 7.26
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS
85
and INSTRUCTIONS
listed chronologically
8.1 8.12
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
97
Annual Reports, Newsletters,
Project and Personnel Lists,
Leaflets and Circulars
listed chronologically
9.1 9.14
MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS
105
listed alphabetically by
author
Part II. HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
11.1 11.4
HAER NATIONAL and
113
REGIONAL CATALOGS
listed chronologically
12.1 12.3
HAER STATE and
115
LOCAL CATALOGS
listed alphabetically
by state
13.1 13.6
HAER LISTS and
117
FINDING AIDS
14.1 - 14.47
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
119
by HAER and HAER
COOPERATORS
listed regionally, then
alphabetically by state
15.1 15.3
HAER FILMS and MICROFORM
139
16.1 - 16.21
PUBLICATIONS ABOUT HAER
141
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
listed alphabetically
by author
17.1 17.11
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS
149
and INSTRUCTIONS
listed chronologically
18.1 18.5
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
153
Annual Reports, Newsletters,
Project and Personnel Lists,
Leaflets and Circulars
listed chronologically
19.1
MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS
155
listed alphabetically by
author
INDEX
157
iv
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
AIA
American Institute of Architects
DOI
U.S. Department of the Interior
E.O.
Executive Order
EODC
Eastern Office, Division of Design and Construction
(National Park Service)
GPO
Government Printing Office
HABS
Historic American Buildings Survey
HAER
Historic American Engineering Record
HCRS
Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service
LC
Library of Congress
NPS
National Park Service
NTHP
National Trust for Historic Preservation
OAHP
Office of Archeology and Historic Preservation
SHPO
State Historic Preservation Officer
SITES
Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service
appen.
appendix, appendices
auth.
author
comp.
compiler
dwgs.
drawings
ed.
editor
illus.
illustrations or illustrated
intro.
introduction
OP
out of print
pp.
pages
princ. inves.
principal investigator
proj. dir.
project director
supvr.
supervisor
V
INTRODUCTION
During its 59 years of activity, the Historic American
Buildings Survey and, since 1969, the Historic American
Engineering Record, have been responsible for a remarkably varied
body of publications resulting from their recording of historic
structures. Whether issued directly by the National Park Service
or by cooperating bodies on behalf of HABS/HAER, few of these
works have been widely circulated, even in the context of
scholarly publications. While some are Government Printing
Office publications which did not reach commercial markets, many
others have been informal and limited issuances from the
HABS/HAER office itself. Similarly, many cooperating
organizations and government agencies have issued a wealth of
publications, ranging from university press books to informal
issuances.
It has always been difficult to be certain just what
publications HABS/HAER has been responsible for, as opposed to
those publications and articles using HABS material. With the
passage of more than half a century, the memory of some
publications has faded so that today they can best be described
as scarce or rare. A growing interest in HABS/HAER documentation
has been engendered by a burgeoning historic preservation
movement and a renewed interest in traditional architecture. The
need has become apparent for a comprehensive bibliography to seek
out and evaluate these many, often obscure, and sometimes
irregularly issued publications before the working memory of them
is lost. To the best of our knowledge, no library--not even that
of HABS/HAER itself--has assembled a comprehensive collection of
all the published materials. Thus it seems most useful and
timely to compile and publish such a bibliography and, whenever
possible, to identify authorship when it is not cited in the
publication itself, to credit cooperating organizations with
which HABS and HAER have so frequently and fruitfully worked, and
to identify the variant and sequential editions of such materials
as catalogs and recording instructions.
SCOPE
The scope of this bibliography covers the years 1933 through
1991 and has been limited to publications issued by HABS/HAER,
the National Park Service, and the Government Printing Office,
those issued by HABS/HAER cooperators for HABS/HAER, and those in
which HABS/HAER has substantially participated in preparing the
publication. Not included are National Park Service park or
regional publications using HABS/HAER records. It was beyond the
scope of this bibliography to locate and cite the innumerable
publications and articles and newspaper reports that have made
good--sometimes extensive--use of the HABS and HAER collections,
which are, after all, public documents. Substantive articles
about the HABS/HAER and its history are included, however,
vii
generally favoring articles from journals over those found in
newspapers and newsletters.
Regrettably, this method of selection bypasses many
significant instances of the publication of HABS photos,
drawings, and data. Some of these, from the 1930s particularly,
have become historic documents in themselves. An example is
Samuel Wilson, Jr. "Latrobe's Last Design, in Southern
Architectural Review (December 1, 1936), which is based on the
recording by HABS of Latrobe's great Louisiana State Bank in New
Orleans. The article certainly claims our interest, for under
the title is the notation, "From Material Collected by the
Historic American Buildings Survey." Surely a future
bibliography is needed to collect important related publications
such as this one.
METHODOLOGY
The primary source for publications has been the extensive
library of the HABS/HAER Division of the National Park Service in
Washington, D.C., and the publications lists that have been
issued by the division and its predecessor components. The
personal libraries of individuals, including the authors and
HABS/HAER staff, who have collected HABS/HAER materials have
been important additional sources, as has been the Library of
Congress, where the HABS/HAER collection is housed in the
Division of Prints and Photographs. The National Trust for
Historic Preservation Collection at the University of Maryland
School of Architecture Library, College Park, Maryland, the Avery
Library at the School of Architecture at Columbia University, New
York, New York, have been helpful, as have historic preservation
and architectural history bibliographies. Many friends of HABS
and HAER, people having a long association with and interest in
the work of documenting America's cultural heritage, have
contributed citations from their own knowledge and holdings. The
state historic preservation offices have been generous in
providing information about publications in their states, and
several have issued HABS publications. A preliminary draft of
this bibliography was distributed in December 1988 to
individuals, institutions, and SHPOs, not just to seek additional
citations, but to secure material for annotations and to check
for accuracy and appropriateness for inclusions. Many
particularly helpful responses were received. Different copies
of publications were sought out to check for different sequential
and variant editions.
STYLE
We have attempted to arrange the bibliography to maximize
its usefulness and convenience for researchers. Since HABS/HAER
documentation is basically addressed to separate professional
disciplines of the cultural heritage--architecture and
viii
engineering/industrial archeology--we have divided the
bibliography into separate HABS and HAER sections, using parallel
categories. Publications that refer to both programs are cross
referenced. For example, a number of HABS catalogs include HAER
listings; others are joint publications, such as the book,
Recording Historic Structures. Since the programs' documentation
of historic structures is geographically based and cataloged, it
is appropriate to use geographical distribution by states as the
primary arrangement for these publications, rather than the usual
author-title arrangement (which is, however, used within each
geographical breakdown). We believe that most users will want
primary references to specific geographic areas rather than, say,
building types, historical periods, or specific authors.
Some series of publications, notably national catalogs and
recording instructions, are organized chronologically, rather
than by author-title, to permit the most convenient access to the
material and to clarify the sequential development of these
publication types. The index, however, notes each reference to
authorship. In those sections in which there is no overriding
geographical or chronological consideration (such as Articles and
Other Publications about the HABS/HAER Programs), the normal
author-title format has been used. We believe this split system
will facilitate reference by the user of HABS/HAER materials and
library card systems. A thorough index, as well as cross
entries, will make it possible to readily identify all works by a
given author or issuances by a particular cooperating
organization or publisher.
In addition to the basic components of a bibliographic
entry--author, title, place and date of publication, publisher,
number of pages--the citations have been annotated with material
about the character of the publication, the number and type of
illustrations, the reasons for its preparation, and the names of
cooperating organizations which have played such an important
role in the success of the HABS/HAER program. We have also
attempted to supply authorship as well as place and date of
publication when not indicated in these often informal
publications. (Supplied information is indicated by brackets.)
The character of the issuance, whether a formal, letterpress
publication or an informal, mimeographed or offset printing, is
noted. An attempt is also made to codify editions and to note
informal preliminary editions.
RELATED PUBLICATIONS AND FINDING AIDS
As indicated in the discussion of the scope of this
bibliography, there are many important publications that have
made good use of HABS/HAER documents, photographs, and measured
drawings that were not within the established scope of official
or cosponsored publications, as well as press releases and
articles about a particular project or an individual structure
ix
recorded by a project. Since it is the very nature of HABS/HAER
documentation to provide drawings, photographs, and documentary
materials for scholars working in the field, such related
publications have not been included in this bibliography.
Indeed, the sheer numbers of such publications would make their
inclusion difficult, since an astonishingly high percentage of
books and articles on American architecture and engineering use
some of these records.
A number of publications have been issued by other offices
and divisions of the National Park Service itself using HABS/HAER
materials. They represent some of the more important types of
related publications which are not included here, such as
mitigation documentation or studies of historic structures within
the National Park system.
Over the years, a number of useful publication lists and
finding aids have been prepared. Those issued periodically by
HABS/HAER have been included in the bibliography under Lists and
Finding Aids, as have HABS/HAER lists contained in other
significant publications. There are other publications from the
National Park Service and the Library of Congress as well as
published bibliographies which include important references to
HABS/HAER materials.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors wish to express their thanks to the many friends
of HABS/HAER who have contributed their thoughts to the
preparation of this bibliography. We are particularly indebted
to Dr. Robert J. Kapsch, Chief, HABS/HAER; John A. Burns, Deputy
Chief, HABS/HAER; Eric DeLony, Chief, HAER; Jack E. Boucher,
HABS/HAER photographer; John C. Poppeliers; C. Ford Peatross,
Curator, Architectural Collections, and Mary M. Ison, Head,
Reference Section, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of
Congress; S. Allen Chambers, Jr.; Carol Poh Miller; Margaret
Thomas Will; Diane Maddex; Elisabeth Walton Potter; Samuel
Wilson, Jr.; Lee J. Nelson, National Park Service; Ernest A.
Connally; as well as many State Historic Preservation Officers
and historical organizations.
X
Part I
Historic American Buildings Survey
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
(listed chronologically)
1.1
[Historic American Buildings Survey] Catalogue of
Completed Records, December 15, 1933 to July 15, 1934.
[Washington]: HABS/NPS/Branch of Plans and
Designs/NPS/DOI, [1934].
Informal publ.; soft cover; 89 pp.; 1,043 entries; not
illus.; OP.
The first national catalog of the HABS collection. The
purpose of this informal listing was to tabulate the
impressive accomplishments of the first phase of HABS
recording. The lists and records are for 38 states and
the District of Columbia, compiled during the first
seven months of the HABS program. The catalog is
organized by state and county. Each entry lists the
name of the structure, the survey number, and the
number of drawings and photographs prepared. It is
curiously paginated from 1 to 39a, with a separate
number assigned to the first page of entries for each
state; subsequent pages for each state have the
identifying state number plus subletters.
1.2
[Historic American Buildings Survey], Catalogue of
Completed Records, December 15, 1933 to December 31,
1935.
[Washington]: HABS/Branch of Plans and Design/NPS/DOI,
[1936].
Informal publ. 117 pp.; 1790 entries; not illus.;
index of building types; OP.
This second national catalog of HABS records the vast
quantity of recording done in the first two years of
the survey. The arrangement and pagination is similar
to the 1934 catalog. In this case, the 117-page
catalog ends at p. 41b.
1.3
Historic American Buildings Survey: Catalog of the
Measured Drawings and Photographs of the Survey in the
Library of Congress, January 1, 1938.
O'Neill, John P., comp. and ed.; Leicester B. Holland,
intro.
Washington: GPO for NPS/DOI, 1938.
3
HABS
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
Hard cover; vi + 264 pp. 2,200 entries; 20 photos; 23
dwgs.; index of building types; appen. memorandum of
agreement; OP.
The third catalog of HABS records and the first to be
formally printed and illustrated for wide distribution.
Listings for 2,200 structures consist of name, HABS
number, and number of drawings and photos. The compiler
was one of the first staff members of HABS and
supervised the Survey during its early years.
1.4
Historic American Buildings Survey: Catalog of the
Measured Drawings and Photographs of the Survey in the
Library of Congress, March 1, 1941.
[Nichols, Frederick D., comp. and ed. Leicester B.
Holland, intro.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, 1941.
Hard and soft covers; viii + 458 pp.; 6,389 entries; 42
photos; 44 dwgs.; index of building types. Xerox
reprint avail. from NTIS (Publ. # PB177632) avail. in
microfiche from same source. Reprint, Burt Franklin
Bibliography and Reference Series 416. [New York: Burt
Franklin (Lenox Hill Publishing and Distributing Co.),
[1971]. The index to building types still constitutes
a valuable reference source to HABS records.
This catalog lists the results of recording done under
various 1930s economic recovery programs before the
hiatus of World War II. Illustrations have been
increased and entry format expanded to include address,
date, style and architect where known. For states with
no updated state catalog, this book served as the basic
guide to the HABS collections for over 40 years. The
index makes this a reference work that is still
valuable today. The editor was one of HABS' earliest
employees; he later became a distinguished professor of
architecture at the University of Virginia. Holland
was chief, Fine Arts Division, Library of Congress and
Chairman, HABS Advisory Board. Preface (p. vii) refers
to catalog as "Second Edition."
1.5
Historic American Buildings Survey Catalog Supplement:
Catalog of the Measured Drawings and Photographs of the
Survey in the Library of Congress, Comprising Additions
Since March 1, 1941.
4
HABS
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
[Bailey, Worth, comp. and ed.]
Washington: HABS/Division of Design and Construction/
NPS/DOI, 1959.
Soft cover; 179 pp. ; 1,410 entries; 29 photos; 12
dwgs.; OP. Xerox reprint avail. from NTIS (publ. #
PB177633). Microfiche avail. from same source.
Issued as a supplement to the 1941 catalog shortly
after funding for HABS was renewed in 1957. The
entries have been further expanded to include more
detailed physical descriptions of the buildings.
Bailey was an architectural historian and consultant
and a decorative arts specialist. He worked with the
HABS Washington office in the late 1950s and 1960s.
1.6
A Checklist of Subjects: Addition to the Survey
Material Deposited in the Library of Congress Since
Publication of the HABS Supplement, January 1959-
January 1963.
Washington: HABS/Division of Architecture/NPS/DOI,
1963.
Informal publ. i 32 pp. ; 836 entries; not illus.; OP.
A modest attempt to provide an updated listing of
materials added to the HABS collection. The entries
represent renewed recording by the National Park
Service using student architects as draftsmen and
enlisting private preservation groups as cooperators.
The abbreviated entry format lists only the names of
the buildings, arranged alphabetically by state and
city or town. Compiler was possibly Worth Bailey, who
compiled the 1959 catalog supplement.
1.7
Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record.
Peatross, C. Ford, ed. of essays, and Alicia Stamm,
comp. of checklist.
Washington: published for the Library of Congress by
GPO, 1983.
5
HABS
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
Hard cover; xvi + 708 pp.; 16,738 entries for both HABS
& HAER; 287 photos; 154 dwgs. i index to counties by
city. Available from GPO (Publ. # 03-000-00149-4).
The first comprehensive national listing of HABS
records since 1941, this checklist containing 16,738
entries was issued to commemorate the 50th anniversary
of HABS. Includes both HABS and HAER documentation in
Library of Congress through January 1, 1982. Listings
include sites documented by HAER. Because of its size,
entries are limited to name, address, HABS number, and
a code indicating if photographs, drawings, or written
data exist in the archives. Entries are organized by
county with an index of town names and their
corresponding counties. The checklist was compiled by
HABS/HAER archivist Alicia Stamm and a team of ten
interns. The checklist is preceded by 16 essays edited
by C. Ford Peatross, Curator of the Architecture,
Design and Engineering Collections, Prints and
Photographs Division, Library of Congress. The essays
provide valuable contributions to the history of HABS,
its operations, and the uses to which the records have
been put. Topics and authors are listed below:
Allen, Richard Sanders. "Documenting Early American
Technology: Covered Bridges."
Bruegmann, Robert. "HABS at an Awkward Age: The 1960s
and 1970s."
Burns, John. "Recording Historic Buildings: New
Philosophies, New Techniques, New Technologies."
DeLong, David G. "Recording the Work of An Architect:
Frank Lloyd Wright."
Gayle, Margot. "America's Cast-Iron Heritage".
Ison, Mary M. "Using the HABS/HAER Collections at the
Library of Congress."
Kapsch, Robert J. "Future Directions for the Historic
American Buildings Survey."
Leunsbury, Carl. "Vernacular Construction in the
Survey."
Myers, Denys Peter. "Fittings and Fixtures:
Miscellaneous Americana in Survey Photographs."
6
HABS
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
Peatross, C. Ford. "A Rich Vein in the Mother Lode:
HABS in the Library of Congress."
Peterson, Charles E. "The Historic American Buildings
Survey: Its Beginnings."
Pitts, Carolyn. "Cape May, New Jersey: Preservation of
a Victorian Town."
Rifkind, Carole. "Main Street: Its Revitalization.'
Roth, Rodris. "Recording a Room: The Kitchen."
Tatum, George B. "Documenting a City: Philadelphia."
Wilson, Samuel, Jr. "The Survey in Louisiana in the
1930s."
1.8
Shaker Catalog. Preliminary [Edition].
Poppeliers, John C., ed. & comp.
Arlington: HABS/Washington Planning and Service
Center/NPS, 1967
Informal publ.; 35 pp.
Extracts from lists of Survey material deposited in the
Library of Congress. In 1967, following several years
of HABS recording of Shaker communities and the
donation of extensive additional HABS records of Shaker
communities by the New York State Department of
Education and Elmer R. Pearson, John C. Poppeliers (who
was senior editor and historian of HABS) prepared
catalog entries for all HABS Shaker records on index
cards, which this union list comprises.
1.9
"Shaker Material in the Historic American Buildings
Survey."
Peladeau, Marius B. [and John C. Poppeliers].
The Shaker Quarterly 9(4) 107-132 (Winter 1969).
A virtually direct copy of The Shaker Catalog (entry
1.8), prepared in the HABS office by John C.
Poppeliers, published here without credit to the actual
author. See also Shaker Built, entry 1.10.
7
HABS
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
1.10
Shaker Built: A Catalog of Shaker Architectural Records
from the Historic American Buildings Survey.
Poppeliers, John C., ed. and proj. dir.; Deborah
Stephens [Burns], Jane Kulczycki, Mary Farrell, Susan
Dynes, John A. Burns.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, 1974.
Soft cover; 87 pp.; 175 entries; 21 photos; 12 dwgs. ;
biblio.; reprinted 1978; OP. GPO # 881-167.
This illustrated catalog lists all HABS records of
Shaker architecture. It contains a brief introductory
essay and bibliography and entries for 175 buildings in
six states: Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New York, and Ohio. Published to accompany
an exhibit of the same name commemorating the
bicentennial of the Shakers in 1974, it is the only
specialized non-geographical catalog published by HABS.
Based on 1967 Shaker Catalog. Edited by John C.
Poppeliers, Project Director. Entries by Deborah
Stephens [Burns]. Essays by Mary Farrell, Susan Dynes
and Deborah Stephens [Burns]. Research by Deborah
Stephens [Burns] and Jane Kulczycki. See entry 1.8.
8
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
(listed alphabetically by state, then chronologically)
ALABAMA
2.1
The Alabama Catalog, Historic American Buildings
Survey: A Guide to the Early Architecture of the State.
Gamble, Robert; Nicholas H. Holmes, Jr., intro.; F.
Lawrence Oaks, fwd.
Tuscaloosa: Univ. of Alabama Press, 1987.
Hard cover; XX + 445 pages; 727 entries; 210 photos; 84
dwgs.; index; biblio.; glossary of architectural terms;
appen.; avail. from the Univ. of Alabama Press, P.O.
Box 2877, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487. (Publ. # 80500.)
One of the most informative and scholarly publications
in the HABS state catalog series. Includes 727 entries
arranged by county, plus an extensively illustrated
174-page essay on the historic styles and building
types of Alabama; also a section on HABS recording in
the state. Appendices include: status of HABS-recorded
structures in Alabama, 1985 (the number of buildings,
lost, relocated, abandoned, etc.) ; Mobile ironwork
survey; Mobile structures arranged by street address,
and HAER records. The author was senior architectural
historian with the Alabama Historical Commission and
former NPS employee. Oaks was SHPO for Alabama. See
1941 catalog for listings by cities and towns.
2.2
Historic American Buildings Survey: Mobile, Alabama,
Records.
Holmes, Nancy N., comp.
[Philadelphia: HABS], 1965.
Informal publ. ; 9 pp. ; 146 entries; not illus.; limited
circulation; OP.
This informal catalog of Mobile buildings recorded by
HABS as of 1965, provides some additions and
corrections to 1930s material and indicates existing
and demolished buildings. It brings the Mobile catalog
up to date following the recording project there in
1963. The author and her husband, Nicholas, an
architect, are noted preservationists in Mobile and
9
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
were instrumental in resuming HABS recording there in
1963.
CALIFORNIA
2.3
California Architecture: Historic American Buildings
Survey.
Woodbridge, Sally B.; intro. by S. Allen Chambers, Jr. ;
James J. Rawls and Kathryn Gualtieri, fore.
San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1988.
Soft cover; xi + 274 pp. i 1,000+ entries; cover + 146
photos; 84 dwgs.; index of architects; biblio. Avail.
from Chronicle Books, 275 Fifth St., San Francisco, CA
94103.
This publication in the, HABS state catalog series lists
more than 1,000 recorded examples of California
architecture from the Spanish Colonial period through
the early 20th century. Many of the listed records
were made in the last 20 years; catalog includes
recording through 1980. Includes an 88-page essay on
California architecture by Woodbridge, an architectural
historian, critic, and writer. There is also a short
history of HABS recording in California from 1933 to
the present by S. Allen Chambers, Jr., who was HABS
architectural historian. The catalog was a cooperative
project of the California Historical Society and HABS.
Gualtieri was California SHPO.
DELAWARE
2.4
Historic American Buildings Survey Delaware Catalog.
In preparation, 1990.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
2.5
Historic American Buildings Survey District of Columbia
Catalog.
[Schwartz] Beinke, Nancy K., comp.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, 1968.
Informal publ.; 63 pp.; 242 entries; 22 photos; cover +
4 dwgs.; indices: building types, architects; appendix:
list of Georgetown buildings; limited edition; OP.
10
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
This catalog served as an interim edition until an
expanded publication was produced in 1974. The author
was an architectural historian on the HABS staff. See
entry 2.6.
2.6
Historic American Buildings Survey: District of
Columbia Catalog, 1974.
Schwartz, Nancy B[einke], comp.
Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia for the
Columbia Historical Society, 1976.
Hard and soft covers; xiii + 194 pp.; 350+ entries; 90
photos; 34 dwgs. i index by street address;
bibliographic essay. Avail. from Univ. Press of
Virginia, P.O. Box 3608, University Station,
Charlottesville, VA 22903.
Part of the HABS state catalog series. Contains more
than 350 entries for structures recorded before 1974
plus a bibliographic essay. The compiler was an
architectural historian on the HABS staff. Publication
of the catalog was funded by the Columbia Historical
Society. An interim-version catalog was published in
1968. See entry 2.5.
GEORGIA
2.7
The Georgia Catalog, Historic American Buildings
Survey: A Guide to the Architecture of the State.
Linley, John; Hope T. Moore, fwd.
Athens, Ga.: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1983.
Hard and soft covers; xiv + 402 pp. i 373 entries; 226
photos; 29 dwgs. i 3 maps; index to essay; index of
proper names to catalog; biblio. i glossary of
architectural terms; append.: National Register,
National Historic Landmark, and HAER listings for
Georgia. Avail. from Univ. of Georgia Press, Athens,
Ga. 30602.
Catalog includes a 253-page essay on the historic
architecture of the state. Also lists HAER entries for
Georgia through 1980. The author was a teacher and
architect. This publication is Volume 15 in a series
11
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
funded by the Wormsloe Foundation. Moore was former
Associate Director for Cultural Programs for HCRS.
2.8
Interim Catalog, Historic American Buildings Survey:
Records of Savannah, Georgia, 1934-1962.
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS/DOI, 1962.
Informal publ. 7 pp. ; 52 entries; 1 cover; not
illus.; limited distribution (original printing, 100
copies) i OP.
One of a number of informal catalogs issued to update
sections of the 1941 and 1959 catalogs. Developed as a
planning tool for the 1962 Savannah recording project
sponsored with HABS by Historic Savannah, Inc., and the
South Georgia Chapter, AIA, it helped planners decide
what buildings needed recording and which of those
already recorded needed additional records or updated
information.
ILLINOIS
2.9
Historic American Buildings Survey: Chicago and Nearby
Illinois Areas. List of Measured Drawings,
Photographs, and Written Documentation in the Survey,
1966.
Rudd, J. William, comp.
Park Forest, Ill.: The Prairie School Press, 1966.
Soft cover; V + 52 pp.; 307 entries; 15 photos; 18
dwgs. ; chronological index; index of building types.
Avail. from Prairie Avenue Bookshop, 711 S. Dearborn
St., Chicago, IL 60605.
Lists records for Chicago and its suburbs, many of them
assembled during summer recording projects in 1963,
1964, and 1965. The catalog was published to accompany
the 1966 Chicago opening of an exhibit of HABS Chicago
documents, circulated by the Smithsonian Institution
Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES). The catalog was
compiled for HABS by the supervisor of the 1964-65
recording teams. There is also a preliminary edition
of Rudd's ([EODC/NPS/DOI], 1965; informal publ.; ii +
37 pp.).
12
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
INDIANA
2.10
Historic American Buildings Survey in Indiana.
Slade, Thomas M., ed.; essays by David R. Hermansen and
H. Roll McLaughlin.
Bloomington, Ind.: Historic Landmarks Foundation of
Indiana, Indiana Univ. Press, 1983.
Hard and soft cover; xviii + 156 pp.; 161 entries; 33
photos; 51 dwgs. i index; append. : HABS forms; HAER in
Indiana; projects by county. Avail. from Historic
Landmarks Foundation of Indiana, 340 W. Michigan st.,
Indianapolis, IN 46202.
Lists records made in Indiana between 1933 and 1979.
The editor, a former HABS architectural historian, was
on the staff of the Historic Landmarks Foundation of
Indiana. Includes two introductory essays: "HABS in
Indiana, 1933-1940," by David R. Hermansen, professor
of architecture at Ball State University and long-time
HABS supporter, and "HABS in Indiana, 1955-82:
Recollections, by H. Roll McLaughlin, architect, HABS
collaborator and HABS Advisory Board member. A
preliminary edition, compiled by William P. Thompson
and edited by Nancy K. Beinke [Schwartz] was printed by
HABS for limited distribution in 1971. See entry 2.11.
2.11
Historic American Buildings Survey, Indiana Catalog: A
List of Measured Drawings, Photographs and Written
Documentation in the Survey, 1971.
Thompson, William P., comp.; Nancy K. Beinke
[Schwartz], ed.
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1971.
Prelim. ed.; informal publ.; 54 pp.; 92 entries; not
illus.; limited distribution; OP.
This catalog contains 92 entries and a separate list of
76 structures recorded on HABS Inventory forms. This
material was absorbed into the expanded and more
formally printed catalog edited by Thomas Slade and
published in 1983. Information was gathered in the
field by William Thompson and expanded and edited in
the HABS office by Nancy K. Beinke [Schwartz]. See
entry 2.10.
13
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
IOWA
2.12
The Iowa Catalog, Historic American Buildings Survey.
Shank, Wesley I. Todd R. Mozingo, "Survey of Styles;"
essay, Adrian D. Anderson.
Iowa City: Univ. of Iowa Press, 1979.
Hard and soft covers; xiii + 158 pp.; 124 entries; 92
photos; 31 dwgs. and maps; index; biblio.; append.:
HABS forms. Avail. from the Univ. of Iowa Press, Publ.
Order Dept., G.S.B., Iowa City, IA 52242.
Includes HABS recording through 1977. "Historic
Architecture in Iowa, introductory essay on
architectural development in the state, plus a
bibliographic essay and an essay on HABS and HABS
recording in Iowa. The author, a professor of
architecture at Iowa State University, has supervised
HABS summer recording teams and donated material to the
HABS collection for Iowa. Todd R. Mozingo of the
state's Division of Historic Preservation provided a
style guide, "Survey of Styles," illustrated with Iowa
examples. Adrian Anderson was the Iowa State Historic
Preservation Officer. Publication of this catalog was
supported by a grant from Iowa State Historical
Department, Division of Historic Preservation.
MAINE
2.13
Maine Catalog, Historic American Buildings Survey: A
List of Measured Drawings, Photographs and Written
Documentation in the Survey, 1974.
Myers, Denys Peter.
[Augusta]: The Maine State Museum, 1974.
Soft cover; vii + 254 pp., 162 entries; 75 photos; 42
dwgs.; index; biblio.; avail. from Maine State Museum,
State House, Augusta, ME 04330.
Contains a 197-page essay, "Historic Architecture of
Maine," with footnotes and bibliography. The author
was senior architectural historian of HABS. This was
the first of the definitive new HABS state catalogs
that include extensive essays, on the architectural
development of the state, as well as a detailed catalog
14
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
of HABS records. The object was to use HABS documents
as the basis for writing and illustrating a narrative
that contributes to scholarship on the state and also
interests the general reader.
MARYLAND
2.14
Records of Historic Maryland Buildings.
[Poppeliers, John C., and Nancy K. Beinke (Schwartz) ]
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, [1969].
Informal publ. (1969) ; 36 pp.; not illus., except
cover; limited distribution; OP.
The 1969 edition has 819 entries. One of a number of
informal catalogs produced in the 1960s to update
earlier catalogs, this was initially prepared for the
Maryland Historic Trust and the Association of
Historical Societies of Maryland for use in a workshop,
"A Survey of Historic Maryland Buildings and Sites,"
January 7, 1964 (Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS/DOI,
1964). A draft text for a formal Maryland catalog was
prepared in 1974 by Constance Werner Ramirez but has
not been edited and published.
MASSACHUSETTS
2.15
Historic American Buildings Survey, Massachusetts
Catalog: A List of Measured Drawings, Photographs and
Written Documentation in the Survey, 1964.
Poppeliers, John [C.], comp. and ed.
Boston: Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1965.
Soft cover; iv + 86 pp. ; 800+ entries; 11 photos; 2
dwgs. ; index of building types; OP.
In this catalog, HABS architectural historian John
Poppeliers used the expanded entry format (including
name, location, description, history, and HABS records)
that has been used in all subsequent state catalogs and
for the HABS index cards at the Library cf Congress.
The catalog was reprinted in full in Historic Buildings
of Massachusetts. See entry 2.16.
15
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
2.16
Historic Buildings of Massachusetts: Photographs from
the Historic American Buildings Survey.
[Poppeliers, John C., comp.]
Scribner's Historic Buildings Series. New York:
Charles Scribner's Sons, 1976.
Hard and soft cover; XV + 341 pp.; 800+ entries; 500
photos; OP.
Reproduces the text of The Massachusetts Catalog and
adds an extensive selection of photos (but no drawings)
from the HABS collection but no drawings. Intended to
be one of a series based on HABS, but only one volume
was produced. See entry 2.15.
2.17
Historic American Buildings Survey: Records of Historic
Cape Cod Buildings in HABS.
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS, 1963. 2nd ed., revised.
Informal publ. i 6 pp. ; 96 entries; not illus.; OP.
Lists HABS records for buildings in Barnstable County,
Massachusetts. Includes results of recording projects
1959-63. One of several informal lists issued during
1960s.
MICHIGAN
2.18
Historic American Buildings Survey, Michigan: List of
Measured Drawings, Photographs, and Documentation in
the Survey of 1965 and Complete Listings of Michigan's
HABS Records.
McKee, Harley J., William K. Alderfer, fwd.
Lansing, Mich. : Historical Society of Michigan and
Michigan Society of Architects, 1967.
Soft cover; iv + 65 pp.; 109 entries; 18 photos; OP.
Contains an illustrated essay by Harley McKee on the
architecture of Michigan, pp. 1-41. McKee, professor
of architecture at Syracuse University, supervised
numerous HABS summer recording teams, including the
1965 Central Michigan project. Reprinted from the
periodical, Michigan History, with photos not found in
16
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
the original publication. Alderfer was director of
Historical Society of Michigan. See entry 2.19.
2.19
"Glimpses of Architecture in Michigan" and "Records of
Buildings in the State of Michigan."
McKee, Harley J.
Michigan History 50: 1-49 (March 1966). Published by
the Michigan Historical Commission.
The HABS Michigan catalog was originally published as
two articles in this periodical. It was reprinted as a
separate publication with illustrations in 1967. See
entry 2.18.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
2.20
"New Hampshire Catalog, Historic American Buildings
Survey, Records in the Library of Congress."
[Poppeliers, John C.]
Historical New Hampshire 18 (2) : 1-17 (October 1963).
Publication of New Hampshire Historical Society.
18 pp. i 75 entries; 7 photos. Avail. from New
Hampshire Historical Society, 39 Park St., Concord, NH
03300.
First catalog to use an expanded entry form that gave
more information on both the buildings and the HABS
records than previous catalogs. Since it was not
possible because of budget and staff constraints to
expand and update the entire national catalog, it was
decided to revise one state at a time. Each structure
was visited to determine its current status, a more
precise address was given, and historical and
descriptive matter was added. The format was followed
in several subsequent catalogs. A supplement to this
catalog was published in 1967. See entry 2.21.
2.21
"Historic American Buildings Survey Catalog, Merrimack
and Hillsborough Counties, New Hampshire."
Giffen, Daniel H.
Historical New Hampshire 22 (3) : 2-21 (Autumn 1967).
Publication of the New Hampshire Historical Society.
17
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
20 pp. i 12 entries; 12 photos; OP; xerox copy avail.
from New Hampshire Historical Society, 39 Park St.,
Concord, NH 03300.
Supplements catalog published in 1963. Covers
buildings in two counties documented during a 1964
summer recording project. The author was director of
the New Hampshire Historical Society, which sponsored
this survey work. See entry 2.20.
NEW JERSEY
2.22
Historic American Buildings Survey of New Jersey:
Catalog of the Measured Drawings, Photographs and
Written Documents in the Survey.
Bassett, William B., comp.; John Poppeliers, ed.;
Robert A. Beck, fwd.
Newark: The New Jersey Historical Society, 1977.
Hard cover; X + 210 pp.; 834 entries; 171 photos; 16
dwgs.; index; available from the New Jersey Historical
Society, 230 Broadway, Newark, NJ 07104.
Catalogs one of the largest state holdings in the HABS
collection. More than 400 structures were recorded in
the 1930s alone. Also includes Poppeliers' essay on
HABS recording in New Jersey. Bassett was a free-lance
architectural historian in Philadelphia, working under
contract with HABS. Beck was president of the New
Jersey Historical Society. Poppeliers was HABS chief.
NORTH CAROLINA
2.23
Historic American Buildings Survey: North Carolina
Catalog.
Draft at HABS/HAER, 1990.
PENNSYLVANIA
2.24
Historic American Buildings Survey: Pennsylvania
Catalog.
In preparation, 1990.
2.25
Philadelphia Preserved: Catalog of the Historic
American Buildings Survey.
18
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
Webster, Richard J.; Charles E. Peterson, intro.;
Richard Tyler, fwd.
Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press, 1976. 2nd ed., 1981.
Hard cover; iv + 411 pp.; 602 entries; 104 photos; 13
dwgs.; index and notes.
There is a later reprint in paper by Temple University
Press, with no editorial changes. Lists HAER records
for Philadelphia, one of only four cities that have
their own catalogs. Catalog is organized by sections
of the city, each section preceded by an essay on its
urban development. A 50-page introduction, "HABS--In
and Out of Philadelphia," by Charles E. Peterson,
provides an important look at the first 30 years of
HABS history especially in Philadelphia. Webster was
associate professor of history and American studies at
West Chester State College. The Philadelphia
Historical Commission underwrote the catalog; Tyler was
director of the commission.
RHODE ISLAND
2.26
Historic American Buildings Survey, Rhode Island
Catalog: A List of Measured Drawings, Photographs and
Written Documentation in the Survey, 1972.
Overby, Osmund, comp.; John C. Poppeliers, ed.
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1973.
Informal publ.; 167 pp.; 319 entries; not illus. ;
limited distribution; OP.
Preliminary edition, never formally published.
Includes 319 entries plus a separate listing of HABS
Inventory forms. Includes a 10-page bibliographic
essay, "The Study of Rhode Island Architecture." The
author, a professor of architectural history at the
University of Missouri, served as supervisor of several
HABS summer recording teams and was sometimes on HABS
staff in Philadelphia.
SOUTH CAROLINA
2.27
Records of Buildings in Charleston and the South
Carolina Low Country.
19
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
McKee, Harley J., comp.
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS/DOI, 1965.
Informal publ. ; 26 pp. i 202 entries; not illus.;
limited distribution (original printing, 250 copies) ;
OP.
Entries for buildings in Charleston, Dorchester,
Beaufort, Georgetown, and Berkeley Counties. Uses same
expanded format as the Massachusetts Catalog. Lists
buildings from previous catalogs as well as those
recorded in summer projects in 1958, 1962, and 1965.
The author, a professor of architecture at Syracuse
University, supervised numerous HABS recording projects
including those in 1962 and 1963 in Charleston and
vicinity. He was author of Recording Historic
Buildings.
TEXAS
2.28
Texas Catalog, Historic American Buildings Survey: A
List of Measured Drawings, Photographs and Written
Documentation in the Survey, 1974.
Goeldner, Paul, comp.; Lucy Pope Wheeler and S. Allen
Chambers, Jr., eds.
San Antonio: Trinity Univ. Press, 1975.
Soft cover; vi + 247 pp. ; 285 entries; 90 photos; 63
dwgs.; index; appen., list of HABS forms; OP. Limited
number of copies available free from HABS.
Includes 285 entries with a short introduction on HABS
recording in Texas. Dr. Goeldner was professor of
architecture at Texas Technological University, HABS
summer team supervisor, and later HABS principal
architect and historical architect for NPS National
Capital Region. Enlarged by HABS staff members Lucy P.
Wheeler and S. Allen Chambers, Jr. Published with the
assistance of Exxon Corporation, U.S.A.
UTAH
2.29
Utah Catalog, Historic American Buildings Survey.
Goeldner, Paul.
20
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
Salt Lake City: Utah Heritage Foundation, 1969.
Soft cover; iv + 76 pp.; 101 entries; 51 photos; 31
dwgs.; index; OP.
Includes a 50-page essay on the architectural history
of Utah. Three-fourths of the documented buildings
were recorded in 1967 and 1968 by summer recording
projects in cooperation with Utah Heritage Foundation.
Dr. Goeldner was HABS project supervisor. There was a
preliminary printing of the catalog with a different
cover.
VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.30
"List of HABS Virgin Islands Records."
In Historic Architecture of the Virgin Islands.
Appendix IV (7 pp.) contains 100 entries with detailed
listing of records. See entry 4.81.
VIRGINIA
2.31
Historic American Buildings Survey, Virginia Catalog: A
List of Measured Drawings, Photographs and Written
Documentation in the Survey.
Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission and HABS. [W.
Brown Morton, coord. i S. Allen Chambers, Jr., and
Caroline Reynolds Heath, eds.]
Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia for HABS,
1976.
Hard and soft cover; xii + 461 pp.; 900 entries, plus
2900-entry listing of HABS forms for Virginia; 133
photos; 126 dwgs.; avail. from Univ. Press of Virginia,
Box 3608, University Station, Charlottesville, VA.
22903.
Extensively illustrated catalog of one of the largest
state collections in HABS. The Virginia Historic
Landmarks Commission provided much of the field work.
WISCONSIN
2.32
Historic American Buildings Survey, Wisconsin
Architecture: A Catalog of Buildings Represented in the
21
HABS
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
Library of Congress with Illustrations from Measured
Drawings.
Perrin, Richard W. E., intro.; Worth Bailey, comp. and
preface.
[Washington]: HABS/NPS/DOI, 1966.
Hard and soft covers, 80 pp. i 89 entries; 41 photos;
356 dwgs. ; 4 maps; biblio; OP. GPO # 1966-0-756-991
Experimental state catalog; horizontal format and
dimensions were not repeated in later catalogs. This
one uniquely features small reproductions of all
drawings. Developed and compiled by HABS architectural
historian Worth Bailey. Perrin, a noted expert on the
architecture of the state, was Wisconsin AIA
preservation officer; his foreword is a 16-page essay
on architectural history in Wisconsin, "Forms from Many
Lands."
22
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
LISTS AND FINDING AIDS
(listed alphabetically by title)
3.1
Advisory List to the National Register of Historic
Places, 1969.
Washington: NPS/DOI, [1970].
Soft cover; vii + 311 pp.; 9,909 entries; 50 states
plus Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands; not illus.;
limited distribution; OP; GPO # 1970 0-378-575.
A list prepared to provide states with a roster of
buildings and sites to be considered for potential
nomination to the National Register of Historic Places.
It was composed primarily of buildings recorded by HABS
plus those studied by the National Survey of Historic
Sites and Buildings that were in existance at that
time. With the expansion of the National Register of
Historic Places in 1966, consideration was given to
automatically including HABS buildings in the Register.
However, since it was not known what buildings
survived, this advisory list was produced to guide the
states. It lists only building names and addresses,
not the number of HABS records. Introductions by
Ernest Allen Connally and William J. Murtagh.
3.2
The Architectural Heritage of Early Western
Pennsylvania: A Record of Building Before 1860.
Stotz, Charles Morse; Fiske Kimball, fwd.; with a new
intro. by the author for this edition.
[Pittsburgh]: University of Pittsburgh Press.
Hard cover; xix + 293 pp.; 416 photos; 81 dwgs.; index;
biblio.
Contains a list of HABS-recorded buildings, pp. 287-88,
"A List of Buildings Built Before 1860, in the 27
counties of Western Pennsylvania, taken from the
Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C., from the catalogs of March
1, 1941 and 1958" (actually 1959). Includes 125 short
title entries. Book was originally published as The
Early Architecture of Western Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh:
Buhl Foundation, 1936), but the original edition does
not include the HABS checklist.
23
HABS
FINDING AIDS
3.3
The Architecture of Historic Nantucket
Lancaster, Clay; James C. Massey, intro.
New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1972
The "Bibliography on Nantucket Architecture and Related
Subjects" includes the following HABS references:
IV, pp. 26-35: "resumes" (histories) of historic
Nantucket buildings in HABS, prepared by Marie M.
Coffin.
XV, p. 268: lists HABS urban history maps of 1968.
XVII, pp. 269-71: short-title list of 79 HABS recorded
buildings plus 2 area studies with 40 additional
buildings.
3.4
Historic Architecture of the Virgin Islands.
Contains a list of HABS records for the Virgin Islands.
See entry 4.81.
3.5
Historic Buildings of Ohio.
Contains a list of Ohio buildings recorded by HABS
through 1970. See entry 4.68.
3.6
Historic Railroad Stations.
Jandl, H. Ward, Jan Thorman, and Katherine H. Cole
[Stevenson].
Washington: National Register of Historic Places,
OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1974.
Soft cover; 118 pp.; 562 entries; 70 photos; 1 dwg. ;
index; limited distribution; OP; GPO # 879-160.
A list of 562 extant railroad stations taken from the
files of the National Register of Historic Places, and
state inventories, with notations of those also in
HABS/HAER (56 recorded by HABS, 31 recorded by HAER).
Intended to call attention to railroad stations as
historic resources, it was prepared for a workshop on
reuse of railroad stations held in Indianapolis, July
1974. Susan Dynes, HABS, and James Armstrong, HAER,
provided the HABS/HAER essay.
24
HABS
FINDING AIDS
3.7
An Index to Railroading Structures in the HABS/HAER
Collection.
See entry 13.3.
3.8
New Haven Architecture.
Contains list of HABS recorded buildings in New Haven,
Connecticut. See entry 4.15.
3.9
A Preliminary Inventory of Spanish Colonial Resources
Associated with National Park Service Units and
National Historic Landmarks.
Henderson, Richard R., princ. researcher and ed.
Washington: United State Committee, International
Council of Monuments and Sites, for National Park
Service, 1987.
Appendix A.6 is "Spanish Heritage Resources in the
HABS/HAER Database." Russell V. Keune was project
director.
3.10
"Railroad Stations Recorded by the Historic American
Buildings Survey and the Historic American Engineering
Record. "
Rapp, William F.
Railroad Station Historical Society Bulletin 17 (6) : 73-
91 (Nov.-Dec. 1984).
3.11
Washingtoniana Photograph Collections In The Prints and
Photographs Division of the Library of Congress.
Collins, Kathleen.
Washington: Library of Congress, 1989.
Hard cover; xxiv + 310 pp.; index; biblio.
"Historic American Buildings Survey," pp. 108-115, and
"Historic American Engineering Record, " p. 110, list
HABS and HAER-recorded buildings in Washington, D. C.
There are more than 500 HABS short-title entries and
four for HAER. Fifteen HABS/HAER photos illustrate
this section and introductory pages of the book.
25
HABS
FINDING AIDS
3.12
"Westchester Historic Buildings. =
Halbert, William Carter.
The Westchester Historian (Jan. 1955) : 4-7.
4 pp. i not illus.; OP.
A list of buildings in Westchester County, New York,
recorded by HABS in the 1930s. Also a list of those
buildings whose records are in the Department of Public
Works in White Plains, plus a list of other historic
buildings drawn up by the author in his capacity as
preservation officer for his AIA chapter.
26
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, NATIONAL AND REGIONAL
(listed alphabetically by title)
Publications by HABS and HABS cooperators, including
selections from HABS, HABSI, and measured drawings
folios.
4.1
America's City Halls.
Lebovich, William L.
Washington: The Preservation Press, 1984.
Soft cover; 114 pp.; 114 entries; 118 photos. Avail.
from National Trust for Historic Preservation Mail
Order, 1600 H St., N.W., Washington, DC 20006.
A photographic essay on 114 city halls in 40 states
with introductory text discussing the development of
this building type. The result of a cooperative
project among HABS, the U.S. Conference of Mayors and
the AIA to document city halls. Material solicited by
the author from cities across the country was first
assembled into an exhibit that opened June 1982 at the
annual meeting of the USCM in honor of the 50th
anniversary of HABS and the 125th anniversary of the
AIA. A selection of these photos was circulated by the
Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service
(SITES). The author was a historian on the HABS staff.
4.2
"The Architectural Forum Master Detail Series."
Architectural Forum, September 1934-January 1937.
An important early series of nine Architectural Forum
articles featuring the work of HABS. An aid to
architects of the period, who often used copies or
adaptations of colonial details in contemporary
designs. The tenth article in the series, on the early
architecture of Pennsylvania, was not based on HABS
records but on work done by the Pittsburgh Chapter of
the AIA. Those taken from HABS files included
buildings in Delaware, Kentucky, Louisiana, New York,
Ohio, and Virginia. See entries 4.16, 4.17, 4.31,
4.41, 4.42, 4.43, 4.55, 4.66, and 4.85.
4.3
Documenting a Legacy: 40 Years of the Historic American
Buildings Survey.
Poppeliers, John C., et al.
27
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, NATIONAL AND REGIONAL
Washington: GPO for Library of Congress, 1973.Soft
cover; 26 pp.; 18 photos; 20 dwgs.; OP; GPO #1973-0-
524-326.
Offprint from Quarterly Journal of the Library of
Congress (October 1973). Served as the exhibit catalog
for the second major HABS exhibit mounted at the
Library of Congress (Nov. 1, 1973-Jan. 31, 1974). This
exhibit marked the 40th anniversary of HABS and
stressed newer developments in recording such as
historic districts, photogrammetry, and landscape
studies. John C. Poppeliers was chief of HABS. Staff
members contributing to the articles were S. Allen
Chambers, Jr., Caroline R. Heath, Ursula M. Theobald,
and Rodd L. Wheaton.
4.4
Field Guide to American Architecture.
Rifkind, Carol.
New York: The New American Library, Inc., 1980.
Soft cover; xi + 322 pp.; 47 photos; 456 dwgs.;
biblio.; index; avail. from New American Library, Inc.,
Premium Marketing Division, 1633 Broadway, New York, NY
10019. Also reprinted by Bonanza Books, New York,
1984.
Text by Carol Rifkind is a guide to building types and
architectural styles. Illustrated almost entirely with
HABS and HAER drawings and photos. The author was a
professor in the graduate school of architecture and
planning, Columbia University, and consultant in
historic preservation and tourism.
4.5
Measured Drawings of National Trust Properties Executed
by the Historic American Buildings Survey, National
Park Service.
[Massey, James C., intro. & proj. dir.]
Washington: National Trust for Historic Preservation,
[1974-76].
Folio; 9 sets of dwgs.; OP.
Folio containing reproductions of the HABS drawings for
the following seven National Trust-owned properties:
28
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, NATIONAL AND REGIONAL
Belle Grove (Virginia), Casa Amesti (California),
Cliveden (Pennsylvania), Decatur House (Washington,
D. C.), Lyndhurst (New York), Pope-Leighey House
(Virginia), and Shadows-on-the-Teche (Louisiana). In
1976 Drayton Hall (South Carolina) and Woodlawn
Plantation (Virginia) were added. Published as part of
a program of the NTHP and HABS to record National Trust
historic properties.
4.6
More Classic Old House Plans: Authentic Designs for
Colonial and Victorian Homes.
Grow, Lawrence, comp.
Pittstown, N.J.: The Main Street Press, 1986.
Soft cover; 128 pp.; 320 dwgs.; biblio.
HABS drawings form the basis for this explicative
treatment of 16th- through 19th-century American house
styles. The book is divided into six sections: early
colonial, mid-colonial and late colonial and early
Victorian, mid-Victorian, and late Victorian. A brief
essay precedes each section, and a description of each
house is provided.
4.7
The New England Textile Mills Survey. Selections from
the Historic American Buildings Survey, No. 11.
[Sande, Theodore A., ed.; Robert Vogel, proj. dir.]
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1971.
Soft cover; ix + 176 pp.; 22 entries; 47 photos; 33
dwgs. i 4 maps; OP; GPO # 923-268.
One of a series of publications based on HABS
documentation. Includes HABS photo-data documentation
of textile mills in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and
Rhode Island. Includes records made in 1967 and 1968
during projects cosponsored by HABS, the Smithsonian
Institution and Merrimack Valley Textile Museum as
demonstration projects for the documentation of
industrial structures. Their success accelerated the
creation of HAER in 1969. Robert Vogel was curator of
civil and mechanical engineering at the Smithsonian;
Theodore Sande was an instructor at Williams College.
See entry 4.8 for cross references to other selections.
29
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, NATIONAL AND REGIONAL
4.8
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Survey.
A series of documentary publications of HABS records,
issued by HABS and cooperating organizations. See
entries 4.7, 4.15, 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22, 4.24,
4.28, 4.51, 4.62, 4.64, 4.67, 4.81. Series developed
by James C. Massey, HABS chief.
4.9
Waiting for the 5:05: Terminal, Station, and Depot in
America.
Grow, Lawrence; Clay Lancaster, intro.
New York: Main Street Press/Universe Books, 1977.
Hard and soft cover; 128 pp.; 164 photos; 15 dwgs.; OP.
Based on HABS/HAER records. Provides a largely
pictorial look at American railroad stations. Book
enlarges on an exhibit of HABS/HAER records, "Terminal,
Station and Depot in America," circulated by the
Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service
(SITES) beginning in 1976. Grow headed Main Street
Press.
30
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
(listed alphabetically by state, then by title)
CALIFORNIA
4.10
Benicia: Portrait of an Early California Town.
Bruegmann, Robert.
San Francisco: 101 Productions, 1980.
Soft cover; xiv + 158 pp.; 97 photos; 26 dwgs. ; 17
maps; 6 copies of old prints; indexes; biblio.; notes;
OP.
A well-illustrated architectural history of one of the
first towns incorporated in California. Based on
material assembled during HABS' Benicia recording
project in 1976. Written by team historian Bruegmann.
Cosponsored by HABS and the Exxon Corporation, which
has a refinery in Benicia, as a bicentennial project.
Designed to increase awareness of town's historic
assets and spur planning efforts to protect them in
advance of increasing development. Good example of
private/public cooperation and of use of HABS records
to produce a narrative document more accessible to the
general public.
4.11
An Enduring Heritage: Historic Buildings of the San
Francisco Peninsula.
Regnery, Dorothy E.; John C. Poppeliers, fwd.; Kathryn
H. Kaiser [Gualtieri], pref.
Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press, 1976.
Hard cover; xiii + 124 pp. ; 149 photos; 13 dwgs. and
maps; index; biblio. Avail. from Stanford Univ. Press,
Stanford, CA 94305.
Extensively illustrated look at historic architecture
in Palo Alto and other peninsula towns. Cooperative
project of HABS and the Junior League of Palo Alto,
including a summer recording team in 1974. Photographs
of all buildings were made by HABS photographer Jack E.
Boucher. Dorothy Regnery headed the Junior League
survey effort.
4.12
Historic American Buildings: A Series of Volumes
Reproducing All the Drawings of the Historic American
31
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Buildings Survey and Including Photographs of Many of
the Buildings. California: Volumes I-IV.
DeLong, David G., ed. and intros.
New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1979.
Hard cover; index in Vol. IV.
A series intended to reproduce all the measured
drawings in the HABS archive at the Library of Congress
as of 1979. Arranged chronologically, then by building
type, then by geographical area. Volumes for
California, New York, and Texas were the only ones
produced. David DeLong was associate professor,
Graduate School of Architecture and Planning, Columbia
University. See entries 4.57 and 4.80.
Volume I: xxi + 320 pp. i fold-out map locating recorded
buildings. Contains HABS drawings and photos for 54
pre-1862 residential buildings in central and southern
California.
Volume II: 471 pp. ; 39 pre-1862 residential and
religious buildings in central and northern California.
Volume III: 357 pp. ; 60 pre-1917 buildings, various
types and locations.
Volume IV: 343 pp. i 59 pre-1941 buildings, various
types and locations, index to all volumes.
4.13
Historic California: San Juan Bautista, Monterey.
[Kneass, A.; A. Louis Koue; and Charles S. Pope,
comps.]
n.p.: AIA, Monterey and Northern California Chapters;
Society of Architectural Historians; NPS; California
Heritage Council, [1960].
Informal publ. ; 22 pp.; 19 photos; 2 dwgs.; maps; OP.
HABS Inventory (HABSI) forms for 19 buildings and
groups. These one-page forms were designed to be
filled out by local groups and donated to HABS as a way
of conducting a broad inventory of historic buildings.
Their use was discontinued in 1971. This project was
sponsored by the AIA (Northern California and Monterey
32
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Chapters), Society of Architectural Historians,
California Heritage Council and NPS. Kneass was with
the California Department of Beaches and Parks and Koue
and Pope were NPS architects in San Francisco.
Publication date taken from date of cover design. See
entry 4.14.
4.14
Historic California: Sonoma-Benicia.
[Pope, Charles S. and A. Lewis Koue, comps.]
San Francisco: California Heritage Council, 1960.
Informal publ.; 17 pp.; 18 photos; OP.
Compilation of one-page HABSI forms for 17 buildings.
Related to similar publication for San Juan Bautista;
see entry 4.13. Cooperators included the Northern
California and East Bay Chapter, AIA.
CONNECTICUT
4.15
New Haven Architecture. Selections from the Historic
American Buildings Survey, Number 9.
[Wilkins, Woodrow W., and Jonathan Conant; Dorothy C.
Buffmire, ed.]
Washington: HABS/DHA/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1970.
Soft cover; V + 159 pp.; 18 entries; 35 photos; 27
dwgs. and maps; OP. GPO # 0 893-136.
Reproductions of HABS written data for eleven buildings
in New Haven recorded during a summer project in 1964.
Cosponsored by New Haven Preservation Trust.
Illustrated with a selection of HABS photos and
drawings. Also contains brief descriptions of eight
other buildings recorded in 1964 project and list of
all HABS records for the city. Woodrow Wilkins was
professor of architecture, University of Kentucky, and
supervisor of 1964 project. Jonathan Conant was
project historian and a student at Yale University.
DELAWARE
4.16
"The Architectural Forum Master Detail Series, Number
2. Historic American Buildings Survey, Old Swedes,
Holy Trinity Church."
33
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Architectural Forum 61 (6) : 445-452 (December 1934).
8 pp.; 8 photos; 7 dwgs.
Reproduction of HABS drawings for Old Swedes Church in
Wilmington, Delaware. For more information on the
Architectural Forum Master Detail Series, see entry
4.2. For other articles in series see entries 4.17,
4.31, 4.41, 4.42, 4.43, 4.55, 4.66, and 4.85.
4.17
"Historic American Buildings, The Architectural Forum
Master Detail Series, Number 8."
Architectural Forum 64: 125-32 (1936)
8 pp. ; 9 photos; 16 dwgs.
Brief historical information accompanying HABS photos
and drawings for three New Castle, Delaware, houses:
the Amstel House, Van Dyke House, and Kensey Johns
House. For more information on Master Detail Series,
see entry 4.2; for other articles in series, see
entries 4.16, 4.31, 4.41, 4.42, 4.43, 4.55, 4.66, and
4.85.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
4.18
Georgetown Architecture. Selections from the Historic
American Buildings Survey, Number 10.
[Reiff, Daniel D. and Ellen J. Schwartz (Myer) ];
Daniel D. Reiff, intro.
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts and HABS/OAHP/NPS/
DOI, 1970.
Soft cover; xxxvii + 291 pp.; 15 entries; 108 photos;
17 dwgs.; appen.; limited distribution; OP.
The sixth and last of the documentary publications on
Georgetown architecture issued jointly by the
Commission of Fine Arts and HABS. It reproduces the
HABS written data for 14 structures plus street
furniture, and rounds out the representative building
styles and types covered in the other volumes. HABS
data is preceded by a 36-page summary of Georgetown
architecture by Daniel Reiff based on all six volumes.
Reiff and Schwartz were employees of the Commission of
Fine Arts. See entries 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22, 4.24.
34
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
4.19
Georgetown Architecture: Northwest. Selections from
the Historic American Buildings Survey, Number 6.
[Black, Nancy W., et al.]
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts, 1970.
Soft cover; 661 pp. i 27 entries; 63 photos; appen.;
limited distribution; OP.
Contains written documentation for 27 structures west
of Wisconsin Avenue and north of M Street. The fifth
volume in a series of studies of Georgetown, D.C.,
architecture. Nancy Black, Commission of Fine Arts
historian, was assisted by a number of volunteer
researchers. Architectural descriptions provided by
the office of Walter Peter, Jr., AIA. This volume
prepared by the Commission of Fine Arts, which donated
the records to HABS. See entries 4.18, 4.20, 4.21,
4.22, 4.24.
4.20
Georgetown Architecture: The Waterfront. Selections
from the Historic American Buildings Survey, Number 4.
[Reiff, Daniel D., and William Gwinn]; Daniel D. Reiff,
intro.
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts and
HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1968.
Soft cover; iii + 297 pp.; 24 entries; 50 photos; 1
dwg.; appen.; limited distribution; OP. GPO # 1968 0-
319-731.
Documents 24 structures in the old waterfront area of
Georgetown. Third volume in a series produced to
document buildings in the Georgetown Historic District.
Reiff prepared the historical data and Gwinn the
architectural descriptions. See entries 4.18, 4.19,
4.21, 4.22, 4.24.
4.21
Georgetown Commercial Architecture: M Street.
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Survey,
Number 2.
[Noffsinger, James Philip, and Thomas R. Martinson].
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts and HABS/NPS, 1967.
35
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Soft cover; 130 pp. ; 15 entries; 18 photos; appen. i
limited distribution; OP.
Reproduces and illustrates the documentation assembled
on 15 Georgetown commercial buildings by summer
recording team members Philip Noffsinger of the
University of Kentucky and Thomas Martinson, an
architectural student at the University of Minnesota.
The first of six volumes in the series entitled
"Selections from the Historic American Buildings
Survey" dealing with Georgetown, D.C., architecture and
issued jointly by the Commission of Fine Arts and HABS.
The books are based on a joint HABS-CFA project
arranged by James Massey, HABS chief, and Charles
Atherton, secretary, CFA. The data collected on a
representative sampling of building types and styles
was used by the Commission in its role as review body
for the Georgetown Historic District. The records
produced became part of the HABS archives. See entries
4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.22, 4.24.
4.22
Georgetown Commercial Architecture: Wisconsin Avenue.
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Survey,
Number 3.
[Noffsinger, James Philip, and Thomas R. Martinson]
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts and
HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1967.
Soft cover; 108 pp.; 11 entries; 12 photos; appen. ;
limited distribution; OP. GPO # 1967 0-256-064.
Documents 11 structures on one of Georgetown's two main
shopping streets. The second volume in a series to
document the architecture of the Georgetown Historic
District. See entries 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.24.
4.23
Georgetown Historic Waterfront, Washington, D.C.: A
Review of Canal and Riverside Architecture.
Werner [Ramirez], Constance W.
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts and OAHP/NPS/DOI,
1968.
Soft cover; 90 pp. buck red cover; 81 photos; 18 dwgs.
and maps; biblio.; OP; GPO # 1968 0-292-323. Reprinted
in 1974 with a brown cover; GPO #1974 0 522 566.
36
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
A study of 26 buildings and structures near the Potomac
River and the C&O Canal in the Georgetown Historic
District. Based on information gathered by an HABS
team in 1967. This material was expanded and developed
into a narrative describing the chronological
development of the waterfront area by Werner, a
consultant in preservation planning. One of a number
of projects to document the Georgetown Historic
District cooperatively undertaken by the Commission of
Fine Arts and HABS. See entries 4.18, 4.19, 4.20,
4.21, 4.22, 4.24.
4.24
Georgetown Residential Architecture: Northeast.
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Survey.
Number 5.
[Schwartz (Myer), Ellen J. and William P. Thompson.]
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts and
HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, [1969].
Soft cover; 233 pp. ; 15 entries; 45 photos; 15 dwgs.
(floor plans) ; appen.; limited distribution; OP. GPO #
1969 0-356-031.
Contains documentation for 15 houses in the northeast
part of the Georgetown Historic District east of
Wisconsin Avenue and north of M Street surveyed in
summer 1968. The fourth in a series of volumes
cosponsored by the Commission of Fine Arts to document
the architecture of Georgetown. Historical
documentation prepared by Ellen Schwartz [Myer], a
graduate student in fine arts at the University of
Maryland. Thompson was assistant professor of
architectural history, University of Manitoba. See
entries 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22.
4.25
The Historic Buildings of Washington, D.C. Historic
Buildings of America. A Selection from the Records of
the Historic American Buildings Survey, National Park
Service, United States Department of the Interior.
Maddex, Diane; Arthur Cotton Moore, fwd.
Pittsburgh: Ober Park Associates, 1973.
Hard and soft covers; 191 pp.; 261 photos; 28 dwgs. ;
index; biblio.; appendices.
37
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Includes 17-page preface by Maddex, editor with the
National Trust for Historic Preservation, on
documentation of historic structures, preservation, and
HABS in Washington. Illustrates and describes 50
buildings chosen from the HABS archives. A similar
book was produced for buildings in Ohio. See entry
4.66. Moore was a Washington, D.C., architect.
4.26
Massachusetts Avenue Architecture. Vol. I.
[Staff of the Commission of Fine Arts]; Charles H.
Atherton, fwd.; Jeffrey R. Carson, pref.
Washington: Commission of Fine Arts, 1973.
Soft cover; xi + 472 pp.; 21 entries; 182 photos; 42
dwgs.; illus. glossary of architectural terms; OP; GPO
# 1973 0-508-114.
The seventh in a series of studies prepared to aid the
Commission of Fine Arts in their function of reviewing
alterations and new construction in certain areas of
D.C. Twenty-one buildings on "Embassy Row" are
described and illustrated with photographs by HABS
photographer Jack E. Boucher. A second volume on
Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., and two volumes on
Sixteenth Street, N.W., were also produced by the Fine
Arts Commission but are not in HABS format, and none of
the records were placed in the HABS collection of the
Library of Congress.
4.27
"Mount Vernon Theater, Washington, D.C., Historic
American Buildings Survey."
[Morrison, Andrew Craig]
Marquee 15 (3) : 10-13 (3rd quarter 1983).
4 pp. 2 photos; 1 dwg. Avail. from Theater Historical
Society, 2215 W. North Ave., Chicago, IL 60647.
Third in a series of articles reproducing excerpts from
HABS written and photographic records of theaters. See
entries 4.45, 4.48, 4.56, 4.69, 4.74.
4.28
Washington, D.C., Architecture: Market Square.
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Survey,
Number 8.
38
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
[McKee, Harley J., and Thomas Fauntleroy.]
Washington: Urban Design and Development Corporation
and HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1969.
Soft cover; vi + 151 pp. i 30 entries; 61 photos; 3
dwgs.; limited distribution; OP.
Study of 30 historic buildings in an area proposed for
development north of Pennsylvania Avenue between Sixth
and Ninth Streets, N.W. Cosponsored by the AIA's Urban
Design and Development Corporation, under contract with
the Smithsonian Institution, to explore the feasibility
of locating the Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars within the survey area. Harley J. McKee was
professor emeritus of architecture at Syracuse;
Fauntleroy was an architectural student at Howard
University.
4.29
The White House Grounds and Gardens, 1984-88.
See entry 4.30.
4.30
The White House: The Ronald W. Reagan Administration,
1981-1989.
Washington: GPO for the Office of the Chief Usher of
the White House, 1989.
Hard and soft covers; 84 pp. ; 49 photos; limited
printing (1,800 copies distributed to individuals and
800 Federal Repository Libraries). GPO # 1989-674086.
Photographic and textual documentation of the
residential quarters of the White House at the end of
the Reagan administration. Details the renovations and
redecorations undertaken between 1981 and 1988, as well
as additions to the White House decorative arts
collection. Intended primarily to document the private
areas of the mansion, which change with each occupant.
Produced with the cooperation of the White House
Historical Association and the NPS, which is
responsible for maintenance of the White House. All
color photographs of the building were taken by HABS
photographer Jack E. Boucher and, although restricted,
are part of the HABS archives. A companion book, The
White House Grounds and Gardens, 1984-88, was produced
at the same time. It contains nine Boucher photographs
but is devoted primarily to drawings identifying plant
39
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
materials in the White House gardens. A very limited
number of copies were printed, and there was no
distribution to federal repository libraries.
GEORGIA
4.31
"Historic American Buildings, Architectural Forum
Master Detail Series, Historic American Buildings
Survey, Number 7."
Architectural Forum 64 (6) : 499-508 (June 1936).
10 pp. ; 11 photos; 11 dwgs.
Introductory essay, photos, and drawings for three
Georgia buildings: Westover, in Milledgeville (Baldwin
County) ; Lowther Hall, in Clinton (Jones County) ; and
Davenport House, in Savannah. For further information
on the Master Detail Series, see entry 4.2; for other
articles in series, see entries 4.16, 4.17, 4.41, 4.42,
4.43, 4.55, 4.66, and 4.85.
ILLINOIS
4.32
An Inventory of Historic Structures within the Illinois
and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor. [Vol.
I.]
Fitzsimons, Gregory Gray, Susan Shearer, and Sally
Kress Tompkins.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1985.
Soft cover; 130 pp. ; 8 maps; limited distribution (60
copies distributed to Illinois libraries) ; OP.
Presents an overview history of the Illinois and
Michigan Canal and outlines a multi-year project to
inventory industrial and transportation sites and
historic architecture along the 120-mile canal
corridor. Gives the results of three pilot studies
conducted in summer 1985: LaSalle/Peru to Ottawa,
Morris, and Lemont. Project undertaken at request of
Midwest Regional Office, NPS, to fulfill requirements
of Public Law 98-398 (8/24/84), which established the
Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor.
Inventory devised by Tompkins, HABS/HAER deputy chief.
Field supervisor was Fitzsimons, a graduate student at
the University of Washington and later a HAER employee.
40
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Shearer was a historian from Washington, D.C., who
supervised the Morris, Illinois, inventory. Also see
two other volumes from 1985 (entries 4.33 and 4.34) and
multi-volume studies in 1986 (entry 4.35) and 1987
(entry 4.36). For HAER study of Lockport, Illinois,
see entry 14.9. See also Gray Fitzsimons, "The
Architectural Legacy and Industrial Archeology of the
Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage
Corridor, " in The Illinois and Michigan Canal National
Heritage Corridor: A Guide to Its History and Sources
(DeKalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois Univ. Press, 1987).
4.33
An Inventory of Historic Structures within the Illinois
and Michigan Canal Heritage Corridor, 1985. Vol. II:
Morris.
[Shearer, Susan].
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, [1987].
Soft cover; 727 pp.; 347 contact prints on inventory
cards; limited distribution; OP.
Reproductions of inventory cards for 347 structures in
the town of Morris, Illinois, plus overview history
reprinted from Vol. I. See entry 4.32.
4.34
An Inventory of Historic Structures within the Illinois
and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor, 1985.
Vol. III.: Lemont.
[Johnson, Jill, and Frances P. Alexander, princ.
authors; Gray Fitzsimons, ed.]
[Washington]: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1987.
Soft cover; 287 pp.; 10 photos plus 122 contact prints
on inventory cards; limited distribution; OP.
Overview history of canal, edited and expanded from
original version in Vol. I, plus reproductions of
inventory cards for 122 structures in Lemont, Illinois.
Johnson and Alexander were graduate students at the
University of Oregon and George Washington University,
respectively. See entry 4.32.
4.35
An Inventory of Historic Structures Within the Illinois
and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor, 1986. 6
vols.
41
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
[Washington]: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1986.
Soft cover; limited distribution; OP.
In the summer of 1986, HABS/HAER conducted the second
year of a three-year inventory of historic structures
along the Illinois and Michigan Canal Corridor.
Volume I: Overviews of the Historic Architecture of
Peru, LaSalle, Utica, Ottawa, Marseilles, and Seneca.
[Alison K. Hoagland, ed.]
146 pp. ; 37 photos; 7 maps.
Contains an overview history of each of six towns
surveyed in 1986.
Volume II: Peru Inventory of Historic Structures.
[Elizabeth A. Miller, supvr. ; Mary M. Stolberg, Rachel
D. Barber].
518 pp. i 258 contact photos; 1 map.
Inventory cards for 258 structures in Peru, Illinois,
arranged alphabetically by street.
Volume III: LaSalle Inventory of Historic Structures.
[Sara Amy Leach and Mary J. Turner].
335 pp. ; 166 contact prints; 1 map.
Inventory cards for 166 structures in LaSalle,
Illinois, arranged alphabetically by street.
Volume IV: Utica Inventory of Historic Structures.
[Donna M. Neary and Marguerite S. Shaffer].
243 pp. i 120 contact prints; 1 map.
Inventory cards for 120 residential, commercial, and
farm buildings in or near Utica, Illinois.
Volume V: Ottawa Inventory of Historic Structures.
[Rachel D. Barber and Mary J. Turner].
239 pp. ; 118 contact prints; 1 map.
Inventory cards for 118 structures in Ottawa, Illinois,
arranged alphabetically by street.
Volume VI: Marseilles and Seneca Inventory of Historic
Structures.
[Deborah A. Fulton, Marguarite S. Shaffer and Donna M.
Neary].
207 pp.; 102 contact prints; 1 map. Inventory cards
for 56 commercial buildings in Marseilles and 46
commercial and residential buildings in Seneca,
Illinois.
42
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
4.36
An Inventory of Historic Structures Within the Illinois
and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor, 1987. 3
vols.
[Washington]: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1987.
Soft cover; limited distribution; OP.
Results of the third year of a three-year project to
inventory the historic structures of the Illinois and
Michigan Canal Corridor. See entries 4.31, 4.32, 4.33,
4.34.
Volume I: Summit.
Frances P. Alexander, hist. and ed.; Ernest J. Emrich,
Frederick W. Schmidt.
218 pp.; 99 photos; 2 maps.
The most thoroughly surveyed town in the Illinois and
Michigan Canal corridor. 1,332 structures built before
1950 were surveyed, and a representative sampling was
more thoroughly inventoried. This volume contains an
overview history, summary of survey, and inventory
forms for 52 selected buildings.
Volume II: Joliet.
Alison K. Hoagland, ed., Frank Brown III, Joseph R.
DeRose, Jeannine Jacaruso.
346 pp.; 191 photos; 3 maps.
Overview history, survey and inventory of two Joliet,
Illinois, neighborhoods, one downtown and the other in
the residential west side. Inventory cards were
prepared for 180 of the 709 buildings surveyed.
Volume III: Ottawa.
[Alison K. Hoagland, ed., Jeanne C. Lawrence, Mary K.
Shipe, William G. Taft].
493 pp. ; 10 photos plus 700 contact prints.
Historical overview, survey and inventory of two Ottawa
residential neighborhoods. Inventory cards were
prepared for 148 of the 709 buildings surveyed.
4.37
Measured Drawings of Northern Illinois Architecture,
Historic American Buildings Survey: Northern Illinois,
1716-1867.
Chicago: Lake Photoprint Co., 1934.
43
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Hard cover folio; 51 pp. i 50 dwgs.; OP; reprint avail.
from NTIS, 5285 Port Royal Rd., Springfield, VA 22161;
publ. # PB 182466. Microfiche avail. from same source.
First of three large-format folios reproducing HABS
drawings made in Illinois in the 1930s. Drawings in
this volume were made by a HABS team based in Chicago
between January and May 1934. Sponsored by NPS,
Federal Civil Works Administration Project #67, and
Illinois C.W.A.- I.E.R.C. Project # 7523. These were
the only publications of this type produced in the
1930s. See entries 4.38 and 4.39.
4.38
Measured Drawings of Northern Illinois Architecture,
Historic American Buildings Survey: Northern Illinois,
1837-1872.
Chicago: Lake Photoprint Co., 1937.
Hard cover folio; 51 pp.; 50 dwgs.; OP; reprint avail.
from NTIS, 5285 Port Royal Rd., Springfield, VA 22161.
NTIS publ. # 182467. Microfiche avail. from same
source.
Second of three folios sponsored by NPS, Illinois State
Historical Library, and the Illinois Relief Commission.
Measured drawings made by HABS in Chicago between
February 1935 and May 1936. See entries 4.37 and 4.39.
4.39
Measured Drawings of Northern Illinois Architecture,
Historic American Buildings Survey: Northern Illinois,
1833-1872.
[Washington]: Branch of Plans and Designs/Office of
National Parks, Buildings and Reservations/DOI, 1937.
Hard cover folio; 52 pp.; 50 dwgs.; 1 map; OP; reprint
avail. from NTIS, 5285 Port Royal Rd., Springfield, VA
22161, publ. # PB182465. Microfiche avail. from same
source.
Third of three folios. Drawings prepared by a Chicago-
based HABS team between May and July 1937. Cosponsored
by NPS, Illinois State Historical Library, and Public
Works Administration. See entries 4.37 and 4.38.
44
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
4.40
The Robie House, Historic American Buildings Survey.
Palos Park, Ill.: The Prairie School Press, 1968.
Soft cover; 14 pp.; 14 dwgs.; OP.
Measured drawings of one of Frank Lloyd Wright's best-
known houses, made by HABS in 1963 under the
supervision of Osmund R. Overby, professor of
architecture and history, University of Missouri. This
publication was produced to make more widely available
records that were at that time the most frequently
requested set of HABS drawings. Includes measured
drawings of Robie House furniture designed by Wright,
rarely found in HABS.
KENTUCKY
4.41
"Historic American Buildings Survey, The Architectural
Forum Master Detail Series, No. 1."
Architectural Forum 61 (3) : 203-16 (September 1934).
14 pp.; 12 photos; dwgs.
First in this important series of articles featuring
measured drawings from the HABS program, published
between 1934 and 1937. Includes drawings, photos and
descriptive text on Liberty Hall and Castlewood,
Kentucky. See entry 4.2.
4.42
"Historic American Buildings Survey, The Architectural
Forum Master Detail Series, No. 3."
Architectural Forum 62 (6) : 567-78 (June 1935).
10 pp.; 8 photos; 16 dwgs.
Third in a series of eight articles reproducing details
from HABS recording projects. Contains photographs and
drawings of Rose Hill and its outbuildings in
Lexington, Kentucky. See entry 4.2.
LOUISIANA
4.43
"Historic American Buildings Survey, The Architectural
Forum Master Detail Series, No. 5."
45
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Architectural Forum 63 (5) : 495-506 (Nov. 1935).
12 pp. ; 13 photos; 16 dwgs.
Fifth in the nine-article Architectural Forum series
featuring early HABS projects. Reproduces photos and
drawings of the Beauregard House, New Orleans,
Louisiana. See entry 4.2.
MARYLAND
4.44
Historic American Buildings Survey: An Architectural
Study of Fort McHenry, Fort McHenry National Monument
and Historic Shrine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Nelson, Lee H.
Philadelphia: EODC/NPS/DOI, 1961.
Informal publ. ; 184 pp.; 29 photos; 42 dwgs.; OP;
reprint available from NTIS, Dept. of Commerce, 5285
Port Royal Rd., Springfield, VA. 22161; publ. #
PB182463. Microfiche also avail.
HABS report on the development of the "star fort" and
pentagonal fort at Fort McHenry between 1776 and 1857.
Includes overview history plus photos and drawings of
four buildings recorded during the summer of 1958 at
the NPS-owned site whose bombardment inspired our
national anthem. Project carried out by HABS as
research for the restoration of the fort. Nelson was a
NPS historical architect, and later chief, Preservation
Assistance Division, NPS.
MASSACHUSETTS
4.45
"B. F. Keith Theater, Boston, Massachusetts, Historic
American Buildings Survey."
[Morrison, Andrew Craig, Lucy P. Wheeler, Denys Peter
Myers].
Marquee 15 (2) : entire issue (second quarter).
33 pp. i 15 photos; 2 dwgs. Avail. from Theater
Historical Society, 2215 W. North Ave., Chicago, IL
60647.
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HABS
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One of a series reproducing excerpts from HABS written
and photographic records of theaters. Also see entries
4.27, 4.48, 4.56, 4.69, 4.74.
4.46
The Historic Architecture and Urban Design of
Nantucket.
Ramirez, Constance Werner.
Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1970.
Soft cover; 16 pp.; 12 photos; 7 dwgs. ; OP.
An illustrated essay that served as the catalog for a
traveling exhibit of the same name. The exhibit of
HABS photos and drawings was based on the work of a
series of HABS summer teams on Nantucket. It was
circulated by the Smithsonian Institution traveling
Exhibition Service. Ramirez was an urban planner who
participated in the 1968 urban planning history of
Nantucket sponsored by HABS and the Nantucket
Historical Trust.
4.47
An Historical Survey of the Physical Development of
Nantucket: A Brief Narrative History and Documentary
Source Material.
Hugo-Brunt, Michael, with Constance Werner [Ramirez],
Robert Meeker, Donald Evans, Barclay G. Jones (prog.
dir.), and Patricia Brennecke.
Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell Univ., 1969.
Soft cover; xii + 384 pp.; not illus.; OP.
A prototype study in urban planning history conducted
for HABS by the Division of Urban Studies, Center for
Housing and Environmental Studies, Cornell University.
The purpose was to survey and assemble source material
for the study of urban development on Nantucket so that
individually recorded buildings could be understood in
their historic context and to evaluate the potential
usefulness of further projects to document the
development of urban form. Project funded by the
Nantucket Historical Trust. Includes narrative history
and inventories of source materials, written, oral, and
visual, especially maps and photographs.
47
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MICHIGAN
4.48
"The Grand Riviera Theater, Detroit, Michigan, Historic
American Buildings Survey.'
[Morrison, Andrew Craig].
Marquee 20 (1) : 3-15 (1st quarter 1988).
13 pp. i 20 photos; 1 dwg. Avail. from Theater
Historical Society, 2215 W. North Ave., Chicago, IL
60647.
Sixth in a series reproducing excerpts from HABS
written and photographic records of theaters. Also see
entries 4.27, 4.45, 4.56, 4.69, 4.74.
MONTANA
4.49
Montana's Historic Structures. Vol. I.
DeHaas, John N., Jr.
Bozeman: Montana State University, 1964.
Hard cover; informal publ. ; bound black-line prints;
155 pp.; 1 photo; 96 dwgs.; limited distribution; OP.
Reproduces the written data and drawings for nine
buildings in Montana and one in Idaho recorded in 1963
by HABS field team supervised by John DeHaas, professor
of architecture, Montana State University. Project
sponsored by HABS, San Francisco Office, Montana State
University and the Montana Chapter, AIA. See entry
4.50.
4.50
Montana's Historic Structures and Projects in Wyoming.
Vol. II.
DeHaas, John N., Jr.
Bozeman: Montana State University, 1969.
Hard cover; informal publ. ; bound black-line prints;
217 pp.; 1 photo; 133 dwgs.; limited distribution; OP.
Reproduction of HABS written data and drawings prepared
by a 1965 field team that recorded ten buildings in
48
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Montana and six in Wyoming. Professor John DeHaas
supervised the team and prepared the written data.
Project was sponsored by HABS San Francisco office and
Montana State University. See entry 4.49.
NEVADA
4.51
The Architecture of Carson City, Nevada. Selections
from the Historic American Building Series, Number 14.
Chambers, S. Allen, Jr., [and Harley J. McKee].
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1973.
Soft cover; V + 194 pp.; 16 entries; 61 photos; 1 dwg.;
limited distribution; OP.
Reproduction of HABS written data and photos for 16
Carson City buildings. Buildings selected for HABS
recording from an inventory of Nevada historical
architecture prepared in 1972 by Harley J. McKee, who
also wrote the architectural description in this
volume. McKee was professor emeritus of architecture
at Syracuse University and long-time HABS associate.
Historical data prepared by HABS historian S. Allen
Chambers, Jr.
NEW JERSEY
4.52
The Cape May Handbook.
Pitts, Carolyn, Michael Fish, Hugh J. McCauley, and
Trina Vaux.
Philadelphia: The Athenaeum of Philadelphia, 1977.
Soft cover; 78 pp.; 53 photos; 27 dwgs.; illus.
glossary of architectural terms; OP.
A handbook designed to inform Cape May residents about
the architectural qualities of their Victorian resort
town and to encourage preservation. Uses graphic and
written records assembled by HABS summer recording
teams in 1973, 1974, and 1977. Good example of the use
of HABS records to further practical preservation
goals. Sponsored by the Athenaeum, HABS, and City of
Cape May. Funds also provided by Atlantic Richfield
Foundation and National Endowment for the Arts.
49
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4.53
Historic Themes and Resources within the New
Jersey Coastal Heritage Trail. Southern New
Jersey and the Delaware Bay: Cape May, Cumberland,
and Salem Counties.
Sebold, Kimberly R., and Sara Amy Leach.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1991.
Soft cover; xii + 193 pp. i 109 photos; 8 dwgs.; 14
maps and site plans; appen.; biblio.
The first substantive historical documentation of
the New Jersey Coastal Heritage Trail undertaken
by the NPS was begun by HABS in the summer and
fall of 1990. Appendices include discussions of
patterned brick houses and stack houses; a list of
existing HABS documentation of structures in the
study area; and recommendations for further
research and documentation. Project leader was
Sara Amy Leach, HABS historian; research was done
by project historian Kimberly R. Sebold, and
large-format photographs were produced by David
Ames, University of Delaware.
NEW MEXICO
4.54
Architecture of the Acoma Pueblo: The 1934
Historic American Buildings Survey Project.
Nabokov, Peter.
See entry 6.35.
NEW YORK
4.55
"Architectural Forum Master Detail Series, No. 4."
Architectural Forum 63 (1) : 39-50 (July 1935).
12 pp. ; 13 photos; 22 dwgs.
Fourth in the series of nine Architectural Forum
articles about HABS work in the 1930s. Traces the
evolution of upstate New York houses, from early
Dutch to Italianate, through three HABS-recorded
examples. Drawings and photos of the Jan Breese
House, Greenbush; House at Russia, Herkimer
County; and Beverwyck (William Patterson van
50
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Rensselaer House), Rensselaer. For other articles
in the series see entry 4.2.
4.56
"Fox Theater, Brooklyn, New York. "
Morrison, A. Craig, Lucy Pope Wheeler, Denys Peter
Myers; intro. by Michael Miller.
Theater Historical Society Annual No. 9. Chicago:
Theater Historical Society, 1982.
Soft cover; 48 pp.; 23 photos; 4 dwgs. Avail.
from Theater Historical Society, 2215 W. North
Ave., Chicago, IL 60647.
Publication devoted entirely to the HABS report on
Fox Theater. Although identified as number 8 in a
series of 10 planned publications of HABS reports
on theaters, it was the first to be published.
Also see entries 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.69, 4.74.
4.57
Historic American Buildings: A Series of Volumes
Reproducing All the Drawings of the Historic
American Buildings Survey and Including
Photographs of Many of the Buildings. New York:
Volumes I-VIII.
DeLong, David G., ed. and intros.
New York: Garland Publishing, Inc. 1979.
Hard cover; index in Vol. VIII; OP. Part of a
series reproducing HABS drawings.
Volume I: xxiii + 331 pp.; intro. and fold-out map
showing towns where buildings are located.
Contains HABS drawings and photos for 27 pre-1776
residential buildings in New York City and Albany.
Volume II: 391 pp.; records of 41 pre-1776
residential buildings in New York City and Albany.
Volume III: 389 pp.; records of 45 1700-1861
residential, religious and public buildings in New
York City and Albany.
Volume IV: 335 pp.; records of 32 1777-1861
residential buildings in New York City area.
51
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Volume V: 311 pp. i records of 52 1777-1861
residential buildings in Albany and Syracuse.
Volume VI: 403 pp.; records of 40 1777-1861
residential and religious buildings in Rochester,
Buffalo, and New York City areas.
Volume VII: 382 pp.; records of 67 1777-1861
religious and commercial buildings in Albany,
Rochester, Buffalo, and New York City areas.
Volume VIII: 364 pp. i including 22-page index to
all volumes. Records of 80 miscellaneous buildings
throughout New York State.
See entries 4.12 and 4.80.
4.58
The Historic American Buildings Survey in Western
New York.
Shelgren, Olaf William, Jr.
Buffalo: Buffalo and Erie County Historical
Society, [1966].
Offprint from society journal, Niagara Frontier
13 (1) (Spring 1966). Soft cover; 13 pp.; 28
entries; 39 photos; OP.
Catalog published to accompany a traveling exhibit
of photographs selected from HABS recording
projects in western New York. Contains a photo and
descriptive paragraph for each building. Authored
by Shelgren, preservation officer, Buffalo and
Western New York Chapter, AIA. Exhibit opened
February 1966, cosponsored by HABS, AIA, Buffalo
and Erie County Historical Society and New York
State Council on the Arts. Exhibit and
publication assisted with grants from the New York
State Council on the Arts.
4.59
Historic Structures Inventory, Governors Island,
New York.
Tompkins, Sally Kress, et al.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, [1985].
52
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
2 vols. and appendices; soft cover; unpaginated;
200 entries; limited distribution; OP.
An inventory of approximately 200 structures pre-
dating 1940 on 172-acre Governors Island.
Conducted in 1982-83 by HABS/HAER for the Third
Coast Guard District.
Vol. I: Contains preservation guidelines,
building analyses and maintenance guidelines.
Vol. II: HABS documentation for the most
important buildings at Fort Jay and Castle
William.
Appendices: National Historic Landmark nomination
prepared by HABS.
4.60
Historic Structures Inventory, Governors Island,
New York.
Tompkins, Sally Kress, prog. mgr.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, [1985].
Soft cover; unpaginated; limited distribution; OP.
Contains selected portions of the three-volume
report compiled in 1982-83 plus results of
additional documentation done by a HABS field team
in 1985 at the request of the Third Coast Guard
District. See entry 4.59.
4.61
Historic Structures Inventory, United States
Military Academy, West Point, New York. 4 vols.
Tompkins, Sally Kress, proj. leader.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1984.
Soft cover; limited distribution; OP.
Vol. I, Methodology and Deliverables Required by
Scope of Work.
96 pp. ; 3 photos; 1 map.
Includes methodology, maintenance plan, National
Register of Historic Places nomination, and
building inventory.
53
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Vol. 2, West Point, An Overview of the History and
Development of the United States Military Academy.
Lange, Robie S.
106 pp. i 133 photos; 14 dwgs. and maps.
Volume 3, Building Analyses and Preservation
Guidelines for Category I and Selected Category II
Buildings at the United States Military Academy,
West Point, New York.
Grashof, Bethanie C.
222 pp. ; 82 photos; 37 dwgs.
Volume 4, Appendices.
162 pp. ; not illus.
Contains scope of work, definitions of building
categories, and review of existing drawings.
4.62
History of a Nineteenth-Century Urban Complex on
the Site of Fort Stanwix. Selections from the
Historic American Buildings Survey [Number 15].
Waite, Diana Steck; Mark Lawton, intro.
Albany: New York State Historic Trust, 1972.
Soft cover; iii + 105 pp. i 24 photos; 5 maps;
biblio.; OP.
General history plus HABS written data and photos
for five buildings that were constructed on the
site of 18th-century Fort Stanwix at Rome, New
York. They were recorded prior to their
demolition for the reconstruction of the Fort.
Funding for research was provided by the Rome
Urban Renewal Agency. Waite was an architectural
historian from Troy, NY. Lawton was director of
the New York Historic Trust.
4.63
Iron Architecture in New York City: Two Studies in
Industrial Archeology.
See entry 14.28.
4.64
New York City Architecture. Selections from the
Historic American Buildings Survey, Number 7.
[Waite, Diana Steck].
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1969.
54
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Soft cover; iv + 97 pp.; 33 photos; limited
distribution primarily to New York libraries or
preservation groups; reprinted, second printing
without spine 1969; OP. GPO #680 879-107.
HABS written data and selected photos for eight
threatened 19th and early 20th-century buildings
in New York City. Six of eight now demolished.
Text by architectural historian Waite.
4.65
Shaker Architecture: Descriptions with Photographs and
Drawings of Shaker Buildings at Mount Lebanon, New
York; Watervliet, New York; West Pittsfield,
Massachusetts.
Lassiter, William Lawrence.
New York: Vantage Press, 1966.
Hard cover; 127 pp.; 12 entries; 13 photos; 71 HABS
dwgs. plus 12 line dwgs. of Shaker garb and customs;
OP.
Thirteen Shaker buildings illustrated with photographs
and drawings made for HABS in the 1930s. Text by
Lassiter, senior curator of history and art, New York
State Education Department. He had charge of the
drawings, which had been deposited with the Education
Department until they were transferred to the HABS
archives in 1966.
OHIO
4.66
"The Architectural Forum Master Detail Series, No. 6:
Historic American Buildings Survey: Kirtland Temple."
Architectural Forum 64 (3) : 177-88 (March 1936).
12 pp; 12 photos; 13 dwgs.
The sixth in Architectural Forum's series representing
HABS work of the 1930s, this article features three
Ohio churches: Kirtland Temple (Mormon), Kirtland;
Church of the Congregational Society, Tallmadge; and
Congregatonal Church, Bucksville. For other articles
in the series, see entry 4.2.
55
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4.67
The Architecture of Cleveland: Twelve Buildings, 1836-
1912. Selections from the Historic American Buildings
Survey, Number 12.
[Poppeliers, John C., and S. Allen Chambers, Jr., eds. ]
Cleveland: The Western Reserve Historical Society and
HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1973.
Soft cover; iv + 95 pp.; 12 entries; 36 photos; 3
dwgs.; limited distribution; OP.
Reproduces HABS written data and photos for 12
Cleveland structures including a bridge and
presidential monument. Text prepared in 1965-67 by
volunteers under the direction of the Western Reserve
Historical Society. Foreword by Frederick C. Crawford
and Meredith B. Colkert, Jr., Director of WRHS.
4.68
Historic Buildings of Ohio. Series: The Historic
Buildings of America, A Selection from the Records of
the Historic American Buildings Survey, National Park
Service.
Kidney, Walter C.; James C. Massey, pref.
Pittsburgh: Ober Park Associates, 1972.
Hard and soft cover; V + 130 pp.; 121 photos; 51 dwgs. ;
index; list of Ohio buildings recorded by HABS; OP.
Describes and illustrates 71 Ohio buildings chosen from
the HABS archives. Text by architectural historian
Kidney. Intended as part of a series organized by HABS
chief James C. Massey to publish HABS documentation by
states; only Ohio and D.C. were published. Includes a
list of Ohio buildings recorded by HABS through 1970.
OREGON
4.69
"Oriental Theater, Portland, Oregon. Historic American
Buildings Survey."
Potter, Elisabeth Walton; additions and ed. by Lucy
Pope Wheeler and Denys Peter Myers.
Marquee 19 (1) 3-27 (1987).
56
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
25 pp. ; 32 photos; 1 dwg. Avail. from Theater
Historical Society, 2215 W. North Ave., Chicago, IL
60647.
This issue devoted almost entirely to an edited version
of the HABS report on the Oriental Theater is one of an
occasional series based on HABS theater records that
has appeared in Marquee. Potter was state park
historian. Also see entries 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.56,
4.74.
PENNSYLVANIA
4.70
America's Industrial Heritage Project.
See entries 4.71, 4.72, 4.75, 4.76, 4.77, 4.78, 14.39,
14.40, 14.41, 14.42.
4.71
The Character of a Steel Mill City: Four Historic
Neighborhoods of Johnstown, Pennsylvania.
Wallace, Kim E., ed.; contributions by Natalie
Gillespie, Bernadette Goslin, Terri L. Hartman, Jeffry
Hickey, Cheryl Powell, and Kim E. Wallace.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS, 1989.
Paper; vii + 191 pp.; 39 photos; 22 dwgs.; 7 maps;
biblio; 76-pp. appen. Limited ed.
Part of series America's Industrial Heritage Project.
Includes studies of Johnstown, Cambria City,
Minersville, and Westmont, HABS reports, and an
inventory of buildings surveyed.
4.72
The Company Towns of the Rockhill Iron and Coal
Company: Robertsdale and Woodvale, Pennsylvania.
Bennett, Lola M.
Washington, D.C.: HABS/HAER and America's Industrial
Heritage Project/NPS/DOI, 1990.
Soft cover; xi + 98 pp.; 94 photos; 9 dwgs.; 12 maps;
biblio.
This HABS documentation project focuses on the
lifestyle of miners in Robertsdale and Woodvale, their
dwellings, and their place in Pennsylvania's coal-
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HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
mining industry. Historian Lola Bennett completed
research in the summer of 1989; the final report was
compiled and edited by HABS historians Kim E. Wallace
and Sara Amy Leach.
4.73
Early Architecture of Chester County, Pennsylvania.
[Gowans, Alan].
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS/DOI, 1960.
Informal publ. i 15 pp.; 26 entries; not illus. except
cover; OP.
Booklet to accompany exhibit of Chester County
buildings recorded by HABS in the late 1950s.
Introductory essay by Gowans, professor in University
of Delaware Winterthur program. Building descriptions
based on data prepared by Bart Anderson and James
Sorber of the Chester County Historical Society.
Exhibit mounted February 1960 at the University of
Delaware. Sponsored by HABS and Committee on Cultural
Affairs, University of Delaware, the exhibit was the
culmination of a cooperative project between HABS,
which provided photos; and Chester County Historical
Society, which prepared written data for 100 county
buildings. It was the first such project undertaken
after HABS was reactivated in 1957 and represents one
new approach for expanding the HABS archives without
the manpower provided by the relief programs of the
1930s.
4.74
"Garden Theater, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Historic
American Buildings Survey.'
[Morrison, A. Craig, et al.]
Marquee 19: 14-17 (3rd quarter).
5 photos; 1 dwg. Avail. from Theater Historical
Society, 2215 W. North St., Chicago, IL 60647.
Sixth in a series of articles reproducing records of
theaters. Also see entries 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.56, and
4.69.
58
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4.75
A Legacy of Coal: The Coal Company Towns of
Southeastern Pennsylvania.
See entry 14.42.
4.76
Norvelt and Penn-Craft, Pennsylvania: Subsistence-
Homestead Communities of the 1930s.
Hoagland, Alison K., and Margaret M. Mulrooney.
Washington, D.C.: HABS/HAER and America's Industrial
Heritage/NPS/DOI, 1991.
Soft cover; ix + 89 pp.; 374 entries; 15 dwgs.; 56
photos; 2 maps; biblio.; index.
Historical and photographic documentation of two
Depression-era experiments in providing practical
housing in workable communities for the rural poor, one
sponsored by the federal government's Division of
Subsistence Housing, the other by the American Friends'
Service Committee. The HABS documentation was begun by
Margaret Mulrooney, HABS historian, in 1989 and
continued by Alison K. Hoagland, HABS senior historian,
in 1991. Isabel Yang, HABS architect, was delineator
of maps and architectural drawings, and David Ames, of
the University of Delaware, was photographer.
4.77
Railroad City: Four Historic Neighborhoods in
Altoona, Pennsylvania.
Wallace, Kim E., comp.
Washington, D.C.: HABS/HAER and America's
Industrial Heritage Project/NPS/DOI, 1990.
Soft cover; viii + 502 pp.; 374 entries; 458
photos; 27 dwgs.; 11 maps; biblios. i appen.; index
to buildings, plus index to architects and
builders.
An unusually extensive study of a major railroad-
repair center, based on fieldwork conducted in
Altoona in the summers of 1988 and 1989 by HABS
senior historian Alison K. Hoagland and five other
HABS historians, plus measured drawings completed
by two teams of HABS/HAER architects under the
supervision of John A. Burns, HABS deputy chief
and principal architect. K. Edward Lay,
59
HABS
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University of Virginia, supervised the HABS team;
George Steinrock, Jr., the HAER architects. Kim
E. Wallace, Kathy Edwards, Susan Garfinkel, Alison
K. Hoagland, Nancy L. Smith, and Nancy Spiegel
authored the publication.
4.78
Two Historic Pennsylvania Canal Towns: Alexandria
and Saltsburg.
Leach, Sara Amy, ed.
[Washington]: HABS/HAER/NPS, 1989.
Soft cover, V + 263 pp. i 55 photos; 13 dwgs.,
charts, and maps; biblio; limited edition. GPO #
1989-249-151-60757.
Part of series, "America's Industrial Heritage
Project." Contains studies of canal-town
development in Pennsylvania, a historical overview
of Alexandria, and Saltsburg, and individual HABS
reports. Contributions by Dorothy Burlingame,
Karen Genskow, and Kristin Belz.
TENNESSEE
4.79
Architecture of Middle Tennessee: The Historic
American Buildings Survey.
Brumbaugh, Thomas B., ed. and preface; Martha I.
Strayhorn and Gary G. Gore, eds.; John C.
Poppeliers, intro.
Nashville: Vanderbilt Univ. Press, 1974.
Hard and soft covers; xvii + 170 pp.; 144 photos;
31 dwgs.; avail. from the Univ. of Illinois Press,
c/o CUP Services, 6525, Ithaca, N.Y. 14851.
Illustrated narratives for 35 buildings based on
records collected during HABS summer recording
projects in 1970 and 1971. The Middle Tennessee
Project was cosponsored by the Tennessee
Historical Commission and the Historic Sites
Federation of Tennessee. Illustrated with photos
by Jack E. Boucher and drawings by HABS teams.
Brumbaugh was professor at Vanderbilt University.
Gore was editor and Strayhorn was design and production
manager for Vanderbilt University Press.
60
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TEXAS
4.80
Historic American Buildings: A Series of Volumes
Reproducing All the Drawings of the Historic American
Buildings Survey and Including Photographs of Many of
the Buildings. Texas: Volumes I and II.
DeLong, David G., ed. and intros.
New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1979.
Hard cover; index in Vol. II. OP.
Volume I. 459 pp. + xxii-page intro. i 350 dwgs. for 74
Texas buildings; fold-out map showing building
locations.
Volume II: 458 pp.; dwgs. and photos of 85 Texas
buildings.
Part of a series that reproduces HABS drawings in the
Library of Congress as of 1979. See entries 4.12 and
4.57.
VIRGIN ISLANDS
4.81
Historic Architecture of the Virgin Islands.
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Survey,
Number 1.
[Gjessing, Frederik C., Osmund R. Overby, et al.]
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS, 1966.
Informal publ. i soft cover; 130 pps. i 100 entries; 13
photos; 7 dwgs. i limited distribution; OP. Reprint
available from NTIS, 5285 Port Royal Rd., Springfield,
VA 22161. Publ. # 182464. Microfiche avail. from same
source.
Reproduces HABS photos and written data for eight
buildings recorded between 1958 and 1965 in cooperation
with Virgin Islands National Park. Also lists all HABS
Virgin Island records. Gjessing was park architect;
Overby, was responsible for historical research and was
a summer employee of HABS. Architectural descriptions
were written by Gjessing, Philip Gardner, and J.
Michael Everett, NPS architects in the V.I.
61
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
VIRGINIA
4.82
The Architectural Heritage of Fort Monroe: Inventory
and Documentation of Historic Structures Undertaken by
the Historic American Buildings Survey.
Graham, John Paul, supvr. ; Mary Beth Gatza, and E.
Kipling Wright, historians.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1987.
2 vols. i soft cover; limited distribution (Vol. I, 25
copies; Vol II, 5 copies) i OP.
Results of a summer project in cooperation with the
Department of the Army to inventory the pre-1961
architecture of Fort Monroe, a site at the strategic
confluence of the York and James Rivers and the
Chesapeake Bay which contains an 1819 bastioned fort.
Vol. I: 99 pp.; 16 photos; 17 dwgs. and maps. Contains
historical and architectural overview, methodology of
survey, and drawings and written data for most
significant structures at fort.
Vol. II: 635 pp. at least one contact print for each
building. Reproduces the inventory cards for 314 pre-
1961 buildings at Fort Monroe.
4.83
Patrick Henry: Economic, Domestic, and Political Life
in Eighteenth-Century Virginia.
Hardwick, Kevin R.
Brookneal, Va. Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation,
1991.
Soft cover; viii + 49 pp. + 9-p. annotated biblio;
illus. Avail. from the Patrick Henry Memorial
Foundation, Red Hill Route 2, Box 127, Brookneal, V.A.
24528.
The five chapters of this HABS report are an
interpretive account of Patrick Henry's life at his
Virginia plantation, Red Hill. Assessments of the
architecture at Red Hill and recommendations for its
presentation and interpretation are included as
appendices.
62
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
4.84
"Stratford and the Lees."
Wyrick, Connie H.
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
30(1) : 71-90 (March 1971).
Wyrick, Connie H.
20 pp.; 10 photos; 20 dwgs.
Article describing an unusual documentation project
that HABS sponsored. The author was employed by the
Robert E. Lee Memorial Foundation to document the
architectural changes at Stratford, including the
extensive 1930s restoration. Comprehensive HABS
drawings were produced of Stratford, and a duplicate
set was annotated to illustrate graphically the
findings of changes and alterations to the mansion and
to point up original material. This article is
illustrated with HABS photos and 20 annotated drawings.
4.85
"Three Houses in Virginia, Historic American Buildings
Survey, Architectural Forum Master Detail Series, No.
9."
Architectural Forum 66(1): 53-60 (Jan. 1937).
8 pp.; 10 photos; 18 dwgs.
The houses featured in the ninth of this important
series of articles on HABS work, begun in 1934, are the
Mary Washington House, Fredericksburg; Folly Farms,
Folly Mills; and Greenway, Charles City.
WEST VIRGINIA
4.86
Historic Survey of Malden, West Virginia.
Preservation Unit, West Virginia Department of Culture
and History.
[Charleston, W.V.]: West Virginia State Historic
Preservation Office, 1979.
Informal publ.; 27 pp.; 24 dwgs.; OP.
63
HABS
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS, STATE AND LOCAL
Based on HABS drawings and written documentation, this
booklet contains a brief text and reproductions of the
measured drawings.
WISCONSIN
4.87
Prairie Du Chien: Historical and Architectural
Resources.
Hoagland, Alison K., supvr., and Bradley T. Frandsen.
Washington: HABS/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Soft cover; 216 pp. i 7 photos; 8 maps; limited
distribution; OP.
A study to evaluate historic architecture in the
floodplain in Prairie du Chien prior to proposed
removal as part of flood control project. Includes
history of urban and architectural development and
inventory of structures over 50 years old. Conducted
by HABS staff and funded by St. Paul District, Corps of
Engineers.
64
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
MICROFORM AND FILMS
MICROFICHE
5.1
Historic American Buildings Survey: The Microfiche
Edition.
Teaneck, N.J.: Somerset House, 1981. Avail. from
Somerset House, 623 Martense Ave., Teaneck, NJ 07666.
(Outside U.S.A.: Chadwyck-Healy Ltd., 20 Newmarket Rd.,
Cambridge CB58DT, England.)
1,567 60-frame positive silver microfiche. 45,000
photographs and 35,000 pages of text describing 20,000
buildings--the entire body of HABS records deposited in
the Library of Congress as of December 31, 1979.
Inaccurate figures used by Chadwyck-Healy; Library of
Congress has records of only 16,738 HABS/HAER
structures. Available as a complete set or by
individual states. Does not include measured drawings.
MICROFILM
5.2
Historic American Buildings Survey. Microfilm and
Electrostatic Prints of Measured Drawings in the
Library of Congress.
Washington: Library of Congress, 1974.
63 reels of 35 mm. silver halide safety base microfilm.
Avail. from Photoduplication Service, Library of
Congress, Washington, DC 20540.
Copies of all 34,000 measured drawings transferred to
the Library of Congress between 1933 and 1974, grouped
by states. Available either as microfilm (silver or
diazo) or 8 X 10" electrostatic prints (Xerox Copyflo).
May be ordered as a complete set or by individual
states. Available from Prints and Photographs
Division, Library of Congress, which can also provide
names and addresses of institutions which have ordered
copies of this publication. Full-size reproductions
are also available as blueline or blackline diazo
prints, photodirect prints, and photographic prints.
There is also a 1960s microfilm of HABS drawings in the
HABS/HAER office, Washington.
65
HABS
MICROFORM AND FILMS
VIDEOTAPE
5.3
For the Record: How HABS/HAER Documents America's
Heritage
Washington: National Association of Home Builders for
the National Building Museum in cooperation with
HABS/HAER/NPS, 1989.
20-min. VHS videotape. Developed to accompany exhibit
of same name. Avail. from Curator, National Building
Museum, Judiciary Square, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20001.
This videotape explains how HABS/HAER records buildings
and structures for study and repository in the Library
of Congress Prints and Photographs Collection by
chronicling the activities at two summer projects--one
a HABS team in the third summer of recording Scotty's
Castle in Death Valley, California, the other a HAER
team at the Avery Island Salt Works on Avery Island,
Louisiana. Clearly describes/demonstrates how
buildings and structures are recorded by a process that
includes thorough research, exact field notes, careful
measuring, and painstaking hand drawing. Provides an
accurate view of a HABS/HAER summer team. Brief
information on the history of HABS and HAER is
included. Copies of the video have been distributed to
schools of architecture throughout the nation.
66
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
PUBLICATIONS ABOUT HABS HISTORY and OPERATION
(listed alphabetically by author)
6.1
Allen, Richard Sanders.
"Documenting Early American Technology: Covered
Bridges."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.2
Bailey, Worth
Safeguarding a Heritage.
Washington: NPS/DOI, 1963.
Soft cover; 8 pp.; not illus.; OP.
Statement of the philosophy underlying the rejuvenated
HABS program of the early 1960s and the basis for most
of the HABS accomplishments since. Prepared while the
author, a HABS architectural historian, was a Federal
Executive Fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Reprinted in Historic Preservation 15 (4) 143-9 (1963)
with added illustrations; 3 photos; 2 dwgs.
6.3
Barthold, Elizabeth J.
"Documenting Historic Parks in the Nation's Capital."
CRM 14 (6) :7-9 (1991)
3 pages; 3 photos, 2 illus.
Overview of work in progress by HABS to inventory and
research the elements of the historic L'Enfant-McMillan
plan of Washington, D.C., as it exists today, including
the little-known system of small, federally owned
"reservations" scattered throughout the city.
Elizabeth Barthold was project historian.
6.4
Beatty, Laura
"The Historic American Buildings Survey."
National Parks and Conservation Magazine March/April
1983: 1-7.
67
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
7 pp.; 3 photos; 4 dwgs.
An illustrated history of HABS on the occasion of its
50th anniversary. Author was on staff of National
Parks and Conservation Association.
6.5
Borchers, Perry E.
Photogrammetric Recording of Cultural Resources.
Washington: Technical Preservation Services/ NPS/DOI,
1977.
Soft cover; 38 pp.; 14 photos; 22 dwgs.; O.P. GPO #
1977-0-242-603.
One of a series of publications to assist federal,
state and local governments in preservation efforts.
Written by Perry Borchers of Ohio State University, the
premier American practitioner of architectural
photogrammetry. Much of his work has been done for
HABS, and that work illustrates this publication.
6.6
Boucher, Jack E., and Marion D. Ross
"Jacksonville in HABS Color."
Historic Preservation 24: 26-28 (April-June 1972).
3 pp.; 4 photos; OP.
Brief article describing HABS's first use of color for
large-format photographs. Illustrated with photos of
Jacksonville, Oregon, the first site recorded by HABS
using color photography. Accompanying text by Ross, a
professor at the University of Oregon who directed HABS
Jacksonville Project.
6.7
Bruegmann, Robert.
"HABS at an Awkward Age: the 1960s and 1970s."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
68
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
6.8
Burkhardt, E. Walter, and Varian Burkhardt.
Alabama Ante-Bellum Architecture: A Scrapbook View from
the 1930s.
Auburn: Alabama Historical Society, 1976.
Soft cover; 80 pp. ; 214 photos.
Reproduction of a series of articles originally
published in the Birmingham News-Age-Herald by HABS
District Officer E. Walter Burkhardt and his wife,
Varian. A very personal view of HABS recording in the
1930s with much miscellaneous information on historic
Alabama buildings.
6.9
Burns, John A.
"Architects and the Historic American Buildings Survey,
1933-1990."
In The Role of the Architect in Historic Preservation:
Past, Present, and Future (Washington, D.C.: The
American Institute of Architects, 1990), pp. 26-36.
10 pp.; not illus.
This assessment of the impact HABS alumni architects
have had on historic preservation in the United States
was first presented as a paper at the Centennial
Symposium of the American Institute of Architects'
Committee on Historic Resources in 1990. John A. Burns
is deputy chief, HABS/HAER.
6.10
Burns, John A.
"CAD-Photogrammetry: A Powerful Documentation Tool."
CRM 14 (3) (1991) 4-5.
2 pp.; not illus.
A concise evaluation of the advantages and drawbacks of
computer-assisted drafting and photogrammetry in
HABS/HAER recording of historic architecture and
engineering structures.
69
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
6.11
Burns, John [A.]
"Recording Historic Buildings: New Philosophies, New
Techniques, New Technologies. "
In Historic America: Building, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.12
Carver, John A., Jr.
"An Inexact Business."
AIA Journal February 1963: 31-35.
5 pp. i 9 photos; plus cover photo; 3 dwgs.; OP.
Discussion of the importance of history and the role of
the NPS in recognizing and recording historic
buildings. Adapted from a speech given by Carver,
Assistant Secretary of the Interior, to the American
Association for State and Local History.
6.13
Chambers, S. Allen, Jr.
"HABS in Connecticut."
Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation News 114:
S1-S23 (July 1988).
23 pp. ; 17 photos; 13 dwgs.
One of a series of accounts by former HABS
architectural historian Chambers describing the
operation of HABS in individual states. Covers 1930s
through 1980s. Discusses HABS personnel, cooperating
organizations, and buildings documented. Illustrated
with HABS photos and drawings. See entries 6.14 and
6.15.
6.14
Chambers, S. Allen, Jr.
"HABS in New York: A Record of Achievement."
Preservation League of New York Newsletter 13: 8-11
(Winter 1987).
70
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
4 pp. i 7 photos; 4 dwgs.
See entries 6.13 and 6.15.
6.15
Chambers, S. Allen.
"HABS in Virginia: 52 Years of Documenting the
Commonwealth's Architecture."
Notes on Virginia (Virginia Division of Historic
Landmarks) 26: 8-15 (Spring 1985).
8 pp. 5 photos; 8 dwgs. plus 1 dwg. on cover; HABSI
form.
See entries 6.13 and 6.14.
6.16
Connally, Ernest Allen.
"Preserving the American Tradition: The National Park
Service Program for Students. 11
AIA Journal May 1961.
5 pp. i 4 photos; 1 dwg.; OP; offprint 1961 and 1968.
An article discussing the value of serving on an HABS
summer recording team for the professional and personal
development of the architectural student. The author
was associate professor at the University of Illinois
and supervisor of HABS summer teams. He later became
the first chief of the NPS Office of Archeology and
Historic Preservation (OAHP). Offprints of this
article were acquired by HABS for distribution as
recruiting literature in 1961. In 1968 it was
reprinted by Charles E. Peterson.
6.17
Corkern, Wilton C.
Architects, Preservationists, and the New Deal:
Historic American Buildings Survey, 1933-1942.
Ann Arbor, MI. : University Microfilms International,
1984.
Microfilm edition of doctoral dissertation at George
Washington University. The most complete history of
the HABS program, relating it to private and federal
preservation efforts in the 1930s.
71
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
6.18
DeLong, David G.
"Recording the Work of an Architect: Frank Lloyd
Wright."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.19
Dolinsky, Paul D.
"54 Years of Documenting Historic Landscapes."
Landscape Architecture 77(4) : 86-89 (July/August 1987).
4 pp.; 2 photos; 1 dwg.; 3 site plans.
A look at early efforts by HABS to document landscapes
and an update on new techniques and projects. Dolinsky
was HABS landscape architect.
6.20
Fitzsimons, [G.] Gray, and John A. Burns.
"Historic Structures: Documenting the Railroads."
See entry 16.11.
6.21
Freeman, Allen.
"Architectural History on Film: HABS photographer Jack
Boucher reaches a milestone."
Architecture February 1986: 66-9.
4 pp.; 7 photos.
Profile of HABS photographer Jack E. Boucher, with
selection of his photographs on the completion of his
100, 000th photo. Published at the time of his Library
of Congress exhibit, which opened at the AIA
headquarters building in Washington.
6.22
Fullington, Martha W., ed.; [Mary W. Edwards, H. Thomas
Shaw, Martha W. Fullington, E. Thomas Sims and J. Tracy
Paver, contributors].
Focusing on the Past: Photographs of Historic
Structures in South Carolina.
72
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
[Columbia]: South Carolina State Historic Preservation
Office of the South Carolina Department of Archives and
History, [1987].
Exhibit catalog; 20 pp.; 40 photos + 3 photos on cover;
2 dwgs. i map; biblio.
A catalog to accompany an exhibit honoring Charles E.
Lee upon his retirement as State Historic Preservation
Officer. Result of a cooperative project with HABS to
photograph some 60 South Carolina buildings, largely
neglected by earlier HABS projects. Jack E. Boucher
was the photographer.
6.23
Gayle, Margot.
"America's Cast-Iron Heritage."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
Historic American Engineering Record.
See entry 1.7.
6.24
Giebner, Robert C.
"Historic American Buildings Survey, San Diego 1971. "
The Journal of San Diego History 17 (4) : 39-44 (Fall
1971).
5 pp. ; 5 photos.
Account of HABS program and recording work in San
Diego, carried on by HABS in cooperation with San Diego
Historic Sites Board and Save Our Heritage
Organization. Giebner was professor at the University
of Arizona and long-time HABS summer employee.
Includes a list of the 16 recorded buildings.
6.25
Hardy, Andy Leon.
"Racing Against Oblivion."
Historic Preservation 35(1) 38-45 (January/February
1983).
8 pp.; 11 photos; 2 dwgs.
73
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
The HABS program, past and future, at the time of its
50th anniversary. Hardy is a free-lance writer on
architecture and design.
6.26
Guth, Alexander Carl.
"H.A.B.S."
Pencil Points 15: 271-72 (June 1934).
2 pp. ; 1 photo of a linoleum block print.
A brief description of early field work by a
participant.
6.27
[Holland, Leicester B.]
"H.A.B.S. Redivivus."
The Octagon 6: 15-17 (November 1934)
3 pp. ; not illus.; offprint 1934; OP.
An article reprinting and describing the Memorandum of
Agreement of July 1934 establishing HABS as a permanent
program. Describes reorganization of the AIA Committee
on Preservation of Historic Buildings (of which the
author was then chairman) to facilitate the HABS
program. Gives advice on funding HABS projects under
the federal relief program then in effect and includes
the Memorandum of Agreement (see entry 8.2). Holland,
chief, Fine Arts Division, Library of Congress, was
responsible for the HABS collection and a key figure in
organizing the survey and making it a permanent
program. Also reprinted in Historic American Buildings
Survey, Circular of Information. See entry 8.3 for
this and 1980 reprint.
6.28
Hosmer, Charles B.
Preservation Comes of Age: From Williamsburg to the
National Trust, 1926-1949.
Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia for The
Preservation Press, 1981.
2 vols. Hard cover; 1304 pp.; 223 photos; 7 dwgs. ;
index; notes; chronology; biblio. Avail. from the
74
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
National Trust for Historic Preservation, Preservation
Shop, 1600 H St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006.
Fifteen pages of this definitive history of the
American preservation movement are devoted to a section
on the founding of HABS. There are also a number of
other references and illustrations related to HABS and
individuals associated with HABS. Places HABS in the
broad context of American preservation efforts. Dr.
Hosmer, a professor at Principia College, is the
leading historian of the historic preservation movement
in the United States.
6.29
Kapsch, Robert J.
"Future Directions for the Historic American Buildings
Survey."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.30
Kapsch, Robert J.
"HABS/HAER: A User's Guide."
APT Bulletin 22 (1,2) 21-34 (1990).
16 pp.; 1 photo, 7 dwgs.; 1990 offprint by HABS/HAER as
Historic American Buildings Survey - Historic American
Engineering Record, National Park Service, Department
of the Interior, with p. 16 of article as cover.
Intended as a resource for those wishing to work for
HABS/HAER, for these developing documentation meeting
HABS/HAER standards, and for those using the extensive
graphic and written archive developed by the HABS/HAER
programs.
6.31
Kaynor, Fay Campbell.
"Thomas Tileston Waterman: Student of American Colonial
Architecture."
Winterthur Portfolio: A Journal of American Material
Culture 20: 103-149 (Summer/Autumn 1985).
47 pp. i 29 photos; 7 dwgs.; offprint.
75
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
A section of this biographical account of Waterman
written by his niece deals with his association with
HABS during its formative period. Waterman was a key
figure in HABS during the 1930s and a noted restoration
architect.
6.32
Lounsbury, Carl.
"Vernacular Construction in the Survey."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.33
Massey, James C.
"Preservation Through Documentation."
Historic Preservation 18(4) : 148-151 (July/August
1966).
3 pp.; 2 photos; 1 dwg.
A discussion of the longstanding HABS policy of giving
priority in recording to about-to-be-demolished
structures in order to ensure that a documentary record
will remain. The first printed use of the phrase that
has become a kind of HABS motto, "Preservation Through
Documentation."
6.34
Myers, Denys Peter.
"Fittings and Fixtures: Miscellaneous Americana in
Survey Photographs."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
Also published in the Quarterly Journal of the Library
of Congress Spring 1983:99-131. Illustrates some of
the many bits of Americana--from plumbing fixtures to
gas lights--which can be found in HABS photographs. The
author was an architectural historian with HABS.
76
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
6.35
Nabokov, Peter.
Architecture of the Acoma Pueblo: The 1934 Historic
American Buildings Survey Project.
Santa Fe: Ancient City Press, 1986.
Hard and soft covers; 137 pp.; 36 photos incl. sepia
cover; 83 dwgs. Avail. from Ancient City Press, P.O.
Box 5401, Santa Fe, NM 87502.
Reproduction of the extensive 1930s HABS measured
drawing documentation of Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico.
Supplemented with historical photographs. Introductory
essay outlines history of the pueblo and describes the
recording process. Excellent account of one of the
most important and difficult documentation projects
undertaken by HABS. Nabokov is an anthropologist
specializing in Native Americans and their
architecture.
6.36
Parker, Jamieson.
"Historic American Buildings Survey."
Oregon Historical Quarterly 35(1) : 32-41 (March 1934).
"Historic American Buildings Survey, Final Results."
Oregon Historical Quarterly 35(2) : 176-79 (June 1934).
Two "progress reports" written by the HABS district
director on the first Oregon HABS projects, undertaken
in the infancy of the Survey.
6.37
Peatross, C. Ford.
"Architectural Collections of the Library of Congress. "
The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 343
(July 1977) : 249-284.
36 pp. i 47 photos; 9 dwgs. Reprinted by GPO as a
booklet 1978. GPO # 1978 0-251-344.
Account of the association of HABS with the Library of
Congress, custodian of the HABS archives and partner in
the Tripartite Agreement. Discussion of the
77
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
relationship of HABS to other architectural collections
in Library of Congress. Author was curator of
architectural collections, Prints and Photographs
Division, Library of Congress.
6.38
Peatross, C. Ford.
"A Rich Vein in the Mother Lode: HABS in the Library of
Congress."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.39
Peterson, Charles E.
"The Historic American Buildings Survey: Its
Beginnings."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.40
Peterson, Charles E.
"HABS News."
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 19
(2) : 82--84 (May 1960).
3 pp., 6 photos; offprint 1960.
Discussion of HABS projects in Chester County,
Pennsylvania, and the Virgin Islands and the summer
recording projects for 1960.
6.41
Peterson, Charles E.
"The Historic American Buildings Survey Continued. "
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
16(3) : 29-31 (October 1957).
3 pp.; not illus.; offprint 1959.
78
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
Announcing the reactivation of HABS in fiscal year 1958
as part of NPS's "Mission 66" program. Reprints the
original memorandum, written by National Park Service
architect Peterson, which proposed the HABS program in
1933. Credits those helpful in inaugurating HABS.
6.42
Peterson, Charles E.
"Our National Archives of Historic Architecture."
The Octagon 8 (7) : 12-16 (July 1936).
4 pp. ; not illus.; also offprinted 1936.
Article by HABS founder. Gives European and American
precedents for HABS, also author's ideas for continuing
program through student work, private donations, and
direct NPS funding after emergency relief funding is
ended. Important early perspective on HABS.
6.43
Peterson, Charles E.
"Thirty Years of HABS."
AIA Journal (November 1963).
3 pp. ; not illus.; offprint 1963.
Retrospective view of the founding and reactivation of
HABS.
6.44
Pitts, Carolyn.
"Cape May, New Jersey: Preservation of a Victorian
Town."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
6.45
Potter, Elisabeth Walton, and Alfred M. Staehli.
"A History of HABS and HAER in Oregon, 1933-1983."
Informal publ. i 35 pp.; 7 photos; biblio. including
mss. and newspaper articles from 1930s; limited
distribution (15 copies presented to organizations and
individuals). Script of a program presented in Salem,
79
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
Portland, Jacksonville, and Eugene, Oregon, in 1983 to
commemorate 50th anniversary of HABS. Program
accompanied an exhibit of HABS/HAER photos, drawings
and artifacts. Discusses funding, personnel and
accomplishments of HABS recording in Oregon in 1930 as
well as recent HABS/HAER work. Sponsored by the NPS,
AIA, Historic Preservation League of Oregon, and Oregon
Committee for the Humanities. Potter was state
historic preservation officer for Oregon, Staehli a
Portland architect.
6.46
Poppeliers, John C.; S. K. Stevens, fwd.
"Preservation Through Documentation"
Washington: GPO, 1968.
Booklet; 16 pp. i 26 photos; 22 dwgs.
Commemorates HABS's 35th anniversary and accompanied
exhibit of the same name at the Library of Congress.
Article with same name, with excerpts from the foreword
by S. K. Stevens, who was chairman of the Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation, appeared in AIA
Journal (February 1969: 63-66). Reprinted in Quarterly
Journal of the Library of Congress (October 1968) and
in 1973. Library of Congress also reprinted the 1968
Journal article.
6.47
A Record in Detail: The Architectural Photographs of
Jack E. Boucher.
Pierson, William H., Jr., William Lebovich, and Jack E.
Boucher, essays; Robert [J.] Kapsch, pref.
Univ. of Missouri Press, 1988.
Hard cover; ix + 107 pp.; 74 photos.
Companion to Library of Congress exhibit of same name,
celebrating the photographic achievements of long-time
HABS/HAER photographer Boucher, who has taken more than
55,000 photographs for HABS/HAER, 1958-87. Includes
essays in "The Art of Architectural Photography" by
William H. Pierson, Jr. (incorrectly labeled as an
introduction on the title page); "the Historic American
Buildings Survey," by William Lebovich; and "Life
Behind the Lens" by Jack E. Boucher, plus 74 Boucher
photographs with captions by Lebovich. Americana 19
80
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
(August 1988) profiles the Boucher exhibit and book in
"An Eye for Detail."
6.48
Reed, Earl H.
"The Historic American Buildings Survey in Chicago."
Inland Architect January 1965: 17,24.
Not illus.
Description of summer recording projects in Chicago in
1963-64 including personnel, cooperators, buildings
surveyed. Reed was a long-time HABS supporter and
national advisory board member, and a part-time HABS
architect in the 1960s.
6.49
Rifkind, Carole.
"Main Street: Its Revitalization."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record.
See entry 1.7.
6.50
Roth, Rodris.
"Recording a Room: The Kitchen."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record.
See entry 1.7.
6.51
Smith [Gould], Carol C.; James C. Massey, intro.
Fifty Years of the Historic American Buildings Survey.
Alexandria, VA: HABS Foundation, 1983.
Soft cover; 16 pp.; 2 photos; 15 dwgs. Avail. from the
HABS Foundation, Box 1702, Alexandria, VA 22313.
Published by the Historic American Buildings Survey
Foundation, which was set up to assist the HABS program
81
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
and publicize its work and records. History of HABS
honoring its 50th anniversary.
6.52
Tatum, George B.
"Documenting a City: Philadelphia."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record.
See entry 1.7.
6.53
Tompkins, Sally Kress, et al.
"A Tradition of Excellence in Documentation."
CRM Bulletin 9 (3) : 1-24 (June 1986).
25 pp. i 16 photos; 14 dwgs.
Entire issue of this bimonthly publication for National
Park Service Cultural Resource Managers is devoted to
the operation of the HABS/HAER program. Tompkins was
coordinator for issue. Essays include: "HABS," by
John A. Burns, p. 1; "HAER," by Eric DeLony, p. 1; "A
HABS/HAER Summer," by Kim Hoagland and Jean P.
Yearby, p. 6; "HABS/HAER Documentation: Who Uses It?"
by Mary Ison, p. 9; "HABS Photography: A Record In
Detail," by William Lebovich, p. 10; "Mission Project
Brings Praise from Park and Region, by Kenneth L.
Anderson, p. 11; "Landscape Recording: Expanding the
Tradition," by Paul Dolinsky, p. 16; "Maritime
Recording: A HAER Initiative," by Richard K. Anderson,
p. 18; "HABS/HAER in Alaska", by Robert L. Spude, p.
20.
6.54
Tompkins, Sally Kress.
"US/ICOMOS Interns work with HABS/HAER Summer Teams."
CRM Bulletin 10: 18-19 (Special Issue 1987).
2 pp.; 2 dwgs.
In a special issue on NPS international programs, this
article describes the program begun in 1983 in which
international students work on HABS/HAER field teams.
82
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HISTORY AND OPERATION
6.55
Vider, Elise.
The Historic American Buildings Survey in Philadelphia,
1950-1966: Shaping Postwar Preservation.
Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1991.
Unpublished paper. Master's thesis in the graduate
program in historic preservation.
31 photos; 11 dwgs.; 1 facsimile.
An invaluable history covering not only HABS'
Depression-era founding, but its "second coming" after
the hiatus created by World War II. Based on HABS
archives and interviews with HABS veterans including
Charles E. Peterson, James C. Massey, Cervin Robinson,
Jack E. Boucher, John Poppeliers, Russell V. Keune,
Ernest A. Connally, John Waite, James F. O'Gorman,
Penelope Hartshorne Batchelor, the paper documents the
development of HABS as a potent tool for preservation
in the second half of the 20th century.
6.56
[Vogel, Robert M.]
NETMS I, The New England Textile Mills Survey, June-
September 1967: Report of the First Summer's Work.
Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1968.
Soft cover; 38 pp.; 11 photos; 12 dwgs.; OP. GPO #
1978-0-269-591.
Report on a series of projects that preceded the
establishment of HAER. Gives rationale for selecting
New England textile mills for this pilot project. The
author was curator of mechanical and civil engineering,
Smithsonian Institution, and director and historian of
NETMS I project for project documentation. See entry
4.7.
6.57
Will, Margaret Thomas.
"Der Historic American Buildings Survey: Funfzig Jahre
Dokumentation von Baudenkmalern in den Vereinigten
Staaten."
Osterreichische Zeitschrift fur Kunst und Denkmalpflege
42 (1983) : 58-66.
83
HABS
HISTORY AND OPERATION
4 photos; 7 dwgs.
A general description and history of the HABS program
which appeared in this Austrian journal at the time of
HABS's 50th anniversary. Margaret Thomas Will was an
American architectural historian resident in Germany.
6.58
Wilson, Samuel, Jr.
"The Survey in Louisiana in the 1930s."
In Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record. See entry
1.7.
84
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
(listed chronologically)
7.1
HABS Bulletin, Nos. 1 - 60.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, Dec 1933-May 1938.
Informal publ. series; OP.
The earliest HABS regulations and recording
instructions, the bulletins were intended for
distribution to the district and field offices. An
invaluable historical research tool. Bound, xeroxed
copy in the HABS library (Nos. 38, 41, 43, 51, 54
missing) includes 165 pages. Topics include:
Recording instructions--No. 4 (Dec. 22, 1933) ;
No. 5 (Dec. 26, 1934) ; No. 11 (Jan. 8, 1934) ; No. 16
(Mar. 19, 1934) ; No. 17 (Feb. 25, 1934) i No. 21 (Feb 8,
1934) ; No. 28 (Mar. 19, 1934) i No. 40 (Feb. 14, 1935)
District boundaries and officers--No. 7 (Dec. 27,
1933) i No. 12 (Jan. 19, 1934) i No. 35 (Dec. 3, 1934) ;
No. 50 (Apr. 15, 1936)
Tripartite agreement--No. 32 (Mar. 6, 1934) ; No.
36 (Jan 22, 1934)
National exhibit of HABS drawings--No. 22 (Mar. 5,
1934) ; No. 58 (July 27, 1937).
Also included in the assembled volume of Bulletins
are Circulars No. 1 and 10 (see entry 8. 1) and various
letters of instruction. The set was the working copy
belonging to Earl H. Reed, Chicago architect and HABS
district officer, who was active in HABS work into the
1960s. Authorship is not generally indicated, but
several are signed by Thomas C. Vint, chief architect;
John P. O'Neill, technical assistant (later associate
architect) ; and Frederick D. Nichols, junior architect.
7.2
Specifications for the Measurement and Recording of
Historic American Buildings.
Washington: HABS/Branch of Plans and Designs NPS/DOI,
July 1, 1934.
Informal publ. ; probably 38 pp. (some missing from copy
consulted) i not illus. ; rev. and reprinted 1935, 1951,
1958; OP.
Detailed instruction on preparing measured drawings,
written data, photographs and index cards for HABS.
85
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
Based on instructions issued by national HABS office
between December 1933 and May 1934. The first of a
series of publications providing a uniform method for
recording buildings. Developed from several HABS
Bulletins, including No. 4 (December 27, 1933) ; No. 5
(December 26, 1933) i No. 16 (March 19, 1934) i No. 17
(January 25, 1934) i No. 21 (February 8, 1934) i and No.
28 (March 19, 1934) Indicates that these
specifications form an appendix to HABS Bulletin 32
(the Tripartite Agreement). Revised editions as noted
in entries 7.3, 7.4, 7.5, and 7.6 below were issued.
7.3
Specifications for the Measurement and Recording of
Historic American Buildings and Structural Remains.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI. Rev. and ed. Nov. 1, 1935.
Informal publ.; 49 pp.; 5 photos; 6 dwgs.
Contains samples of completed drawings and photos for
first time.
7.4
Specifications for the Measurement and Recording of
Historic American Buildings and Structural Remains.
Washington: HABS/Planning and Construction
Division/NPS/DOI. Rev. and ed. January 1951.
Informal publ. ; 52 pp.; 5 photos; 6 dwgs.
7.5
Excerpts from Specifications for the Measurement and
Recording of Historic American Buildings.
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS. Rev. and ed. March 4,
1958.
Informal publ. ; 10 pp. ; not illus. Rev. excerpts from
the first two chapters of the 1951 ed. See entry 7.4.
7.6
Specifications for the Measurement and Recording of
Historic American Buildings and Structural Remains.
Washington: HABS/Division of Design and
Construction/NPS/DOI, July 1958.
Soft cover; 88 pp. i 7 photos; 18 dwgs.
The last and most extensive revision of the 1934
Specifications and the first to be printed. Contains
86
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
new photographs by Jack E. Boucher and an example of a
Historic American Buildings Survey Inventory Form.
7.7
Manual of the Historic American Buildings Survey.
McKee, Harley J.
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC/NPS/DOI, 1959-64.
Issued by chapters, each separately numbered and
paginated. OP.
Intended to replace the 1934-58 Specifications as a
guide for producing HABS records. Sections were
written separately, issued in limited numbers for use
and review, and then revised. The proposed
organization and the numbering of the individual parts
changed several times. Few copies have been located,
but from correspondence and other references, it
appears that the following parts were written: "General
Criteria," "Measured Drawings," "Written Data,"
"Photographs,' "Index Cards," "Sources of HABS
Material," and "How to Obtain HABS Material from the
Library of Congress." This material was eventually
drawn together, revised and expanded into a single
publication, Recording Historic Buildings. See entries
7.8 and 7.9. Harley McKee was a professor of
architecture at Syracuse University and a long-time
HABS associate and supervisor of summer recording
teams. James C. Massey, who was HABS supervisory
architect in the Philadelphia office, worked in close
cooperation with McKee on the manual.
The following sections from the manual have been
identified and located; others were probably not
printed for distribution. Note that the section
numbers and publication dates do not necessarily follow
the same sequence:
Part II, Criteria. McKee, Harley J. First ed. 1961;
revised ed. 1964. Informal publ.; 5 pp.; not illus.;
500 copies of 1964 edition. Deals with criteria for
the selection of buildings to be recorded.
Part IV, Index Cards. McKee, Harley J., and Charles E.
Peterson. "New draft" July 1962. Informal publ. 10
pp.; not illus.; 300 copies.
87
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
Part V, Photographs/Part VI, Written Data. McKee,
Harley J., comp. 1961. Informal publ. i 93 pp. i 200
copies. Ernest A. Connally, in his foreword to the
1968 edition, Recording Historic Buildings, also cites
1961 Photographs and Written Data in separate version.
Part IX, Measured Drawings. McKee, Harley J. 1961;
revised and reprinted from 1960 draft titled Part V,
Measured Drawings. Informal publ.; 33 pp.; illus.;
limited distribution (100 copies 1960, 300 copies
1961). Deals with how to measure buildings, record
field data, and produce final archival drawings for
HABS.
Preparation of Historical Written Data for the Historic
American Buildings Survey. McKee, Harley J.;
summarized by Melvin M. Rotsch. n.p., 1966. Informal
publ.; 10 pp.; not illus.; limited distribution; OP.
Based on the HABS manual, Part VI, pp. 54-66, written
by Harley McKee in 1959. Melvin Rotsch was professor
of architecture and supervisor of numerous HABS summer
recording teams.
7.8
Recording Historic Buildings.
McKee, Harley J., comp.; Ernest A. Connally, fwd.
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1968.
Soft cover; 110 pp. i 19 photos; 17 dwgs.; index;
prelim. ed. for distribution; OP.
First complete edition derived from HABS manual
sections listed in entry 7.7. Also see entry 7.9 for
1970 edition.
7.9
Recording Historic Buildings.
McKee, Harley J., comp.
Washington: NPS/DOI, 1970.
Hard cover; 165 pp.; 76 photos; 60 dwgs.; index. GPO #
1 29.2H62/12.
A definitive guide to the documentation of historic
structures based on HABS practices and experience.
Used for nearly 20 years for HABS projects and others
producing similar documentation. Aimed at a broader
88
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
audience than its predecessors, the Specifications and
the HABS Manual were introduced as guidance for formal
documentation of historic buildings nationally, not
just HABS. A preliminary soft-cover edition was issued
in 1968; see entry 7.8.
7.10
Historic American Buildings Survey Field Orders.
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1969-73.
Because the guide to producing HABS documentation,
Recording Historic Buildings, was general, specific
instructions for organizing and administering an HABS
field team were necessary as a supplement. A series of
field orders and instructions were produced for this
purpose.
Historic American Buildings Survey Field Order No. I.
[Massey, James C.] 1971. Informal publ. 4 pp.; not
illus. ; OP. Rev. ed., Paul Goeldner, ed., May 30,
1973; 2-pp. addendum June 29, 1973. Prelim. ed. ca.
1969; 4 pp.
Historic American Buildings Survey Field Order No. II,
Organization of HABS Measured Drawing Sheets.
[Wheaton, Rodd L.] 1973. Informal publ. ; 7-pp. text;
20 annotated sample dwgs. ; OP. Prelim. eds. ca. 1969
and 1971 were subtitled Requirements and Suggestions
for HABS Measured Drawings; 4 pp. Intended to give
specific suggestions for producing HABS drawings.
Historic American Buildings Survey Field Order No. III,
Information and Instruction for Field Personnel.
[Steenhusen, Allan H. 1971]. Informal publ. ; 4 pp.;
not illus.; OP. Detailed information for HABS summer
recording teams on pay, leave, supplies, etc. Allan H.
Steenhusen was an HABS architect.
7.11
Historic American Buildings Survey Field Instructions
for Measured Drawings.
Burns, John A.
Washington: HABS/NPS, 1975.
Informal publ.; 7 pp.; OP.
The start of a new series still in use, Field
Instructions was developed from the field orders and
89
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
photographic specifications. A revised edition was
issued in December 1978. See entry 7.14.
7.12
Procedures Manual.
[HABS Staff].
[Washington]: HABS/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Informal publ. i OP.
This is an informal compendium of HABS procedures
including Historian's Procedure Manual, Architectural
Section, Records Management Section, and Photography.
This manual was not publicly distributed but was used
in NPS offices, and the components are individually
listed in this bibliography. See entries 7.11, 7.13,
7.16, 7.21, 7.22, and 7.24. The procedures manual is
cited here to provide context for the individual
components that are in use today.
7.13
Guide for the Preparation of Written Historical and
Descriptive Data in Accordance with the Standards of
the Historic American Buildings Survey for Compliance
with Executive Order 11593, Section 2 (c).
[Harris, Emily]. Washington: HAER/HCRS/DOI, [1979].
Informal publ. ; 11 pp.; not illus.; NAER cover sheet
added in 1980.
Prepared by HABS architectural historian Harris to
guide those required to undertake mitigation projects
by Executive Order 11593. Such projects often require
documentation of a threatened structure to HABS
standards.
7.14
Field Instructions for Measured Drawings, Historic
American Buildings Survey.
Burns, John A., and James F. Speake; Kenneth L.
Anderson, proj. dir.
Washington: HABS/HCRS/DOI, 1980.
Informal publ. ; 43 pp. i 17 maps, dwgs. and sketches;
minor revisions 1981 and 1982 to show organizational
name changes back to HABS/NPS/DOI.
90
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Detailed procedures for production of HABS measured
drawings. An enlarged and illustrated version of the
earlier field instructions. Expanded section on
landscape architecture. Anderson was HABS principal
architect. Burns was an architect and Speake a
landscape architect with HABS. See entry 7.11.
7.15
Guidelines for Inventories of Historic Buildings and
Engineering and Industrial Structures.
See entry 17.3.
7.16
National Architectural and Engineering Record
Photographic and Photocopying Specifications for
Compliance with Executive Order 11593, Section 2 (c).
[Burns, John A.]
[Washington: HABS/HAER, 1980.]
Informal publ. ; 3 pp.; retyped on 4 pp. and NAER cover
sheet added 10/1/80.
One of several documents prepared to guide those
preparing documentation to HABS standards as part of
mitigation projects under Executive Order 11593. Based
on 1961 specifications by HABS/HAER photographer Jack
E. Boucher.
7.17
Guidelines for E.O. 11593, Section 2 (c) Documentation.
Washington: NAER/HCRS/DOI, 1980.
Informal publ.; 63 pp.; 31 photos; 4 dwgs.; OP.
Executive Order 11593 requires government agencies to
mitigate the loss or alteration of historic structures
by recording them according to HABS/HAER Standards.
Such mitigative documentation has provided much
material for the HABS/HAER archives. This document and
others contain a restatement of HABS/HAER procedures
designed to guide federal agencies doing mitigative
work. Assembled in anticipation of the regionalization
of the HABS/HAER program when there would no longer be
a single office to provide uniform guidance and quality
control. See entries 7.13, 7.15, and 7.16.
7.18
HABS User Note: 1. Information for Users of HABS
Measured Drawings.
91
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
Burns, John A.
Washington: HABS/NPS, 1982.
Informal publ. i 3 pp.; 1 dwg. i free xerox copy avail.
from HABS or Library of Congress, Prints and
Photographs Division.
Intended as one of a series which was not completed;
numbers 2 and 3 were not issued. Explains the
variations in HABS drawings due to changes in format,
drafting media, and documentation philosophy.
7.19
HABS User Note: 4. Donating Documentation to the
Historic American Buildings Survey.
Burns, John A.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI. 1983
3 pp.; 1 photo; 1 dwg.; informal publ. Free xerox copy
avail. from HABS.
A brief description of HABS standards and the process
for donating material to the HABS archives.
7.20
"Standards for Architectural and Engineering
Documentation" and "Guidelines for Architectural and
Engineering Documentation" in "Secretary of the
Interior's Standards and Guidelines for Archaeology and
Historic Preservation."
Federal Register September 29, 1983: 44730-44734.
5 pp.; no illus.
These constitute the formal standards for HABS and
HAER, with guidelines for their implementation in
recording historic structures. They represent the
collective wisdom of HABS/HAER staff at that time. All
the HABS/HAER instructions and manuals conform to these
official standards. They are also reproduced as
Appendix A in Recording Historic Structures, pp. 234-
38. Preparation of these standards and guidelines was
in response to the National Historic Preservation Act
Amendments of 1980.
7.21
Historic American Buildings Survey Historians
Procedures Manual.
92
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
[Hoagland, Alison K.]
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, 1983.
Informal publ. i 51 pp. i 1 photo; 2 dwgs.
Guidance for historians preparing HABS documentation.
There are several editions of the manual. The first
version, by Deborah Stephens Burns, was part of an
informal 1978 procedures manual, "Historian's
Procedures Manual," which included architectural and
historical data preparation, photographs, addenda,
index cards, and several appendices, including a
reprint of Harley J. McKee's Amateur's Guide to Terms
Commonly Used in Describing Historic Buildings,
Following the Order Used by the Historic American
Buildings Survey (Rochester, N.Y.: The Landmark
Society, 1970). There is also one appendix with HABS
county numbers used for LC reference. There is also a
1979 edition. The 1980 version, Historic American
Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
Historian's Procedures Manual, was printed during both
HCRS/NAER and NPS periods of HABS/HAER activity. See
entry 7.12.
7.22
Specifications for the Production of Photographs (for
the use and guidance of contract photographers).
Boucher, Jack E.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS [1984].
Informal publ. 7 pp.; not illus. Avail. from
HABS/HAER.
The latest revision of requirements for producing
archival-quality, large-format photographs for
HABS/HAER. Current version of a document first written
in 1961 by HABS photographer Jack E. Boucher and
revised periodically after that under varying titles,
including editions in 1973 or 1974, 1979, and ca. 1982.
See also "Photographic Records in Restoration,"
Building Research 1 (5) 25-26 (1964). See entry 7.12.
7.23
"Historic American Buildings Survey."
Burns, John A.
93
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RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
Section 19 in Architectural Graphic Standards, 8th ed.
Washington: American Institute of Architects Press,
1988. pp. 780-83.
For the first time, this basic architects' reference
work has a four-page section on HABS written by
HABS/HAER architect Burns, concentrating on the
production of measured drawings.
7.24
Transmitting Documentation to HABS/HAER: WASO
[Stamm, Alicia].
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS, 1989.
Informal publ. i i + 43 pp. i 1 photo, part of formatting
illustrations. Cover marked "revised, August, 1989."
Detailed instructions, specifications and formats for
submission of documentation to HABS/HAER by NPS
regional offices. Earliest edition appears as part of
1978 procedures manual and there is a 1985 revised
edition as well. See entry 7.12.
7.25
Recording Historic Structures, Historic American
Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record.
Burns, John A., ed.; Charles E. Peterson, fwd.; Robert
J. Kapsch, pref. ; individual chapters by HABS/HAER
staff as listed below.
Washington: American Institute of Architects Press,
1989.
Hard and soft covers; xiii + 247 pp.; 93 photos; 75
dwgs.; index; biblio.
Edited by John Burns, who was HABS/HAER principal
architect. Chapters by staff of HABS/HAER as follows:
Chapter 1. "What is Architectural and Engineering
Documentation?" John A. Burns.
Chapter 2. "What is a HABS/HAER Survey?" Sally Kress
Tompkins.
Chapter 3. "History." Alison K. Hoagland and Gray
Fitzsimons.
94
HABS
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
Chapter 4. "Photography." William L. Lebovich.
Chapter 5. "Measured Drawings. " John A. Burns.
Chapter 6. "Case Studies. " Sally Kress Tompkins,
Richard K. Anderson. John A. Burns, and Paul D.
Dolinsky.
Recording Historic Structures replaces, after 20 years'
use, Recording Historic Buildings. It represents both
a general overview of HABS/HAER documentation and
detailed guidance on procedures for preparing HABS/HAER
documentation.
7.26
Secretary of the Interior's Standards and
Guidelines for Architectural and Engineering
Documentation: HABS/HAER Standards.
Washington, D.C.: Historic American Buildings
Survey/Historic American Engineering Record, 1990.
Soft cover. 15 pp.; 4 dwgs., 1 photo, 1 map, 1
chart; appen.; biblio. Avail. from Supt. of
Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, D.C. 20402.
The Secretary's Standards and Guidelines were
originally published in the Federal Register (vol.
48, no. 190, Thursday, September 29, 1983, pp.
44730-34). This 1990 edition, compiled by
Caroline H. Russell and the HABS/HAER Division
staff, includes an updated bibliography.
95
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
(listed chronologically)
Annual Reports and Newsletters; Project and Personnel
Lists; Leaflets and Circulars; Publications Lists
8.1
HABS Circular No. 1. The Historic American Buildings
Survey.
Washington: HABS/Office of National Parks, Buildings
and Reservations/DOI, December 12, 1933.
Informal publ. ; 5 pp.
HABS circulars were intended as general information
about HABS for circulation to the HABS district and
state offices and to the general interested public.
No. 1, issued less than two weeks after approval of the
project by Federal Relief Agency Administrator Harry
Hopkins on December 1, 1933, sets forth the general
purposes and operations of the survey, described as a
ten-week project for 1,000 architects and draftsmen.
It states that the program is under the admiristration
of Thomas C. Vint, chief architect of the Branch of
Plans and Design of the Office of National Parks,
Buildings, and Reservations (NPS) and lists the
national advisory committee members appointed to guide
the survey. Vint, a career NPS official, later chief
of design and construction, continued to be a
significant supporter of HABS and important in the
reinstitution of the Survey in 1957. The one known
original copy of Circular No. 1 is included in the
collected volume of HABS bulletins in the HABS/HAER
Washington office. Circular No. 1 may be seen as the
ancestor of the long series of HABS brochures that
continue to this day. Also in the collection is
Circular No. 10, with a reference to Circular No. 7,
signed by A. E. Demaray, associate director, December
27, 1933, on a routine matter of weekly reports.
8.2
Memorandum of Agreement between the National Park
Service, the American Institute of Architects, the
Library of Congress, Relating to the Historic American
Buildings Survey as a Permanent Organization to
Coordinate all Future Work of Recording Historic
American Buildings.
[Washington: NPS, 1934].
Document; 7 pp. i not illus.; amended eds. 1937, 1953.
97
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
The original "Tripartite Agreement" which established
HABS as a permanent program for collecting and
preserving records of historic American architecture.
Sets out in detail the responsibilities of each of the
signing organizations. Approved by acting Secretary of
Interior T. A. Walters on July 23, 1934. Amended in
May 1937 to make the national officers of the AIA
(rather than local chapters) responsible for appointing
district officers, whose terms were reduced to one
year. In 1953, Article II, Section 3, concerning the
composition of the HABS Advisory Board, was amended.
(Board to contain nine members who served six-year
terms and were appointed by the AIA with concurrence of
the Chief Architect, NPS.) The agreement was reprinted
in 1953 under the title Memorandum of Agreement of July
23, 1934 Among the National Park Service, the American
Institute of Architects, and the Library of Congress
Relating to the Historic American Buildings Survey, As
Amended. Published also as HABS Bulletin 32, April 6,
1934. See entries 8.3 (description of agreement) and
8.8 (new 1962 agreement).
8.3
Historic American Buildings Survey, Circular of
Information.
Washington: NPS/DOI/GPO, 1936.
Brochure; 18 pp. ; not illus. Reprint avail. from
Friends of HABS, 332 Spruce st., Philadelphia, PA
19108.
General discussion of HABS published by NPS after
enactment of the Historic Sites Act of 1935, which gave
the government authority to conduct historical surveys.
Details accomplishments of the first two years of HABS
recording as an emergency employment program and
stresses the desirability of making the survey a
permanent program for the collection of documentation
on historic buildings. Also in the booklet is the
Tripartite Memorandum of Agreement of July 1934 and
"H.A.B.S. Redivivus," reprinted from The Octagon
(November 1934), and "The Importance of the Historic
American Buildings Survey in our Scheme of Conservation
of Natural Resources, " by Secretary of the Interior
Harold L. Ickes. Reprinted by Friends of HABS in 1980
as a way of restating the original goals and
achievements of HABS. See entries 6.27, 8.1, and 8.2.
98
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
8.4
Historic American Buildings Survey.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS, 1989. Earlier versions
1956-83.
Brochure; 16 panels; 3 photos; 6 dwgs. Current
brochure avail. free from HABS.
A long series of brief flyers designed to explain the
HABS program, intended for broad distribution. The
earliest of these were simple mimeographed sheets which
described the HABS program and included a current price
list for purchasing copies of HABS documents from the
Library of Congress (1956, 1957, 1958 and 1960). In
1961 a printed six-panel brochure was produced with a
drawing of the cupola of Old City Hall, Philadelphia,
on the front in light ink on a black background was
produced by the Philadelphia HABS office with text by
James C. Massey. The names of current advisory board
members were included in the text. In 1963, the same
cupola motif was used for a brochure printed by GPO
which contained six panels in blue with the cupola in
positive (GPO # 19630-684-619). It was reprinted in
1964 with a darker blue and the cover cupola in
negative, (GPO # 1964 0-747-476). In 1969 a series of
related brochures for all the programs of the Office of
Archeology and Historic Preservation were issued. HABS
brochure text by Dorothy Buffmire, edited by James C.
Massey. This purple ten-panel brochure was reprinted
in 1970 and 1973, but without the NPS logo on the
cover. A twelve-panel brochure with gray cover was
issued ca. 1983 with a measured drawing of a doorway
for Gunston Hall on the cover. The latest brochure in
this series, published in 1989, has a magenta cover
featuring a negative image of the Bullfinch gatehouse
at the U.S. Capitol.
8.5
Annual Report, Historic American Buildings Survey to
the National Advisory Board.
[Washington: NPS], 1958-61 and 1972
Informal documents; 4 or 5 pp. not illus. i OP.
Following reappointment of the HABS National Advisory
board as part of the reactivation of HABS in 1957, its
members were kept abreast of current HABS activities
through various quarterly and special reports as well
as an annual report summarizing each fiscal year. Such
99
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
reports have been located for fiscal years 1958-61.
They contain information similar to that circulated to
a wider audience by the Historic American Buildings
Survey News and the more formal annual reports issued
later. See entries 8.7 and 8.12. Copies in HABS
files.
8.6
Historic American Buildings Survey, Summer Recording
Team Rosters.
[Various locations]; 1960-84.
During most summers 1960-84 HABS compiled a list of
summer recording teams. They were used to inform the
public of the scope of HABS activities and to
facilitate communication with and among the teams.
They form an invaluable record of the temporary
personnel who have worked for HABS over the years and
of the summer recording projects undertaken. A
relatively complete file can be found in the HABS
office. (1965 has not been located and probably was
not issued.)
1960: Description of purpose and personnel of the
Danish Virgin Islands Project.
1963-64: A single sheet was produced on each project
listing its scope, cooperating organizations, and team
members.
1961-62 and 1966-78: Multi-page roster of similar
format for each year. Describes each project and lists
location, field office, address, co-sponsors and staff.
Washington office staff also listed. 1971 contains
both HABS and HAER projects.
1979: A more formal, soft-cover publication put out by
HCRS, Department of the Interior.
1980-1981: HABS and HAER are combined under the
National Architecture and Engineering Record
(NAER/HCRS/DOI). There is a long descriptive paragraph
about each project.
1983-84: Similar to above, but HABS and HAER have been
transferred back to National Park Service.
Since 1985 the lengthy descriptions of summer projects
and cooperations have been transferred to the Annual
100
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
Report. Rosters now consist of a simple listing of
team members by project with field office addresses and
phone numbers and a list of Washington office staff.
8.7
Historic American Buildings Survey News.
[Various locations and dates, 1961-82]; informal publ.
limited distribution; copies in HABS files.
The Philadelphia office of HABS produced a short weekly
newsletter which was appended to the newsletter of the
Historic Structures Section, Eastern Office of Design
and Construction, NPS. It was issued from
approximately 1961-64 and contained information on
personnel projects, visitors, publications, etc.
From April 1967 to September 1970; the Historic
American Buildings Survey News was produced
approximately monthly by the national HABS office in
Washington, D.C. Dorothy C. Buffmire, Georgeanna
Duross [Hannum] and Christine Lisa St. Lawrence were
editors. Its stated purpose was "informing interested
persons about the current programs" of HABS. It is an
excellent source of information on HABS projects,
publications, newspaper articles, and exhibits.
1969-70 issues also contain HAER news. On April 23,
1971, after a DOI abolition of newsletters, it was
replaced by a "Memorandum to the HABS Advisory Board"
which contained similar information and was sent to a
similar mailing list. This "Memorandum" was published
approximately bi-monthly through 1978. After this, the
newsletter ceased except for four issues concerning
events of great interest to friends of HABS. One,
Holiday Greetings from the Staff of HAER (December
1980, 4 pp.), briefly explains the combination of
HABS/HAER to form NAER and the regionalization of the
program. Holiday Greetings from the Staff (December
1981, 4 pp.) announced the end of HCRS and the return
of NAER to the National Park Service. HABS Newsletter
(June 1982, 10 pp., 1 dwg.) announced the return of the
HABS/HAER names. HABS-HAER (June 1983, 14 pp., 2
dwgs.) listed activities associated with the 50th
anniversary of HABS. The 1980 newsletter was edited by
Pat Cejka, the others by Jean Yearby. The function
served by the newsletter was largely taken over by the
annual reports issued after 1983. See entry 8.12.
8.8
Tripartite Agreement for Continuing the Historic
American Buildings Survey.
101
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
Philadelphia: HABS/EODC, 1962.
Document; 2 pp. i not illus.; 200 copies; printed June
1962.
Effective March 2, 1962, this substantial revision of
the agreement among the three cooperating parties
reflects change of operations. NPS now funds and
operates HABS; Library of Congress maintains records;
AIA serves in an advisory capacity. Also refines the
composition and tenure of the advisory board. See
entry 8.2.
8.9
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record Publications List.
Yearby, Jean, comp.; Robert J. Kapsch, ed.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS, 1989. (Earlier versions
1966-88.)
Informal publ. iv + 18 pp.; 2 dwgs. Avail. from HABS.
The latest in a series of publications lists (1966,
1967, 1972, 1978, ca. 1983, and 1988 were noted) issued
by HABS and HABS/HAER over the years as a guide to
publications by or about the program. This one
contains 64 entries for HABS and 33 for HAER. See also
HABS/HAER listings in Catalog of Historic Preservation
Publications (Washington: Cultural Resources Programs,
NPS/DOI, 1989-90), pp. 16-17, for an abbreviated list.
8.10
Historic American Buildings Survey Advisory Board
Meetings, Digests of Meetings.
Washington: HABS/NPS/DOI, various dates 1958-1974.
Typescripts; limited circulation; copies in HABS office
files.
These digests of meetings provide a record of problems
discussed and new directions suggested by the Board.
The following Advisory Board minutes are in the HABS
files: Washington, D.C., January 28-29, 1958;
Philadelphia, PA, October 26-27, 1961; Washington,
D.C., October 16-17, 1967 (first meeting of the
reconstituted board); Los Angeles, CA, June 19-21,
1968; Washington, D.C., November 7-8, 1968; New
102
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
Harmony, IN, May 15-16, 1969; Washington, D.C.,
December 5, 1969; Providence, R.I., May 15-16, 1970;
Washington, D.C., December 3-4, 1970; San Juan, P.R.,
May 21-22, 1971; Washington, D.C., February 25-26,
1972; Indianapolis, IN, December 1-2, 1972; Tarrytown,
N.Y., May 16-17, 1974. Dorothy C. Buffmire compiled
the minutes for the meetings in 1968-69 and May 1970;
Lucy Pope Wheeler the minutes for December 1970 and
1972 meetings; Grace D. Gillette for May 1971.
8.11
(HCRS Annual Reports)
Three have been noted with brief mentions of HABS/HAER
1979-Year End Report 14 pp., HCRS; pub. 10.
1980-Cultural Programs 1979 Annual Report. 18 pp. HCRS;
pub. 24. Notes reorganization of HABS and HAER as a
single division, NAER-National Architectural and
Engineering Record.
1980-HCRS Accomplishments 1977-80.
8.12
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record, National Park Service--Annual
Reports.
[Yearby, Jean P., comp.]
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1983-present.
Since 1983, the HABS/HAER Division has issued a
combined annual report for each federal fiscal year.
Reports cover recording projects, exhibits,
publications, staff news, transmittals to the LC. The
report has become a longer and more formal publication.
Its purpose, like the newsletters and memoranda to the
Advisory Board issued earlier, is to summarize the
activities of HABS/HAER for the interested public. It
lists books and articles reproducing HABS/HAER records,
as well as newspaper and magazine articles not within
the scope of this bibliography. Issues include:
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record Annual Report FY 1983, October 1,
1982 - September 30, 1983. Informal publ.; 12 pp.; not
illus.
103
HABS
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record 1984 Annual Report. Informal publ. ;
16 pp. i selected measured dwgs. appended.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record (HABS/HAER Division) FY 1985 Annual
Report. Informal publ. i 22 pp. ; 3 dwgs.
FY 1986 Annual Report, Historic American Buildings
Survey/Historic American Engineering Record (HABS/HAER)
Division, National Park Service. Soft cover; 34 pp. i 5
dwgs.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record 1987 Annual Report. Soft cover; 61
pp.; 11 photos; 4 dwgs. ; GPO # 19880-207-359.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record, National Park Service, 1988 Annual
Report. Soft cover; 71 pp. ; 18 photos; 3 dwgs.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record, National Park Service - 1989 Annual
Report with the 1980's in Review. Soft cover; 77 pp. ;
32 photos; 12 dwgs. Avail. from HABS/HAER/NPS, Box
37127, Washington, DC 20013-7127. Includes appendix of
records transmitted to the Library of Congress;
"HABS/HAER in Print," listing magazine and newspaper
articles about HABS/HAER; a review of the 1980s; and
1989 accomplishments. There is a memorial for Sally
Kress Tompkins, HABS/HAER deputy chief, who died in
1989, and her last essay, "Looking Ahead: HABS/HAER in
the 1990s. " See entries 8.5 and 8.11.
Annual Report 1990, HABS/HAER. Historic American
Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record,
U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service.
Soft cover; 96 pp.; 18 photos; 11 dwgs; maps. Review
of the year's projects and accomplishments;
bibliography of publications and articles by and about
HABS/HAER; HABS/HAER staff roster; appendix of records
transferred to LC; list of HABS summer alumni, 1980-89.
104
HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY
MISCELLANEOUS
(listed alphabetically by author)
9.1
Beinke [Schwartz], Nancy K.
A List of Furnished Historic Houses in the United
States.
Washington: OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1970.
Soft cover; 173 pp.; not illus.; limited distribution;
OP.
A special project by HABS architectural historian
Beinke. Compiled to aid the staff of First Lady
Patricia Nixon in planning her travels.
9.2
[Borchers, Perry E.]
"Application of Architectural Photogrammetry to the
Historic American Buildings Survey."
Columbus: Ohio State Univ., Engineering Experiment
Station, 1958.
Report; 15 pp.; not illus.; limited distribution; OP.
One of three reports prepared for HABS on contract by
Perry E. Borchers, architecture professor at Ohio State
University. They explore the history of architectural
photogrammetry, its use by European architectural
archives, and its application to HABS to augment hand
measuring for large or threatened buildings. See
entries 9.3 and 9.4.
9.3
Borchers, Perry E.
"European Projects and Equipment for the Recording of
Historic Buildings and Monuments by Architectural
Photogrammetry."
Columbus: Ohio State Univ., Engineering Experiment
Station, 1958.
Report; 17 pp. 3 photos; 1 diagram; limited
distribution; OP.
See entries 9.2 and 9.4.
105
HABS
MISCELLANEOUS
9.4
[Borchers, Perry E.]
"Projects in Architectural Photography for the Historic
American Buildings Survey. "
Columbus: Ohio State Univ., Engineering Experiment
Station, 1959.
Report; 8 pp. i 3 dwgs.; limited distribution; OP.
See entries 9.2 and 9.3.
9.5
Burns, John A.
Energy Conserving Features Inherent in Older Homes.
Washington: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development with U.S. Department of Interior, 1982.
Soft cover; 39 pp.; 24 photos; 13 dwgs. ; biblio.
Avail. from HUD User, Box 6091, Rockville, MD. 20850.
GPO # 1982 0-386-417. Limited number avail. free from
HABS.
Booklet discusses ways older buildings were heated,
cooled, ventilated, and shaded before the advent of
mechanical climate control systems. Many are
applicable today. Written by HABS architect Burns and
illustrated with HABS photos and drawings. Cooperative
project of HUD and HABS/HAER.
9.6
Goeldner, Paul.
A Brief Bibliography for the Restoration of Historic
Buildings.
Washington: HABS/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1971. [Reprinted with
addendum, 1972.]
Informal publ.; 1st printing 5 pp. i 2nd printing 6 pp. ;
not illus.; OP.
Compiled by HABS principal architect Goeldner. This
type of general preservation assistance was eventually
taken over by the Technical Preservation Services
Division of NPS.
106
HABS
MISCELLANEOUS
9.7
Lawrence, Lewis M., supvr.
"Notes on the Development of Early Architecture in
Massachusetts."
Boston: HABS/WPA, 1941.
Unpublished chapter; 69 pp. ; 28 sketches; 12 plans; 1
map.
The culminating activity for HABS under the Works
Progress Administration was to have been publication of
a national outline of the development of early American
architecture. HABS district offices were to prepare
essays based on their field work. However, only two
chapters of this project--for Massachusetts and New
Jersey--are known to have been completed. In this
essay Part 1 deals with factors that influenced
Massachusetts architecture, such as climate, building
materials, architects; Part 2 is a chronological look
at building types and styles. See entry 9.11.
9.8
Lessig, Charles W.
"Measured Drawings in Restoration."
Building Research 1: 20-24 (September/October 1964)
5 pp.; 5 dwgs.
From publication of technical papers presented at a
conference of the Building Research Institute, the BRI
Forum on Restoration and Preservation of Historic
Buildings, June 11-12, 1964. It explains the need for
accurate measured drawings and outlines methods and
techniques for achieving them based on HABS experience.
Lessig was chief architect of the NPS National Capital
Office, Design and Construction.
9.9
Massey, James C.
The Architectural Survey.
Washington: National Trust for Historic Preservation,
[1969].
Pamphlet; 19 pp.; 8 photos; 4 dwg.; biblio.; OP.
Earlier ed., Architectural Surveys (1965, 11 pp., 3
107
HABS
MISCELLANEOUS
photos; 2 dwgs.; OP.) Revised in Historic
Preservation, 18 (4) : 148-51 (July-August 1966). 3 pp. ;
1 dwg.
A guide to conducting architectural surveys based on
HABS experience and recommendations written by HABS
Chief Massey. Produced at a time when many states and
localities were surveying architectural resources for
the purpose of making nominations to the National
Register of Historic Places. Part of NTHP Preservation
Leaflet Series. See entry 9.10.
9.10
Massey, James C.
How to Organize an Architectural Survey.
Washington: National Trust for Historic Preservation
[1971].
Pamphlet; 7 pp.; not illus.; biblio. ; OP.
An updated and revised, but shorter, version of The
Architectural Survey. Part of preservation for the
Bicentennial Series. See entry 9.9.
9.11
Moffett, Herbert N., supvr., Walter E. Rutt, Lewis D.
Cook.
"Outline of the Development of Early American
Architecture [New Jersey].
Newark: HABS/WPA, New Jersey, n.d.
Unpublished chapter; 127 pp. i 42 photos; 7 dwgs. ; 4
maps.
Intended as part of a larger volume, which was never
published. For purpose and organization, see entry
9.7.
9.12
Peterson, Charles E.
A List of Published Writings of Special Interest in the
Study of Historic Architecture of the Mississippi
Valley.
St. Louis: HABS, Central Unit/NPS/DOI, November 1940.
2nd ed.
108
HABS
MISCELLANEOUS
Soft cover; iii + 29 pp.; not illus; OP.
A bibliography compiled by the founder of HABS, then
NPS architect in St. Louis. First edition, May 1940
was a typescript.
9.13
Poppeliers, John [C.], S. Allen Chambers, and Nancy B.
Schwartz.
What Style Is It?
Washington: The Preservation Press, 1977.
Soft cover; 47 pp.; 83 photos; glossary illus. with 15
dwgs. ; OP.
A guide to architectural styles written by HABS Staff
members. Conceived as a bicentennial feature for
members of the National Trust for Historic
Preservation. Originally published in segments in four
issues of Historic Preservation, quarterly magazine of
the National Trust (April-June 1976, July-September
1976, October-December 1976, January-March 1977). See
entry 9.14.
9.14
What Style Is It?
Poppeliers, John C., S. Allen Chambers, and Nancy B.
Schwartz.
Washington: The Preservation Press, 1984. 2nd ed.
Soft cover; 112 pp. i 119 photos; 35 dwgs. plus illus.
glossary with 15 dwgs. Avail. National Trust Mail
Order, 1600 H St., N.W., Washington, DC 20006.
A much expanded edition of one of the most popular
publications of The Preservation Press. Issued to
honor the 50th anniversary of HABS. Expanded text, new
elongated format, drawings, and many new photos added.
See entry 9.13.
109
Part II
Historic American Engineering Record
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
(listed chronologically)
11.1
Historic American Engineering Record Catalog.
[Huberman, R. Carole, comp.]
Washington: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1972.
Informal publ. ; 13 pp. ; not illus. except cover; OP.
The first list of the contents of the HAER collection.
Contains entries of records made from 1969 when HAER
was founded until April 1972. Only the name of the
site and the number of records is listed.
11.2
Historic American Engineering Record Catalog, 1976.
Sackheim, Donald E., comp. and intro.
Washington: NPS/DOI, [1976].
Hard and soft covers; xi + 193 pp. i 150 photos; 54
dwgs. i index; OP. NPS pub. 155.
The first formal national catalog of the HAER
collection to contain full descriptive entries for the
514 sites included, complete as of Dec. 31, 1975.
Entry includes Universal Transverse Mercator
coordinates for exact site location. Reflects growth of
HAER archives from its founding in 1969. Compiled by
HAER historian Sackheim, with assistance from R. Carole
Huberman, Beverly N. Baynes, Robert M. Vogel and Eric
N. DeLony.
11.3
Historic America: Buildings, Structures, and Sites
Recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey and
the Historic American Engineering Record.
Peatross, C. Ford, ed. of essays, and Alicia Stamm,
comp. of checklist.
See entry 1.7.
11.4
HAER Checklist, 1969-1985: A Listing of Sites,
Structures and Objects Documented by the Historic
American Engineering Record.
Boone [Minnick], Ellen, and Alice Keyes, comps. ; Eric
DeLony, proj. leader.
113
HAER
NATIONAL AND REGIONAL CATALOGS
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1985.
Soft cover; 91 pp. i 16 small-scale dwgs. on cover; OP;
xerographic reprint avail. from NTIS, 5285 Port Royal
Rd., Springfield, VA 22161. Publ. # PB 174661.
Microfiche avail. from same source.
A computer-generated listing of 1,200 sites recorded by
HAER during its 16 years of existence. Each entry
contains name of site, location, and number of records
in HAER archives. Boone, Keyes, and DeLony were
HABS/HAER staff members.
114
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
STATE AND LOCAL CATALOGS
(listed alphabetically by state)
12.1
The Alabama Catalog, Historic American Buildings
Survey: A guide to the Early Architecture of the State.
Contains a HAER catalog for Alabama as Appendix D, pp.
417-18. See entry 2.1.
12.2
The Georgia Catalog, Historic American Buildings
Survey, A Guide to Architecture of the State.
Contains a list of HAER records for Georgia through
1980. See entry 2.7.
12.3
Historic American Buildings Survey in Indiana.
Contains a HAER catalog for Indiana as Appendix B, pp.
129-136. See entry 2.10.
115
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
LISTS AND FINDING AIDS
(listed alphabetically by title)
13.1
"Bibliography of State Historic Bridge Inventories."
DeLony, Eric N., comp.
IA: The Journal of the Society for Industrial
Archeology, 16(1): 68 (1990).
1 p.; not illus.
Lists 32 state bridge inventories carried out in
response to HAER guidelines and AIHP requirements.
13.2
Historic Railroad Stations.
Jandl, H. Ward, Jan Thorman, and Katherine H. Cole
[Stevenson].
Washington; National Register of Historic Places,
OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1974.
Soft cover; 118 pp.; 562 entries; 70 photos; 1 dwg.;
index; limited distribution; OP; GPO # 879-160.
A list of 562 extant railroad stations taken from the
files of the National Register of Historic Places, and
state inventories, with notations of those also in
HABS/HAER (56 recorded by HABS, 31 recorded by HAER).
Intended to call attention to railroad stations as
historic resources, it was prepared for a workshop on
reuse of railroad stations held in Indianapolis, July
1974. Susan Dynes, HABS, and James Armstrong, HAER,
provided the HABS/HAER essay.
13.3
An Index to Railroading Structures in the HABS/HAER
Collection.
Eagle, Frederick C., G. Gray Fitzsimons, and Jean P.
Yearby., comp.
[Washington: HABS/HAER] NPS, 1987.
Informal publ. 31 pp. ; 2 photos; 1 dwg. plus cover
dwg.
117
HAER
LISTS AND FINDING AIDS
Checklist of HABS and HAER records of railroad-related
buildings and structures, compiled from the ADP list of
HABS/HAER records, plus an "endnote" on the HAER
program.
13.4
Henderson, Richard R.
A Preliminary Inventory of Spanish-Colonial Resources
Associated with the National Park Service.
Appendix A. 6 is "Spanish Heritage Resources in the
HABS/HAER Database. " See entry 3.9.
13.5
"Railroad Stations Recorded by Historic American
Buildings Survey and the Historic American Engineering
Records."
Railroad Station Historical Society Bulletin 17 (6) : 73-
91 (November-December, 1984). See entry 3.10.
13.6
Washingtoniana Photograph Collection, Prints and
Photographs Division, Library of Congress.
HAER records listed p. 40. See entry 3.11.
118
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS BY HAER AND HAER COOPERATORS
(listed regionally, then alphabetically
by state and title)
14.1
New England: An Inventory of Historic Engineering and
Industrial Sites.
Comp, T. Allan, proj. dir.
Washington: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1974.
Soft cover; 87 pp.; 14 sketches; GPO # 873-926; OP.
An inventory of 789 sites in 427 towns in the six New
England states. Field work was conducted during 1972-
73. It marked the beginning of a long-term effort to
prepare inventories of significant engineering and
industrial sites in all 50 states. Cosponsors were
HAER, American Society of Mechanical Engineers History
and Heritage Committee, Merrimack Valley Textile
Museum, American Society of Civil Engineers New England
Section, and Curran Associates, Northampton, MA.
14.2
Water for the Southwest: Historical Survey and Guide to
Historic Sites.
Baker, T. Lindsay, Steven R. Rae, Joseph E. Minor,
Seymour V: Connors, eds.
New York: American Society of Civil Engineers, 1973.
ASCE Historical Publ. No. 3.
Soft cover, 205 pp.; 42 photos; 12 maps and dwgs.;
index, extensive bibliography. Avail. from American
Society of Civil Engineers, Publications Fulfillment,
P.O. Box 830, Somerset, N.J. 08875.
An introductory essay on the importance of water
resources in the Southwest followed by brief
illustrated descriptions of 60 sites illustrating early
water supply systems in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico,
Texas, and Utah. Study conducted by the Water
Resources Center of Texas Technological University and
partially funded by HAER. It was the first federally
funded inventory of engineering sites conducted after
the HAER program was begun.
14.3
"Pilot Schooner ALABAMA 1925."
Anderson, Richard K., Jr.
119
HAER
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
Seaways, Journal of Maritime History and Research
2 (2) :54-57 (March/April 1991)
4 pp.; 7 photos; 2 dwgs.
Photo essay on the 1986 HAER recordation of the 70-ton
sail-assisted twin-screw pilot schooner ALABAMA,
designed by Thomas F. McManus of Boston for the Mobile
(Alabama) Bay Bar Pilots Association.
ALASKA
14.4
Kennecott, Alaska: Historic American Engineering Record
Recording Project.
Spude, Robert L. S., and Sandra McDermott Faulkner.
Anchorage: Alaska Regional Office/NPS, 1987.
Soft cover; 39 pp.; 19 photos; 15 dwgs.; GPO #1988 592-
446.
A report of HAER recording at Kennecott, a National
Historic Landmark within Wrangall-St. Elias National
Park and Refuge. The Kennecott Mill is the best
remaining example of an early 20th-century copper
concentrator. The report documents the mineral
benefaction process used at this mill. Robert Spude
was director of the recording project, which was
sponsored by HAER, the Alaska Regional Office, NPS, and
Great Kennecott Glacier Land Company in 1987.
Photography by Jet Lowe.
CONNECTICUT
14.5
Connecticut: An Inventory of Historic Engineering and
Industrial Sites.
Roth, Matthew.
Washington: Society for Industrial Archeology, 1981.
Soft cover, XXX + 179 pp.; 37 photos; index,
bibliography.
Results of a HAER inventory conducted in 1978-79 which
identified over 400 examples of Connecticut's
industrial heritage. Sites are arranged by county,
industrial classification and town. An introductory
120
HAER
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
essay describes the state's industrial development.
Report published by SIA with funds from HAER and the
Connecticut Historical Commission, which co-sponsored
the inventory. Includes additional writing and
research of Bruce Clouette and Victor Darnell.
DELAWARE
14.6
Delaware: An Inventory of Historic Engineering and
Industrial Sites.
Thomas, Selma, ed., Preliminary inventory comp. by
Tommy Guider.
[Washington]: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1975.
Soft cover; vii + 47 pp.; 11 maps and sketches; index;
NPS publ. # 149; avail. from Eleutherian Mills-Hagley
Foundation, Box 3630, Wilmington, DE. 19807.
Part of the HAER state inventory series. Lists 100
sites illustrating Delaware's industrial and
engineering heritage identified in an inventory carried
out in 1974. Cosponsored by Eleutherian Mills-Hagley
Foundation.
FLORIDA
14.7
Historic American Engineering Record: State of Florida
Inventory.
Hartmann, John Paul, princ. inves.
Orlando: Florida Technological Univ., College of
Engineering, 1973.
Informal publ.; spiral bound; iv + 38 pp. ; not illus.;
brief biblio.; limited distribution; OP.
An early publication in the HAER state inventory
series. Prepared on contract by Florida Technological
University in 1973. Consists of a narrative overview
of Florida's industrial history with lists of
significant sites interspersed. A simple listing of
sites by county follows the narrative.
121
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ILLINOIS
14.8
An Inventory of Historic Structures Within the Illinois
and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor, Vol. I.
See entry 4.32.
14.9
Lockport, Illinois: An HCRS Project Report.
Stevenson, Donald, proj. supvr.
Washington: GPO for HCRS/DOI, 1980.
Soft cover, 74 pp.; 29 photos; 30 dwgs.; schematics and
maps; OP; GPO # 1980-0-334-820; HCRS Publ. # 35.
A HAER rehabilitation study. Report by an 8-man HAER
team which studied the historic district of Lockport,
Illinois on the Illinois and Michigan Canal.
Recommendations are made on the reuse of historic
buildings and the development of a system of trails to
revitalize the declining commercial center of the town.
Project cosponsored by HAER and the City of Lockport.
See entries 4.32, 4.33, 4.34, 4.35, 4.36.
LOUISIANA
14.10
The McNeil Street Pumping Station Museum.
Reynolds, Terry S., Philip C. Wright.
[n.p.], 1981.
Brochure; 8 panels; 3 photos; 3 dwgs.
Summary of a proposal to convert the McNeil Street
Pumping Station to a museum. Recommendations based on
a NAER recording project in 1980. The station, part of
the Shreveport, Louisiana, water supply, was one of the
last large on-line steam-powered pumping stations in
the United States. Cosponsored by NAER and the City of
Shreveport.
MARYLAND
14.11
"E. C. COLLIER: Two-Sail Bateau 'Skipjack'. "
Anderson, Richard K., Jr.
122
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Seaways, Journal of Maritime History and Research
2 (1) 54 (January/February 1991)
6 pp.; 13 photos; 2 dwgs.
Photo essay on the HAER recordation of the 1910 vessel,
E. C. COLLIER, built on Deal Island, Maryland, for
oystering on the Chesapeake Bay. Now owned by the
Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, at St. Michaels,
Maryland, she is one of the oldest such vessels
surviving and relatively unaltered.
MASSACHUSETTS
14.12
A Guide to the Industrial Archeology of Boston Proper.
Stott, Peter.
Cambridge, MA. MIT Press, 1964.
Interim edition; soft cover; 66 pp.; 16 photos; 3 maps.
Prepared for the Thirteenth Annual Conference of the
Society of Industrial Archeology (Boston, June 14-17,
1984). The project to produce the information resulted
from the cooperation of HAER and the Massachusetts
Historical Commission. The commission sponsored the
Cultural Resources Reconnaissance Survey, which also
provided information. Other cooperators included the
Charles River Museum of Industry in Waltham and members
of the Society for Industrial Archeology, Northern and
Southern New England Chapters. HAER photographer Jet
Lowe was assigned to do large-format photography for
the book. Intended as part of a larger work (never
published) covering Middlesex, Norfolk, and Suffolk
Counties.
14.13
Lowell Canal System.
Malone, Patrick M., ed.
Lowell, MA.: Lowell Museum, 1976.
Soft cover, 27 pp.; 12 photos; 11 dwgs.; OP.
A brief study based on the 1974-1975 HAER recording
project in Lowell. An interim version titled The Lowell
Canal Survey was published by HAER earlier in 1976 with
19 pages, the same text but fewer illustrations.
123
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Cosponsors of the recording project include HAER,
Slater Mill Historic Site, City of Lowell, Lowell City
Development Authority, Historical Commission of the
City of Lowell, University of Lowell, Lowell Historical
Society, Human Services Corporation, and Proprietors of
the Locks and Canals in the Merrimack Valley.
14.14
The Lower Merrimack River Valley: An Inventory of
Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites.
Malloy, Peter M., ed. and dir.; also author of intro.
[Washington]: HAER/NPS/DOI, 1976.
Soft cover; xvi + 110 pp.; 19 photos; 5 dwgs. and maps;
OP.
An inventory of structures built prior to 1930 in the
Lower Merrimack River Valley from North Chelmsford to
Newburyport, Massachusetts. Includes documentation
made in Lawrence and Lowell by HABS and HAER teams.
Brief introduction describes the industrial history of
the area. Part of the HAER state and regional inventory
series.
MICHIGAN
14.15
The Lower Peninsula of Michigan: An Inventory of
Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites.
Hyde, Charles K., proj. dir.; Diane B. Abbott, ed.
[Washington]: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1976.
Soft cover; xiii + 322 pp.; 62 photos; indices; OP.
Part of HAER inventory series. Covers more than 650
sites inventoried in 1975-76. Brief entries are
organized by industry or engineering type with a brief
introduction to each section. Project director was
professor at Wayne State University. Sponsors of
inventory included HAER; Michigan History Division,
Michigan Department of State; Wayne State University;
Michigan Society of Professional Engineers. See entry
14.18.
14.16
Old Reliable: An Illustrated History of the Quincy
Mining Company.
Lankton, Larry D., and Charles K. Hyde.
124
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
Hancock, MI. The Quincy Mine Hoist Association, Inc.,
1982.
Hard cover; 159 pp.; 35 photos; 17 dwgs. Avail. from
the Quincy Mine Hoist Association, Inc., Box 265,
Hancock, MI 49930.
Sponsored by HAER and based on the 1978 Quincy project.
Lankton was historian for this HAER project. History
of one of the mines in America's first large-scale
copper mining area.
14.17
Sault Ste. Marie: A Project Report.
Reynolds, Terry S.; Douglas L. Griffin, fwd.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1982.
Soft cover; 132 pp.; 32 photos; 34 dwgs.; biblio.; OP.
A history of the Michigan Lake Superior Power Plant,
the longest horizontal-shaft hydroelectric powerhouse
in the world, which combined power generation with the
production of calcium carbide. Based on records
produced during a HAER recording project in 1978. A
rehabilitation report, but largely historical in
content, it includes suggestions for reuse of vacant
parts of buildings. Cosponsors included HAER; Michigan
History Division, Michigan Department of State;
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers;
Chippewa County Historical Society; Edison Sault
Electric Company; Lake Superior State College; City of
Sault Ste. Marie.
14.18
The Upper Peninsula of Michigan: An Inventory of
Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites.
Hyde, Charles K., proj. dir.; Diane B. Abbott, ed.
[Washington]: HAER/OAHP/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Soft cover; xvi + 236 pp.; 92 photos; index; OP.
Part of HAER inventory series. Covers 318 sites
inventoried in 1977. Organization of entries same as
for inventory of Lower Peninsula. Sponsors of
inventory include HAER; Michigan History Division,
Michigan Department of State; Northern Michigan
University. See entry 14.15.
125
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
MONTANA
14.19
Butte, Montana: A Project Report.
Comp, T. Allan, proj. dir.
Washington: NPS/DOI, 1981.
Soft cover; 100 pp. i 42 photos; 13 dwgs. and maps; OP;
GPO # 831-034.
A rehabilitation project undertaken when HAER functions
were regionalized under HCRS. The project was
initiated and directed by the Northwest Regional Office
of HCRS without review by the HAER Washington office.
Report printed by NPS after abolition of HCRS. Report
is the product of a summer team which developed a
revitalization strategy based on historic preservation
for Butte's central business district. Cosponsored by
HCRS, City of Butte, Montana State Historic
Preservation Office, Montana Historical Society. Comp
was chief of cultural resources, Northwest Regional
office, HCRS, and former HAER historian.
14.20
City Hall Central Mall, Commercial Avenue, Anaconda.
Comp, T. Allan, proj. dir.
[Washington]: HAER/HCRS/DOI, 1979.
Soft cover; 12 pp.; 13 dwgs.; OP.
A pamphlet illustrated with line drawings showing how
older buildings on Anaconda's Commercial Avenue could
be integrated into a new climatized shopping mall.
Produced by the 1979 Butte/Anaconda Rehabilitation
Action team. See entry 14.21.
14.21
Moving Along Main Street.
Comp, T. Allan, proj. dir.
[Washington]: HAER/HCRS/DOI, [1979].
Soft cover, 15 pp.; 2 photos; 13 dwgs.; OP.
Prepared by 1979 Butte/Anaconda Rehabilitation Action
Team. Gives a brief history of Anaconda and describes
older buildings along Main Street which illustrate that
126
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
history. Produced for local distribution to generate
interest in Anaconda's historic commercial
architecture. See entry 14.20.
14.22
Historic Bridges in Montana.
Quivik, Fredric L.
[Washington]: HAER/NPS/DOI, 1982.
Soft cover; 85 pp.; 40 photos; 8 dwgs.; OP. GPO # 836-
148.
A report based on field work which produced
approximately 500 HAER inventory cards for vehicular
and railroad bridges built before 1945 in Montana. It
contains a general history of bridge building in the
state and descriptions of 80 representative structures.
Cooperators with HAER were Montana Highway Department,
Montana State Historic Preservation Office, Montana
Historical Society. The survey served as a prototype
for other states conducting inventories to identify
historic bridges that might be affected, based on HAER
standards, by the national bridge replacement program
of the 1970 Federal Highway Act. Several other states
including Idaho, Colorado, and Arizona have used HAER
inventory cards in conducting their statewide bridge
inventories.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
14.23
Rehabilitation: Claremont 1978: Planning for Adaptive
Use and Energy Conservation in an Historic Mill
Village.
Leach, Charles, proj. supvr.; T. Allan Comp, proj. dir.
Washington: HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Soft cover, iii + 89 pp.; 68 photos; 64 dwgs.; maps,
sketches; OP. HCRS publ. # 22. GPO #979-0-302-233.
A rehabilitation study which documented underutilized
industrial buildings--primarily mills on the Sugar
River--in the urban center of Claremont, New Hampshire.
Study suggests adaptive uses of the structures to take
advantage of the Tax Reform Act of 1976. Cosponsors
included HAER; Technical Preservation Services
Division, DOI; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
127
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Development; City of Claremont; National Center for
Appropriate Technology; U.S. Department of Energy.
NEW JERSEY
14.24
Great Falls SUM Survey: A Report on the First Summer's
Work.
DeLony, Eric, proj. dir.; Russell Fries, proj. supvr.
Washington: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1973.
Soft cover; iv. + 81 pp.; 11 photos; 13 dwgs.; OP.
Documentation of the first summer of HAER recording of
industrial sites along the water power system developed
by the Society for Useful Manufactures (SUM) in
Paterson, New Jersey. In cooperation with the Great
Falls Development Corporation, Paterson.
NEW MEXICO
14.25
Pueblo of Laguna: A Project Report.
Baer, Marjorie, and Ann Baggerman Frej.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1984.
Soft cover; vii + 79 pp.; 52 photos; 43 dwgs.; GPO#
1984-0-430-477:QL3. Avail. free from HABS/HAER,
National Park Service, Box 37127, Washington, DC
20013-7127.
A rehabilitation report based on the work of an 8
person team who lived and worked at the New Mexico
pueblo in summer 1979. Discusses the history of Laguna
and suggests ways to rehabilitate deteriorating
portions of the pueblo to make them more compatible
with modern living conditions and, therefore,
encourage the tribe to maintain its communal living
patterns. Baer was supervisory historian and Frej was
community planner for the project. Cosponsors included
HCRS, the Laguna Tribal Council, Bureau of Indian
Affairs, and DOI.
128
HAER
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
NEW YORK
14.26
Drawings of the Adirondac Ironworks.
Seely, Bruce E.
Tahawus, N.Y.: NL Industries, Inc., MacIntyre
Development, [ca. 1978].
Folio of 13 HAER dwgs. plus 1 p. of text in a folder;
OP.
Measured drawings of the Adirondack Iron and Steel
Company New Furnace, Tahawus, New York. Seely was
project leader and historian.
14.27
From Fire to Rust: Business, Technology, and Work at
the Lackawanna Steel Plant, 1899 - 1983.
Leary, Thomas E., and Elizabeth C. Sholes.
[Buffalo]: Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society,
1987.
Soft cover; 134 pp.; 73 photos; 5 dwgs.
A history of Lackawanna Steel Company and its
successor, Bethlehem Steel, at Lackawanna, New York.
Much of the research for this book was conducted as
part of a cooperative project with HAER. Contemporary
photos by Jet Lowe.
14.28
Iron Architecture in New York City: Two Studies in
Industrial Archeology.
Waite, John G., and William Rowe III.
Albany: New York State Historic Trust with the Society
for Industrial Archeology, 1972.
Soft cover; 99 pp; 24 photos; 34 dwgs.; OP.
Histories of the Edgar Laing Stores and the Cooper
Union, illustrating the early and innovative use of
iron in architecture. Published for the first annual
meeting of the Society for Industrial Archeology in New
York City, April 1972. Illustrated with photos and
drawings from the collections of HABS (Laing Stores)
and HAER (Cooper Union). Part of continuing HABS/HAER
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
cooperation with the New York State Historic Trust.
Waite, an architect active in New York preservation,
was involved with the HABS recording of the Laing
Stores.
14.29
Long Island: An Inventory of Historic Engineering and
Industrial Sites.
Stott, Peter H., ed.; John A. Gable, dir.
Washington: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1974.
Soft cover; 75 pp.; 8 photos; 11 sketches and maps;
index; OP; NPS publication #134. GPO #887-659.
Part of the HAER inventory series. Brief entries for
130 sites in four Long Island counties inventoried from
January to April 1974. Cosponsored by HAER and the
Society for the Preservation of Long Island
Antiquities.
14.30
Long Island Wind and Tide Mills: An Interim Report.
Comp, T. Allan, and Kathleen S. Hoeft, eds.
Washington: HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1976.
Soft cover; 19 pp. i 5 photos; 14 dwgs.; OP, GPO# 911-
694.
A brief report on the HAER projects during the summers
of 1975 and 1976 to record wind and tide mills on Long
Island. Cosponsored by HAER and the Society for the
Preservation of Long Island Antiquities. See entry
14.33.
14.31
A Report on the Mohawk-Hudson Area Survey: A Selective
Recording Study of the Industrial Archeology of the
Mohawk and Hudson River Valleys in the Vicinity of
Troy, New York, June - September 1969. Smithsonian
Studies in History and Technology, Number 26.
Vogel, Robert M., ed.
Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1973.
Soft cover; viii + 210 pp.; 242 photos; 66 dwgs. and
maps; OP. GPO # 1973-0-497-570.
130
HAER
DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
The project was funded and sponsored by HABS, prepared
as a demonstration project for engineering and
industrial recording by HAER, in advance of HAER
appropriations. This report on the first HAER
recording project documented major American industrial
landmarks built at the confluence of the Mohawk and
Hudson Rivers, a major early industrial area. A
seminal volume, the report helped to establish
industrial archeology as a separate discipline. Robert
M. Vogel, then curator of Mechanical and Civil
Engineering at the Smithsonian Institution, and James
C. Massey, then HABS chief, were instrumental in the
establishment of the project, and Vogel served as
project director. Cosponsors included NPS, the
Smithsonian Institution, American Society of Civil
Engineers, and New York State Office of Parks and
Recreation. Publication includes contributions by
Robert M. Vogel, Selma Thomas, Diana S. Waite, R.
Carole Huberman, Samuel Reznick, and Richard S. Allen.
14.32
"Valley Crossings on the Old Croton Aqueduct."
Lankton, Larry D.
IA, The Journal of the Society for Industrial
Archeology 4 (1) : 27-42 (1978).
16 pp. i 5 photos; 14 dwgs.
Article by HAER Historian Lankton on the HAER recording
of the Old Croton Aqueduct.
14.33
Windmills of Long Island.
Hefner, Robert.
New York: Society for the Preservation of Long Island
Antiquities with W. W. Norton & Company, 1983.
Soft cover; 111 pp.; 82 photos; 24 dwgs.
Based on HAER inventory and recording projects, 1974-
1977. Current photos by Jet Lowe. Hefner is an expert
on windmills and their restoration. SPLIA was project
cooperator. See entry 14.30.
131
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
NORTH CAROLINA
14.34
North Carolina: An Inventory of Historic Engineering
and Industrial Sites.
Glass, Brent D., ed., proj. dir., and intro.
[Washington]: HAER/NPS/DOI, 1975.
Soft cover, XV + 109 pp.; 23 photos; 8 sketches; index;
NPS publ. #150. Avail. from North Carolina Division of
Archives and History, 109 E. Jones St., Raleigh, NC
27611.
Part of the HAER inventory series. Entries for 173
pre-1925 sites in North Carolina based on research
carried out in 1974 and 1975. Co-sponsored by HAER and
North Carolina Division of Archives and History.
14.35
North Carolina Recording Project: Report on the First
Summer's Work.
Seapker, Janet, proj. coord.; and Brent Glass, ed.
[Washington]: HAER and North Carolina Division of
Archives and History, 1976.
Soft cover; 21 pp.; 12 photos; 5 dwgs.; OP. GPO# 912-
933.
Report briefly describing three sites recorded by HAER
during summer 1976: Flowers' Farm Cotton Press, Morven;
Pomona Terra Cotta Manufacturing Company, Greensboro;
Salem Manufacturing Company, Winston-Salem. Results of
the first of three proposed summers of recording
sponsored by the North Carolina Division of Archives
and History, which also sponsored the HAER Inventory in
1974-75.
OHIO
14.36
Cleveland: An Inventory of Historic Engineering and
Industrial Sites.
Bluestone, Daniel M., ed.
[Washington]: HAER/OAHP/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Soft cover; vi + 118 pp.; 46 photos; index; OP.
132
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
Part of the HAER Inventory series. Results of a 1976
inventory identifying 114 sites which illustrate the
industrial history of one of the premier manufacturing
cities of the late 19th century. Includes brief
overview of Cleveland's economic development.
Cosponsors include HAER; Cleveland Landmarks
Commission; Industrial Valley Study Advisory Committee;
Cleveland Foundation/Greater Cleveland Associated
Foundation; Cleveland State University. Includes sites
identified in an earlier, limited study by Clarence H.
C. James. See entry 14.37.
14.37
An Inventory of Noteworthy Engineering and Industrial
Works in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, With Emphasis on the
Cleveland Industrial Valley.
James, Clarence H. C., princ. inves.
Cleveland: Cleveland State Univ., 1975.
Informal publ. ; 32 pp. ; 34 photos; biblio.; limited
distribution; OP.
Brief inventory of 33 sites in the Cleveland Industrial
Valley conducted during 1975 by Clarence H. C. James,
chairman, department of civil engineering and
engineering mechanics at Cleveland State University.
Produced for HAER by the Cleveland Landmarks Commission
using a grant from the Cleveland Foundation. A broader
survey was conducted the next year. See entry 14.36.
OKLAHOMA
14.38
Historic American Engineering Record: State of Oklahoma
Inventory.
Ellifritt, Duane S., princ. inves.
Stillwater: Oklahoma State Univ., School of
Engineering, 1974.
Informal publ. ; spiral-bound; 33 pp. ; 22 photos; brief
biblio.; limited distribution; OP.
Part of the HAER inventory series. The 22 sites are
presented in a narrative outline, arranged by
industrial classification. Inventory conducted on
contract for HAER in 1973 by Oklahoma State University.
133
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
Ellifritt was assistant professor of civil engineering
at OSU.
PENNSYLVANIA
14.39
Fitzsimons, Gray, ed.
Blair County and Cambria County, Pennsylvania: An
Inventory of Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites.
Washington, D.C.: HABS/HAER and America's Industrial
Heritage Project/NPS/DOI, 1990.
Soft cover; 6 + 355 pp.; 195 entries; 53 photos; 2
dwgs. i 3 maps; biblio, index.
Based on a HAER inventory conducted during summer 1987
and summer and fall 1988, using a computerized format
for recording data. The inventory included about 250
industrial sites, 25 railroad bridges, 20 highway and
pedestrian bridges, and 6 railroad tunnels.
Contributions by Denise A. Bradley, Ken Heineman,
Richard Henderson, Thomas Lindlom, Margaret M.
Mulrooney, Charles Scott, Nancy Shedd, and Peter Stott.
14.40
Fayette County, Pennsylvania: An Inventory of Historic
Engineering and Industrial Sites.
Heald, Sarah H., ed.
Washington, D.C.: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1990. Avail. from
America's Industrial Heritage Project, P.O. Box 565,
Hollidaysburg, PA 16648.
Soft cover; 260 pp. ; 134 entries, 83 photos plus cover,
1 map; biblio., appen., index.
Field work on this HAER project in southwestern
Pennsylvania, a joint effort with America's Industrial
Heritage Project, commenced in March 1989. The book
contains a 23-page historical overview plus an
inventory of work sites, buildings, structures, and
company towns associated with the varied industrial
history of the area. Industries covered include iron
and steel, coal and coke, transportation, distilling
and brewing, food processing, glass production,
manufacturing, textiles, extractive industries, and
utilities. The recording project was directed by Gray
Fitzsimons. HAER historians were Frances Robb, Rolla
134
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
Queen, Christine Davis, and Kenneth Rose. Sarah Heald
served as book editor and wrote many entries.
Appendices include lists of coal and coke sites,
historic resources and their significance, and
archeological sites.
14.41
Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania: An Inventory of
Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites.
Shedd, Nancy S., auth.; Sarah H. Heald, ed.
Washington, D.C: HABS/HAER and America's Industrial
Heritage Project/NPS/DOI, 1991.
Soft cover; xiii + 197 pp.; 105 entries; 2 dwgs., 114
photos, 6 maps; biblio; index.
Local historian Nancy S. Shedd produced descriptive and
historical materials and photographs for this record of
nearly 80 industrial works and engineering structures,
in addition to an introductory essay on Huntingdon
County's industrial development. The publication also
contains contributions by Gray Fitzsimons, Deane
Mellender, and the Friends of the East Broad Top. An
inventory of structures associated with East Broad Top
Railroad, whose shops in Rock Hill Furnace are a
National Historic Landmark, was carried out by the
Friends of East Broad Top, led by Philip J. Padgett and
Deane Mellender.
14.42
A Legacy of Coal: The Coal Company Towns of
Southeastern Pennsylvania.
Mulrooney, Margaret M.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1969
Soft cover; xiii + 167 pp., 51 photos; 27 dwgs.; 19
maps; 2 charts; biblio.; glossary; limited edition. GPO
#1989-239-147-10507.
Part of America's Industrial Heritage Project series.
Includes general study of coal-company towns, in
Pennsylvania and other states, and studies of Star
Junction, Windber, and Colver, Pennsylvania. See
entries 4.71 and 4.72. Mulrooney was HAER historian.
135
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
14.43
Lehigh Canal: An HCRS Project Report.
Ware, Donna M., and James Vaseff, proj. dirs.
Washington: HCRS/DOI, 1981.
Soft cover; 89 pp.; 73 photos; 50 dwgs, maps and
charts; OP. GPO #1981 0-334-869.
A HAER rehabilitation study which examines the
remaining 46 miles of the 1827 Lehigh Coal and
Navigation Company Canal which provided transportation
for northeastern Pennsylvania coal and a source of
water power for new industry. The report looks at the
history and physical remains of the canal and the
communities it passes through and makes suggestions for
developing a recreational path along the route and
coordinating restoration begun in several communities.
14.44
Rehabilitation: Fairmount Waterworks 1978: Conservation
and Recreation in a National Historic Landmark.
Vaseff, James R., proj. leader; Hugh McCauley, proj.
supvr.
Washington: HAER/HCRS/DOI, 1979.
Soft cover; 35 pp.; 36 photos; 4 dwgs. i OP. GPO #1979
0-295-577.
A rehabilitation study prepared in conjunction with a
1978 recording project to document Fairmount
Waterworks, the Greek Revival complex overlooking the
Schuylkill River in Philadelphia, which was the most
technologically advanced water supply system in its day
(operated 1815-1909). Study seeks ways to reuse the
complex while maintaining its historic integrity.
RHODE ISLAND
14.45
Rhode Island: An Inventory of Historic Engineering and
Industrial Sites.
Kulik, Gary, proj. dir., author of pref. and intro.;
Julia C. Bonham.
[Washington]: HAER/OAHP/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
136
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DOCUMENTARY PUBLICATIONS
Soft cover; XV + 296 pp.; 31 photos; biblio.; index;
OP; GPO #1978 0-277-203.
Part of HAER inventory series. Contains sites
inventoried from 1975-77. Sites arranged by town and
then industrial type. Brief historical overview. Gary
Kulik was curator of Slater Mill Historic site, which
cosponsored the inventory with HAER and the Rhode
Island Historical Preservation Commission. Bonham was a
student at Brown University.
VERMONT
14.46
Elm Street Bridge.
Zembala, Dennis M.; Douglas Ross, intro.
Woodstock, VT. Woodstock National Historic District
Commission, 1977.
Booklet; iv + 12 pp. ; 10 photos; 2 dwgs.
HAER documentation of an 1867-70 Parker truss iron
bridge in Woodstock. Zembala was HAER historian, Ross
secretary-chairman of the Woodstock National Historic
District Commission.
VIRGINIA
14.47
Rehabilitation: Danville 1978: A Strategy for Building
Reuse and Neighborhood Conservation.
[Comp, T. Allan, proj. dir.
Washington: HAER/HCRS/DOI, 1979.
Soft cover; 79 pp.; 33 photos; 31 dwgs.; OP; GPO #1979
0-292-834.
A HAER rehabilitation study undertaken to demonstrate
the feasibility of reusing historic industrial
buildings in a tobacco warehouse district in Danville,
Virginia, and to show how the historic preservation
provisions of the 1976 Tax Reform Act could affect such
a project. Cosponsored by HAER and two other HCRS
agencies, the National Register of Historic Places and
Interagency Archeological Services.
137
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
MICROFORM AND FILMS
15.1
Coke Making in the Beehive Oven.
Washington: Produced for HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1975.
16mm. film; 18 min.; Rentals avail. from Harpers Ferry
Historical Association, Box 197, Harpers Ferry, WV
25425.
A HAER film shot in Betz, West Virginia, documenting
the process of making coke in a blast furnace using
19th-century techniques. One of two occasions when
HAER used film to record an early industrial process.
15.2
Seneca Glass.
Washington: Produced for HAER/OAHP/NPS/DOI, 1975.
16 mm. film. 24 min. Rentals avail. from Harpers
Ferry Historical Association, Box 197, Harpers Ferry,
WV 25425.
A HAER film which documents the production of handblown
glassware at Seneca Glassworks in Morgantown, West
Virginia. The company has subsequently gone out of
business. Illustrates the efficiency of film in
documenting surviving industrial processes that use
19th-century equipment or techniques. This film won a
Golden Eagle award for excellence in documentary film
making.
15.3
For the Record: How HABS/HAER Documents America's
Heritage.
See entry 5.3.
139
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
PUBLICATIONS ABOUT HAER HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
(listed alphabetically by author)
16.1
Allen, Frederick.
"The HAER Collection."
American Heritage of Invention and Technology 2 (1) : 17-
23 (Summer 1986).
7 pp.; 9 dwgs. plus cover dwg.
Brief text about HAER program accompanied by a fine
selection of HAER measured drawings, reproduced as
blueprints in white line on dark blue background.
16.2
Anderson, Richard K., Jr.
"Lifting Lines for the Schooner WAWONA." Technical
Note.
APT Bulletin 9 (1) : 80-88 (1987).
9 pp.; 7 photos; 3 dwgs.
Documentation technology developed to record the 1897
WAWONA, located in Seattle, Washington. Discussion of
the recent HAER maritime program as a logical
continuation in program if not in name of the WPA
Historic American Merchant Marine Survey, which was
active 1936-37. Its records of 426 vessels are in the
National Museum of American History, Smithsonian
Institution.
16.3
Bowie, John R.
"Documentation of America's Industrial Heritage: The
Historic American Engineering Record."
APT Bulletin, 17(1): 46-56 (1985).
3 photos.; 11 dwgs.
General article on HAER and its documentation of
industrial structures by an architect who has worked on
several HABS and HAER teams. Appendices include (1)
a statistical list of HAER projects by state and (2)
classifying recorded structures by the HAER inventory
classification system.
141
HAER
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
16.4
Britton, David.
"Saving U.S. Industry in Words and Pictures. "
Technology Review 93 (5) : 52-61 (Jul 1990).
10 pp. i 17 photos; 9 dwgs.; plus cover photo in color.
General article about HAER program and its recording
projects.
16.5
DeLony, Eric [N.]
"Accessing the HAER Collection. "
Indiana Covered Bridge Society Newsletter 27 (2) (April
1990).
2 photos; 2 dwgs.
A guide to the use of HAER records.
16.6
DeLony, Eric.
"Conflict between Structurally Deficient and
Historically Significant Bridges."
IABSE Reports 39: 3-8 (1982)
Zurich: International Association for Bridges and
Structural Engineering, 1982.
6 pp. i 4 photos.
Publication of paper given by DeLony, then HAER
principal architect, at IABSE Symposium on Maintenance,
Repair, and Rehabilitation of Bridges. Highlights
issues in the conflict between the need for
structurally safe bridges and their integrity and
preservation as historical resources. Addresses HAER
bridge documentation program.
16.7
DeLony, Eric [N.]
"HAER's Historic Bridge Program."
IA: The Journal of the Society for Industrial
Archeology 15(2) : 57-71 (1989)
142
HAER
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
15 pp. i 7 photos; 6 dwgs.
An overview of HAER's bridge documentation program by
the Chief of HAER.
16.8
DeLony, Eric.
"HAER's Historic Bridge Program: How Well Are We
Doing?"
In Proceedings of the 2nd Historic Bridges Conference,
pp. 140-58. (Columbus: Ohio State Univ. and Ohio
Historical Society, 1988.)
Informal publ. of xeroxed typescripts of conference
papers; 11 dwgs.
Discussion by HAER Chief DeLony of HAER recording
program to survey and document historic bridges. One
of ten papers delivered at the second Historic Bridge
Conference held March 11, 1988, at Columbus, sponsored
by the Ohio State University and Ohio Historical
Society.
16.9
DeLony, Eric N., and Michael J. Auer.
"Historic Bridges: Preservation Challenges."
CRM 14(1): 1,3-7 (1991).
6 pp. ; 4 photos.
Brief analysis of problems of preserving bridges for
continued use without endangering users, as well as
summaries of recent state initiatives relating to their
preservation and the HAER bridge documentation program.
16.10
DeLony, Eric N.
"Preservation des Ponts: Un Defi a la Conservation."
Monuments Historiques, Etats-Unis. (173) 57-60 (March-
April 1991).
4 pp. i 6 photos.
In this special issue on historic preservation in the
United States, HAER Chief DeLony's article spells out
the special problems of saving historic bridges.
143
HAER
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
16.11
Fitzsimons, [G.] Gray, and John A. Burns.
"Historic Structures: Documenting the Railroads."
National Railway Bulletin 53 (4) : 4-23 (1988).
19 photos; 7 dwgs., incl. front and rear covers; avail.
from National Railway Historical Society, P.O. Box
4059, Oak Park, IL 60303.
History and discussion of HABS/HAER recording of
railroad structures by two members of the HABS/HAER
staff. Photos and drawings from HABS/HAER.
16.12
Grow, Lawrence.
Waiting for the 5:05. Terminal, Station and Depot in
America.
See entry 4.9.
16.13
Lowe, Jet, photography; Michael Leccese, essay; David
Weitzman, intro.; Robert J. Kapsch, intro.
Industrial Eye: Photographs by Jet Lowe from the
Historic American Engineering Record.
Washington: The Preservation Press, 1986.
Hard cover; 128 pp.; 119 photos (33 in color) i avail.
from the National Trust for Historic Preservation,
1785 Massachusetts Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20036.
A selection of some of the most spectacular photographs
taken for the HAER collection by John T. (Jet) Lowe,
this much-honored book was edited by Diane Maddex of
the National Trust's Preservation Press, with an
introduction by Weitzman, a profile of the photographer
by Michael Leccese, contributing editor of Preservation
News, and photo captions by Gray Fitzsimons of HAER.
See related article, "America's Daredevil
Documentarian, by Michael Leccese, entry 16.17.
16.14
Industrial Heritage.
[Transactions of the Triennial International Conference
on the Conservation of Industrial Monuments; issues
vary as to subtitles: "National Reports" and
"Transactions. "]
144
HAER
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
International Committee for the Conservation of the
Industrial Heritage, co-published with national
industrial archeology groups on the occasion of
periodic international conferences.
"United States Reports" featuring HAER include:
Griffin, Douglas L. "The Historic American Engineering
Record: Programme and Projects,' pp. 5-17, in First
International Conference on the Conservation of
Industrial Monuments, Transactions (Ironbridge,
England: Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, 1975) ; 1 photo;
3 dwgs.
DeLony, Eric. "Preserving American Industrial and
Engineering Monuments at the Federal Level," pp. 272-
83, in SICCIM, Second International Congress on the
Conservation of Industrial Monuments: Transactions
(Bochum, Federal Republic of Germany: Deutsches
Bergbau-Museum, 1978).
Newell, Diane, and Robert Vogel. "North American
Report," pp. 91-108, in The Industrial Heritage,
Transactions of the Third International Conference on
the Conservation of Industrial Monuments. Volume 1,
National Reports (Stockholm: Nordiska Museet, 1978).
10 photos; 1 dwg.
Griffin, Douglas L. "Power Supply: An Overview of
Historic Resources in the United States, Introductory
Paper,' pp. 259-79, in The Industrial Heritage,
Transactions of the Third International Conference on
the Conservation of Industrial Monuments, Volume 3.
(Stockholm: Nordiska Museet, 1981). 24 dwgs. A three-
page critique of the paper by Robert Vogel follows.
DeLony, Eric. "Etats-Unis," pp. 57-68, in ICCIH 81,
The Industrial Heritage, Fourth International
Conference on the Conservation of the International
Heritage, Volume 1, National Reports (Paris: CICAC,
1981). 5 photos; 2 dwgs. Reprinted in Industrial
Archaeology 2 (1) (Winter 1982).
DeLony, Eric. "United States," pp. 117-23, in
Industrial Heritage 84, National Reports. The Fifth
Conference on the Conservation of the Industrial
Heritage, Volume 1 (Washington: Society for Industrial
Archeology, 1984). 3 photos; 1 dwg.
145
HAER
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
Wright, Helena E., and Eric N. DeLony. "United
States," pp. 140-9, in TICCIH Industrial Heritage--
Austria 1987, Transactions 1--National Reports (Vienna:
Federal Office for the Protection of Monuments and
Department of Industrial Archeology of the Technical
University of Vienna, 1987). 4 photos; 1 dwg.
These U.S. "National Reports" feature the work of HAER
and its projects over the three-year period between
these triennial international conferences.
16.15
Jackson, Donald C.
"HAER and Electrical Engineering."
IEEE Transactions on Education E-27(4) : 211-7 (November
1989)
General article on HAER approach to documentation of
electrical engineering and discussion of three major
HAER power-plant projects. Jackson was HAER historian.
16.16
Kapsch, R[obert]. J.
Preservation of Historic Structures through
Documentation: ASCE and the Historic American
Engineering Record.
[New York]: American Society of Civil Engineers, 1982.
Preprint 82-059; soft cover; 14 pp.; 2 photos; 4 dwgs.
Preprint of paper given by HABS/HAER chief Kapsch to
the 1982 ASCE convention, dealing with the importance
of the study of history--and HAER documentation--to the
engineering profession.
16.17
Leccese, Michael.
"America's Daredevil Documentarian."
Historic Preservation 37 (5) : 46-53 (October 1985).
8 pp. ; 7 photos.
A profile of HAER photographer Jet Lowe, illustrated
with some of his best hard-to-get photographs. Leccese
was a co-editor of Preservation News.
146
HAER
HISTORY AND OPERATIONS
16.18
Massey, James C.
"Landmarks of American Engineering. "
Preservation News 9 (5) (May 1969). Reprinted 1969.
The first article about HAER. It appeared first in the
National Trust for Historic Preservation's monthly
newspaper and then was reprinted on yellow paper as a
handout to explain the new HAER program to the public.
16.19
Potter, Elisabeth Walton, and Alfred M. Staehli.
"A History of HABS and HAER in Oregon, 1933-1983. "
See entry 6.45.
16.20
Tompkins, Sally Kress, et. al.
"A Tradition of Excellence in Documentation. "
CRM Bulletin 9 (3) (June 1986).
Includes description of HAER program by Eric DeLony and
a selection of HAER dwgs. See entry 6.53.
16.21
[Vogel, Robert M.]
NETMS I, The New England Textile Mills Survey, June-
September 1967: Report of the First Summer's Work.
See entry 6.56.
147
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
RECORDING INSTRUCTIONS AND SPECIFICATIONS
(listed chronologically)
17.1
How to Complete HAER Inventory Cards.
Washington: HAER/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Informal publ. ; 16 pp. ; 3 photos; 3 maps; xeroxes
avail. from HABS/HAER.
Detailed instructions on filling out the one-page HAER
Inventory form. These forms were widely used to
inventory industrial and engineering sites in a number
of states. See entries under state inventories.
17.2
Historic American Engineering Record Standards and
Guidelines for Executive Order 11593 Documentation.
Washington: HAER/HCRS/DOI, 1979.
Informal publ. i 39 pp. (14 pp. text, 7 pp. sample
documentation, 18 pp. sample photos) ; 36 photos.
17.3
Guidelines for Inventories of Historic Buildings and
Engineering and Industrial Structures.
[Lankton, Larry D.]
Washington: HABS/HAER/HCRS/DOI, [1979].
Informal publ. i 72 pp.; not illus.
Detailed instructions for organizing an inventory and
completing the NAER Inventory forms, which are based
on the forms developed by HAER for statewide
inventories. Special emphasis is given in the
guidelines to inventorying industrial and engineering
structures which tend to be less familiar to the field
surveyor. Includes a list of industry and bridge truss
types, "Bridge Truss Types: A Guide to Dating and
Identifying, " AASLH Technical Leaflet, by T. Allan Comp
and Donald Jackson.
17.4
Guidelines for E.O. 11593 2 (c) Documentation.
See entries 7.16 and 7.17.
17.5
Historic American Engineering Record Field
Instructions.
149
HAER
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
Lankton, Larry D., and Richard K. Anderson [Jr.]
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/ 1982.
Informal publ.; ii + 199 pp.; 2 photos; 48 dwgs.; 13
maps; avail. from HABS/HAER; GPO #1988-221-973.
For the guidance of recording teams. The text,
covering all phases of documentation, was adapted from
a 1979 edition (Washington, D.C.: HAER/HCRS/DOI, June
1979; 141 pp., 30 dwgs.; 14 maps; OP) written by Larry
D. Lankton, HAER historian. Revisions and additions to
the section on architects' duties were made in the 1981
edition by Richard K. Anderson, HAER architect, who
also selected samples of past HAER drawings and
provided comments. The current printing, issued on
return of HABS/HAER to the NPS, still carries the date
1981 on the cover page.
17.6
"Standards for Architectural and Engineering
Documentation."
See entry 7.20 and 7.26.
17.7
HABS/HAER Historians Procedures Manual.
See entry 7.21.
17.8
Guidelines for Recording Historic Ships.
Anderson, Richard K., Jr.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS/DOI, 1988.
Soft cover; 364 pp.; 125 dwgs., sketches, and charts;
biblio.; GPO #1988-221-973; OP.
A detailed manual for recording large historic ships
according to HAER standards. Intended to be part of a
larger, forthcoming publication, Manual for
Documentation of Historic Marine Resources, to be
published by the National Trust for Historic
Preservation. Anderson was a HAER architect. Includes
several drawings from HAER Field Instructions and
Specifications for the Production of Photographs. Many
of the measured drawings in the Guidelines are from the
1936-37 Historic American Merchant Marine Survey.
150
HAER
RECORDING SPECIFICATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS
17.9
Recording Historic Structures.
See 7.25.
17.10
Transmitting Documentation to HABS/HAER/WASO.
See 7.24.
17.11
Secretary of the Interior's Standards and Guidelines
for Architectural and Engineering Documentation:
HABS/HAER Standards.
See entry 7.26.
151
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
(listed chronologically)
Annual Reports, Newsletters, Leaflets and Circulars,
Publications Lists
18.1
Agreement for the Historic American Engineering Record
to be carried on by the Department of Interior,
National Park Service, the American Society of Civil
Engineers and the Library of Congress.
[Washington] NPS/DOI, 1969
Informal pub. ; 3 pp.
Basic agreement establishing HAER.
18.2
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record, Annual Report.
See entry 8.12.
18.3
Historic American Engineering Record.
Washington: HABS/HAER/NPS, [1990].
Brochure; 16 panels; 6 dwgs. i 3 photos; avail. free
from HAER.
Most recent in a series of folded brochures providing a
general explanation of the HAER program. This edition
has a yellow and green cover. Comparable to a similar
series produced by HABS and intended for broad
distribution. The earliest HAER flyer was a single
sheet featuring the portal from a B & O Railroad
Bollman truss bridge and three paragraphs on HAER,
1970. In 1972 an eight-panel flyer was printed by GPO
as part of a series of related flyers describing all
the programs of the NPS' Office of Archeology and
Historic Preservation. The HAER brochure was gray-
green and contained one photo. (GPO #1972 515-964/10).
This was followed ca. 1978, when HAER was part of
NAER/HCRS, by a twelve-panel brochure with a dark blue
cover. (6 photos; 6 dwgs.)
18.4
[HCRS Annual Reports]
Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service.
See entry 8.11.
153
HAER
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
18.5
Yearby, Jean, comp. 1 Robert Kapsch, ed.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American
Engineering Record Publications List.
See entry 8.9.
154
HAER
OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS
(listed alphabetically by author)
19.1
Thomas, Selma, ed.; T. Allan Comp, intro.
Rehabilitation: An Alternative for Historic Industrial
Buildings.
[Washington]: HAER/OAHP/HCRS/DOI, 1978.
Soft cover; ix + 184 pp.; 44 photos; 50 dwgs.; OP; GPO
#1978 0-269-065.
Four case studies illustrating how incentives provided
by the Tax Reform Act of 1976 can encourage owners of
historic properties to rehabilitate their industrial
structures. Sites represented are Lynchburg, Virginia,
Columbus, Georgia, and Spencer and Winston-Salem, North
Carolina.
155
INDEX
Abbott, Diane B., 14.15, 14.18
Acoma Pueblo, 4.54, 6.35
AIA, see American Institute of Architects
AIA Journal, 6.12, 6.16, 6.43; also see Architecture and The
Octagon.
AIA Press, 7.23, 7.25
Alabama, 2.1; 2.2, 6.7; Mobile, 2.1, 2.2, 14.3
Alabama Historical Commission, 2.1
Alabama Historical Society, 6.7
ALABAMA Pilot Schooner, 14.3
Alaska, Kennecott, 14.4
Alaska Regional Office, National Park Service, 14.4
Alderfer, William K., 2.18
Alexander, Frances P., 4.34, 4.36
Allen, Frederick, 16.1
Allen, Richard Sanders, 1.7, 14.28
American Heritage of Invention and Technology, 16.1
American Institute of Architects, 4.1, 4.58, 6.21, 6.27, 6.45,
8.2, 8.8; also see under individual chapter names.
American Society of Civil Engineers, 14.1, 16.16
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 14.1, 14.2
Americana, 6.47
America's Industrial Heritage Project 4.71, 4.72, 4.75, 4.76, 4.77,
4.78, 14.39, 14.40, 14.41, 14.42
Ames, David, 4.53, 4.76
Ancient City Press, 6.35
Anderson, Adrian, 2.12
Anderson, Bart, 4.73
Anderson, Kenneth L., 6.53, 7.14
Anderson, Richard K., Jr., 6.53, 7.25, 16.2, 17.5, 17.8
APT Bulletin, 6.30, 16.2, 16.3
Architectural Forum, 4.2, 4.16, 4.17, 4.31, 4.41, 4.42, 4.43, 4.55,
4.66, 4.85
Architectural photogrammetry, 6.4, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4
Architecture, 6.21. See also AIA Journal.
Arizona, 14.2
Armstrong, James, 3.6, 13.2
Army, Department of, 4.82
Association of Historical Societies of Maryland, 2.14
Athenaeum of Philadelphia, 4.52
Atherton, Charles. 4.21, 4.26
Atlantic Richfield Foundation, 4.52
Auer, Michael, 16.3
Baer, Marjorie, 14.25
Bailey, Worth, 1.5, 1.6, 2.32, 6.2
Baker, T. Lindsay, 14.2
Barber, Rachel D., 4.35
Barthold, Elizabeth J., 6.3
Bassett, William B., 2.22
157
INDEX
Batchelor, Penelope Hartshorne, 6.55
Baynes, Beverly N., 11.2
Beatty, Laura, 6.4
Beck, William B., 2.22
Beinke, Nancy K. [Schwartz], 2.5, 2.6, 2.10, 9.13, 9.14
Belz, Kristin, 4.71
Bennett, Lola M., 4.72
Birmingham (AL) News-Age-Herald, 6.8
Black, Nancy W., 4.19
Bluestone, Daniel M., 14.36
Bonham, Julia C., 14.45
Boone, Ellen [Minnick], 11.4
Borchers, Perry E., 6.5, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4
Boucher, Jack E., 4.11, 4.26, 4.30, 4.79, 6.6, 6.21, 6.47, 6.55,
7.6, 7.16, 7.22
Bowie, John R., 16.3
Bradley, Denise A., 14.39
Brennecke, Patricia, 4.47
Bridges, 1.7, 6.1, 13.1, 14.22, 16.6, 16.7, 16.9, 16.10, 17.3
Brown, Frank III, 4.35
Bruegmann, Robert, 1.7, 4.10
Brumbaugh, Thomas B., 4.79
Buffalo and Erie County (New York) Historical Society, 4.58, 14.27
Buffalo and Western New York Chapter, AIA, 4.58
Buffmire, Dorothy C., 4.15, 8.4, 8.7, 8.10
Building Research, 7.22
Burkhardt, E. Walter, 6.8
Burkhardt, Varian, 6.8
Bureau of Indian Affairs, 14.25
[Burns], Deborah Stephens, 1.10, 7.21
Burns, John A., 1.7, 1.10, 4.77, 6.9, 6.10, 6.53, 7.11, 7.14, 7,16,
7.18, 7.19, 7.23, 7.25, 9.5, 16.11
California, 2.3; HABS recording in, 2.3, 4.5; Benicia, 4.10, 4.14;
Death Valley, 5.3, Monterey, 4.13; Palo Alto, 4.11, San Diego,
6.24; San Francisco Peninsula, 4.11; San Juan Bautista, 4.13;
Sonoma, 4.14
California Historical Society, 2.3
Canals, 4.23, 4.32, 4.33, 4.34, 4.35, 4.36, 4.78, 14.8, 14.9,
14.43
Carver, John A., Jr., 6.12
Cejka, Pat, 8.7
Chadwyck-Healy, 5.1
Chambers, S. Allan Jr., 2.3, 2.28, 2.31, 4.67, 6.13,
6.14, 6.15, 9.13, 9.14
Charles River (MA) Museum of Industry, 14.12
Chester County (Pennsylvania) Historical Society, 4.73
Chippewa County Historical Society, 14.17
CICAC, 16.14
Chronicle Books, 2.3
Charles Scribner's Sons, 2.16
158
INDEX
City halls, 4.1
Civil Works Administration, 4.37
Cleveland Foundation, 14.36, 14.37
Cleveland Landmarks Commission, 14.36, 14.37
Cleveland State University, 14.36, 14.37
Clouette, Bruce, 14.5
Coffin, Marie M., 3.3
Cole, Katherine H. (Stevenson), 3.6; 13.2
Colkert, Meredith B., Jr., 4.67
Collins, Kathleen, 3.11
Colorado, 14.2
Columbia Historical Society, 2.6
Commission of Fine Arts, see U.S. Commission of Fine Arts
Comp, T. Allan, 14.1, 14.19, 14.20, 14.21, 14.23, 14.30
Conant, Jonathan, 4.15
Connally, Ernest Allen, 3.1, 6.13, 6.55, 7.7, 7.8
Connecticut, 14.5; HABS history, 6.13; HABS records, 4.15; New
Haven, 4.15
Connecticut Historical Commission, 14.5
Connors, Seymour V., 14.2
Copper Mining and Concentrating, 14.4
Corkern, Wilton C., 6.17
Cornell University, 4.47
Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District, 4.87
CRM Bulletin, 6.53, 6.54
Curran Associates, 14.1
Darnell, Victor, 14.5
Davis, Christine, 14.40
DeHaas, John N., Jr., 4.49, 4.50
Delaware, 2.4, 14.6; HABS recording, 4.16, 4.17
Delong, David G., 1.7, 4.12, 4.57, 4.80, 6.18
DeLony, Eric (N.), 11.2, 11.4, 13.1, 14.24, 16.5, 16.6, 16.7, 16.8,
16.9, 16.10, 16.14, 16.20
Demaray, A. E., 8.1
DeRose, Joseph R., 4.36
Deutsches Bergbau Museum, 16.14
District of Columbia (Washington), architecture, 2.5, 2.6, 4.5,
4.18. 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22, 4.23, 4.24, 4.25, 4.26,
4.27; 4.28, 4.29, 4.30; HABS recording, 2.5, 4.5, 4.25;
Georgetown, 2.5, 2.16, 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22, 4.23,
4.24; White House, 4.29, 4.30
Dolinsky, Paul D., 6.19, 6.53, 7.25
Duross, Georgeanna [Hannum], 8.7
Dynes, Susan, 1.10, 3.6, 13.2
Eagle, Frederick C., 13.3
East Bay (CA) Chapter, AIA, 4.14
E. C. COLLIER, 14.11
Edison Sault Electric Company, 14.17
Edwards, Kathy, 4.77
Edwards, Mary W., 6.19
159
INDEX
Eleutherian Mills-Hagley Foundation, 14.6
Ellifritt, Duane S., 14.38
Emrich, Ernest J., 4.36
Energy conservation, 9.5, 14.23
Evans, Donald, 4.47
Everett, J. Michael, 4.81
Executive Order 11593, 7.13, 7.16, 7.17
Exxon Corporation USA, 2.28, 4.10
Farrell, Mary, 1.10
Faulkner, Sandra McDermott, 14.4
Fauntleroy, Thomas, 4.28
Federal Office for the Protection of Monuments (Austria), 16.14
Federal Register, 7.20, 7.26
Fish, Michael, 4.52
Fitzsimons, Gregory Gray, 4.32, 4.34, 6.20, 14.39, 14.40, 16.11,
16.13
Florida, 14.7
Florida Technological University, 14.7
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine, 4.44
Frandsen, Bradley T., 4.87
Freeman, Allen, 6.21
Frej, Ann Baggerman, 14.25
Friends of the East Broad Top, 14.41
Fries, Russell, 14.24
Fullington, Martha W., 6.22
Fulton, Deborah A., 4.35
Gable, John A., 14.29
Gamble, Robert, 2.1
Gardner, Philip, 4.81
Garfinkel, Susan, 4.77
Garland Publishing, Inc., 4.12, 4.57, 4.80
Gatza, Mary Beth, 4.82
Gayle, Margot, 1.7
Genskow, Karen, 4.78
Georgetown, see District of Columbia
Georgia, 2.7, 2.8, 4.31, 12.2; Savannah, 2.8
Giebner, Robert, 6.24
Giffen, Douglas H., 2.21
Gillespie, Natalie, 4.71
Gillette, Grace D., 8.10
Gjessing, Frederik, 4.81
Glass, Brent D., 14.34, 14.35
Goeldner, Paul, 2.28, 2.29, 9.6
Gore, Gary G., 4.79
Goslin, Bernadette, 4.71
[Gould], Carol Smith, 6.51
Gowans, Alan, 4.73
Graham, John Paul,
Grashof, Bethanie C., 4.61
Great Falls Development Corporation, 14.24
160
INDEX
Great Kennicott Glacier Land Company, 14.4
Griffin, Douglas L., 14.17, 16.14
Grow, Lawrence, 4.6, 4.9
Gualtieri, Kathryn [Kaiser], 2.3, 4.10
Gwinn, William, 4.20
HABS Advisory Board, 1.4, 2.10, 8.1, 8.2, 8.8, 8.10, 8.12
HABS Foundation, 6.51
HABS Inventory (HABSI), 4.13, 4.14
HAER inventories, 13.1, 14.1, 14.5, 14.6, 14.7, 14.8, 14.14, 14.15,
14.18, 14.29, 14.34, 14.36, 14.37, 14.38, 14.39, 14.40, 14.41,
14.45
HAER rehabilitation studies, 14.17, 14.19, 14.21, 14.23, 14.25,
14.43, 14.44, 14.47, 19.1
Halbert, William Carter, 3.12
[Hannum], Georgeanna Duross, 8.7
Hardwick, Kevin R., 4.83
Hardy, Andy Leon, 6.25
Harpers Ferry Historical Association, 15.1, 15.2
Harris, Emily, 7.13
Hartman, Terri L., 4.71
Hartmann, John Paul, 14.7
Heald, Sarah H., 14.40, 14.41
Heath, Caroline Reynolds, 2.30, 4.3
Hefner, Robert, 14.33
Heineman, Ken, 14.39
Henderson, Richard R., 3.9, 13.4, 14.39
Hermansen, David R. 2.10
Henry, Patrick, 4.83
Hickey, Jeffrey, 4.71
Historic American Merchant Marine Survey, 17.8
Historic Bridges Inventories, 13.1
Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana, 2.10
Historic Preservation, 6.2, 6.6, 6.25, 6.33, 9.10, 16.17
Historic Savannah, Inc., 2.8
Historic Sites Federation of Tennessee, 4.79
Historical New Hampshire, 2.20, 2.21
Historical Society of Michigan, 2.18
Hoagland, Alison K. [Kim], 4.35, 4.36, 4.76, 4.77, 4.87, 6.53,
7.21, 7.25
Hoeft, Kathleen S., 14.30
Holland, Leicester B., 1.3, 1.4, 6.24
Holmes, Nancy N., 2.2
Holmes, Nicholas H., Jr., 2.1, 2.2
Hosmer, Charles B., 6.28
Huberman, R. Carole, 11.1, 11.2, 14.31
HUD, 9.5
Hugo-Brunt, Michael, 4.47
Human Services Corporation, 14.13
Hyde, Charles K., 14.15, 14.16, 14.18
161
INDEX
IA, the Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology, 13.1,
16.7
ICOMOS, see U.S. ICOMOS
Idaho, 4.49
IEEE, 14.17, 16.15
Illinois, Chicago, 2.9; Joliet, 4.36; LaSalle, 4.32, 4.35;
Lemont, 4.32, 4.35; Lockport, 14.9; Marseilles, 4.35; Morris,
4.33; Northern Illinois, 4.37, 4.38, 4.39; Ottawa, 4.35, 4.36;
Peru, 4.35; Seneca, 4.35; Summit, 4.36; Utica, 4.35
Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor, 4.32, 4.33,
4.34, 4.35, 4.36
Illinois Relief Commission, 4.38
Illinois State Historical Library, 4.38, 4.39
Indian architecture, 6.35
Indiana, 2.10, 2.11
Indiana Covered Bridge Society Newsletter, 16.5
Indiana University Press, 2.10
Industrial Heritage, 16.14
Industrial Valley Study Advisory Committee, 14.36
Inland Architect, 6.48
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE), 14.17,
16.15
Interagency Archeological Services, NPS, 14.47
International Association for Bridges and Structural Engineering,
16.6
Iowa, 2.12
Iowa State Historical Department, 2.12
Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, 16.14
Ironwork, 1.7, 2.1
Ison, Mary M., 1.7, 6.53
Jacaruso, Jeanine, 4.36
Jackson, Donald C., 16.15
James, Clarence H. C., 14.36, 14.37
Jandl, Ward, 3.6, 13.2
Johnson, Jill, 4.34
Jones, Barclay G., 4.47
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 4.13, 4.84,
6.40
Journal of San Diego History, 6.24
Junior League of Palo Alto, 4.11
Kaiser, Kathryn H. [Gualtieri], 4.11
Kapsch, Robert J., 1.7, 6.30, 6.47, 7.25, 8.9, 16.13, 16.16
Kaynor, Fay Campbell, 6.31
Kentucky, HABS records, 4.41, 4.42
Keune, Russell V., 3.9, 6.55
Keyes, Alice, 11.4
Kidney, Walter C., 4.68
Kimball, Fiske, 3.2
Kitchens, 1.7
Kneass, A., 4.13
162
INDEX
Koue, A. Louis, 4.13, 4.14
Kulczycki, Jane, 1.10
Kulik, Gary, 14.45
Laguna Tribal Council, 14.25
Lake Photoprint Co., 4.37, 4.38
Lake Superior State College, 14.17
Lancaster, Clay, 3.3, 4.9
Landscape, HABS history, 6.19
Landscape Architecture, 6.19
Lange, Robie S., 4.61
Lankton, Larry D., 14.16, 14.32, 17.5
Lassiter, William Lawrence, 4.65
Lawrence, Jeanne C., 4.35
Lawrence, Lewis M., 9.7
Lay, K. Edward, 4.77
Leach, Charles, 14.23
Leach, Sara Amy, 4.35, 4.53, 4.72, 4.78
Leary, Thomas E., 14.27
Lebovich, William L., 4.1, 6.47, 6.53, 7.25
Leccesse, Michael, 16.13, 16.17
Lessig, Charles W., 9.8
Library of Congress, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 3.11, 5.1, 5.2,
6.37, 6.38, 8.8, 8.9
Lindlom, Thomas, 14.39
Linley, John, 2.7
Louisiana, 1.7, 4.5, 4.43, 5.3, 6.58, 14.10; Avery Island, 5.3;
New Orleans, 4.43; Shreveport, 14.10
Lounsbury, Carl, 1.7
Lowe, Jet, 14.4, 14.12, 14.27, 14.33, 16.13
Lowell (MA) City Development Authority, 14.13
Lowell Historical Society, 14.13
Lowell Museum, 14.13
Maddex, Diane, 4.25
Main Street, 1.7
Main Street Press, 4.9
Maine, 2.13
Maine State Museum, 2.13
Malloy, Peter M., 14.14
Malone, Patrick M., 14.13
Maritime Survey and Recording, 14.3, 14.11, 16.2
Marquee, 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.56, 4.69, 4.74
Martinson, Thomas R., 4.21
Maryland, 2.14; Baltimore, 4.44
Maryland Historic Trust, 2.14
Massachusetts, 2.15, 2.16, 2.17, 4.7, 4.45, 4.46, 4.47, 14.12,
14.13, 14.14; Boston, 4.45, 14.12; Cape Cod, 2.17; Lawrence,
14.14; Lowell, 14.13, 14.14; Lower Merrimack River Valley,
14.14; Middlesex Co., 14.12; Nantucket, 3.3, 4.46, 4.47;
Newburyport, 14.14; Norfolk Co., 14.12; North Chelmsford,
14.14; Suffolk Co., 14.12; West Pittsfield, 4.65
163
INDEX
Massachusetts Historical Commission, 14.12
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, 14.12
Massey, James C., 3,3, 4.5, 4.8, 4.21, 4.68, 6.33, 6.51, 6.55, 7.7,
7.10, 8.4, 9.9, 9.10, 14.31, 16.18
McCauley, Hugh J., 4.52, 14.44
McGraw-Hill Book Co., 3.3
McKee, Harley J., 2.18, 2.19, 2.27, 4.28, 4.51, 7.7, 7.8, 7.9, 7.21
McLaughlin, H. Roll, 2.10
Meeker, Robert, 4.47
Mellender, Deane, 14.41
Merrimack Valley Textile Museum, 4.7, 14.1
Michigan, 2.18, 2.19; Detroit, 4.48; Lower Peninsula, 14.15;
Quincy, 14.16; Sault Ste. Marie, 14.17; Upper Peninsula,
14.18
Michigan Historical Commission, 2.19
Michigan History, 2.18, 2.19
Michigan History Division, 14.17, 14.18
Michigan Society of Architects, 2.18
Michigan Society of Professional Engineers, 14.15
Miller, Elizabeth A., 4.35
Miller, Michael, 4.56
Minor, Joseph E., 14.2
Mississippi Valley, 9.12
MIT Press, 14.12
Mobile, Alabama, 2.1, 2.2
Montana, 4.49, 4.50, 14.22; Anaconda, 14.20, 14.21; Butte, 14.19,
14.21
Montana Chapter, AIA, 4.49, 4.50
Montana Highway Department, 14.22
Montana State Historic Preservation Office, 14.19, 14.22
Montana State Historical Society, 14.17, 14.22
Montana State University, 4,49, 4.50
Monterey (CA) Chapter, AIA, 4.13
Monuments Historiques, 16.10
Moore, Arthur Cotton, 4.25
Moore, Hope T., 2.7
Morrison, Andrew Craig, 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.56, 4.69
Morton, W. Brown, 2.31
Mozingo, Todd R., 2.12
Mulrooney, Margaret M., 4.76, 14.39, 14.42
Murtagh, William J., 3.1
[Myer], Ellen J. Schwartz, 4.18, 4.24
Myers, Denys Peter, 1.7, 2.13, 4.45, 4.56, 4.69, 6.34
Nabokov, Peter, 6.35
Nantucket Historical Trust, 4.47
National Association of Homebuilders, 5.3
National Building Museum, 5.3
National Center for Appropriate Technology, 14.23
National Endowment for the Arts, 4.52
National Historic Landmarks, 2.7, 3.9, 4.59
164
INDEX
National Parks and Conservation Association, 6.4
National Parks and Conservation Magazine, 6.4
National Railway Bulletin, 16.11
National Railway Historical Society, 16.11
National Register of Historic Places, 3.1, 3.6, 4.61, 9.9, 14.47
National Trust for Historic Preservation, 4.5; see also
Preservation Press.
Neary, Donna M., 4.35
Nelson, Lee H., 4.44
Nevada, Carson City, 4.51
New American Library, 4.4
Newell, Diane, 16.14
New England, 4.7, 6.56, 14.1
New Hampshire, 2.20, 2.21, 4.7; Claremont, 14.23
New Hampshire Historical Society, 2.20, 2.21
New Haven (CT) Preservation Trust, 4.15
New Jersey, 2.22, 4.52, 4.53; Cape May, 1.7, 4.52, 4.53; Cumberland
Co., 4.53; Paterson, 14.24; Salem, 4.53; southern New Jersey,
4.53
New Jersey Coastal Heritage Trail, 4.53
New Jersey Historical Society, 2.22
New Mexico, Acoma Pueblo, 6.35; Laguna Pueblo, 14.25
New York, 4.57, 4.58, 6.14; Brooklyn, 4.56; Buffalo, 14.27; Fort
Stanwix, 4.62; Greenbush, 4.55; Herkimer Co., 4.55;
Lackawanna, 14.27; Long Island, 14.29, 14.30, 14.33; Mohawk
-Hudson River Valley area, 14.31; Mount Lebanon, 4.65; New
York City, 4.56, 4.57, 4.64, 14.28; Rensselaer, 4.53; Shaker
architecture, 4.65; Tahawus, 14.26; U.S. Military Academy,
West Point, 4.61; Watervliet, 4.65; Westchester County, 3.12;
western New York, 4.58
New York State Council on the Arts, 4.58
New York State Historic Trust, 4.62, 14.28
New York State Office of Parks and Recreation, 14.29
Niagara Frontier, 4.58
Nichols, Frederick D., 1.4, 7.1
Nixon, Patricia, 9.1
NL Industries, Inc., 14.26
Noffsinger, James Philip, 4.21
Nordiska Museet, 16.14
North Carolina, 2.23, 14.34, 14.35; Greensboro, 14.35; Morven,
14.35; Winston-Salem, 14.35
North Carolina Division of Archives and Industry, 14.34, 14.325
Northern California Chapter, AIA, 4.14
Northern Illinois Univ. Press, 4.32
Northern Michigan University, 14.18
Notes on Virginia, 6.15
Oaks, F. Lawrence, 2.1
Ober Park Associates, 4.25, 4.68
Octagon, The, 6.27, 6.42, 8.3; also see AIA Journal.
165
INDEX
Ohio, 4.66, 4.67, 4.68; Bucksville, 4.66; Cleveland, 4.67, 14.36;
Cleveland Industrial Valley, 14.37; Cuyahoga County, 14.34;
Kirtland, 4.66; Tallmadge, 4.66; Shaker architecture, 1.10
Ohio State University, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4
Oklahoma, 14.38
Oklahoma State University, 14.38
O'Neill, John P., 1.3
101 Productions, 4.10
Oregon, 6.36, 6.45; Jacksonville, 6.6; Portland, 4.69
Oregon Historical Quarterly, 6.36
Ostereichische Leitschrift fur Kunst und Dekmalpflege, 6.57
Overby, Osmund, 2.26, 4.40, 4.81
Padgett, Philip J., 14.41
Parker, Jamieson, 6.36
Patrick Henry Foundation, 4.82
Paver, J. Tracy, 6.22
Pearson, Elmer R., 1.8
Peatross, C. Ford, 1.7, 6.37, 6.38
Peladeau, Marius B., 1.9
Pencil Points, 6.26
Pennsylvania, 1.7, 2.24, 2.25, 4.71, 4.72, 4.73, 4.74, 4.75, 4.76,
4.77, 4.78; Alexandria, 4.78; Altoona, 4.77; Blair Co., 14.39;
Cambria City, 4.71; Cambria Co., 14.39; Chester Co., 4.73;
Colver, 14.42; Fayette Co., 14.40; Huntingdon Co., 14.41;
Johnstown, 4.71; Lehigh Canal, 14.43; Minersville, 4.71;
Norvelt, 4.76; Penn-Craft, 4.76; Philadelphia, 1.7, 2.25,
6.55, 14.44; Pittsburgh, 4.74; Robertsdale, 4.72; Saltsburg,
4.78; southeastern Pennsylvania coal towns, 14.42; Star
Junction, 14.42; western Pennsylvania, 3.2; Westmont, 4.71;
Windber, 14.42; Woodvale, 4.72
Perrin, Richard W. E., 2.33
Peter, Walter, Jr., 4.19
Peterson, Charles E., 1.7, 2.25, 6.16, 6.39, 6.40, 6.41, 6.42,
6.43, 6.55, 7.7, 7.25
Philadelphia Historical Commission, 2.25
Pierson, William H., Jr., 6.47
Pitts, Carolyn, 1.7, 4.52
Pittsburgh Chapter, AIA, 4.2
Planning, history of, 4.47
Pope, Charles S., 4.13, 4.14
Poppeliers, John C., 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 2.14, 2.15, 2.16, 2.20, 2.22,
2.26, 4.3, 4.11, 4.67, 4.78, 6.46, 9.13, 9.14
Potter, Elisabeth Walton, 4.69, 6.45
Powell, Cheryl, 4.71
Prairie School Press, 2.9, 4.40
Preservation League of New York, 6.14
Preservation News, 16.17
Preservation Press, The, 4.1, 9.13, 9.14, 16.13. See also National
Trust for Historic Preservation.
Proprietors of the Locks and Canals in the Merrimack Valley, 14.13
166
INDEX
Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress, 4.3, 6.34, 6.37, 6.46
Queen, Rolla, 14.40
Quincy Mine Hoist Association, 14.16
Quivik, Frederic, 14.22
Rae, Steven R., 14.2
Railway Station Historical Society Bulletin, 3.10
Ramirez, Constance Werner, 2.14, 4.23, 4.43, 4.46, 4.47
Rapp, William F., 3.10
Rawls, James J., 2.3
Reed, Earl H., 6.48, 7.1
Regnery, Dorothy F., 4.11
Reiff, Daniel D., 4.18, 4.20
Reynolds, John S.,
Reynolds, Terry S., 14.10, 14.17
Reznick, Samuel, 14.31
Rhode Island, 2.26, 4.7, 14.45
Rhode Island Historic Preservation Commission, 14.45
Rifkind, Carole, 1.7, 4.4
Robb, Frances, 14.40
Robert E. Lee Memorial Foundation, 4.82
Robie House, 4.40
Robinson, Cervin, 6.55
Rose, Kenneth, 14.40
Ross, Douglas, 14.46
Ross, Marion D., 6.6
Roth, Matthew, 14.5
Roth, Rodris, 1.7
Rotsch, Melvin M., 7.7
Rowe, William, III, 14.28
Rudd, J. William, 2.9
Russell, Caroline H., 7.26
Rutt, Walter E., 9.11
Sackheim, Donald E., 11.2
St. Lawrence, Christine Lisa, 8.7
Sande, Theodore A., 4.7
San Diego Historic Sites Board, 6.24
Save Our Heritage Organization, 6.24
Schmidt, Frederick W., 4.36
Schwartz, Ellen J. [Myer], 4.18, 4.24
Schwartz, Nancy K. Beinke, 2.5, 2.6, 2.10, 2.11, 9.13, 9.14
Scott, Charles, 14.39
Seapker, Janet, 14.35
Seaways, Journal of Maritime History and Research, 14.11
Sebold, Kimberly R., 4.53
Secretary of the Interior's Standards, 7.20, 7.26
Seely, Bruce E., 14.26
Selections from the Historic American Buildings Series, 4.7, 4.8,
4.15, 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22, 4.24, 4.28, 4.51, 4.62,
4.64, 4.67, 4.68, 4.81
Shaffer, Marguerite S., 4.35
167
INDEX
Shaker buildings, 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 4.65
Shank, Wesley I., 2.12
Shaw, H. Thomas, 6.22
Shearer, Susan, 4.32, 4.33
Shedd, Nanacy, 14.39, 14.41
Shelgren, Olaf William, Jr., 4.58
Shipe, Mary K., 4.36
Sholes, Elizabeth, 14.27
Sims, E. Thomas, 6.22
Slade, Thomas M., 2.10, 2.11
Slater Mill Historic Site, 14.13
Smith [Gould], Carol C., 6.51
Smith, Nancy L., 4.77
Smithsonian Institution, 4.7, 4.28, 4.45, 14.31, 16.2
Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, 2.9, 4.1,
4.8, 4.9, 4.46
Society of Architectural Historians, 4.13
Society for Industrial Archeology, 13.1, 14.5, 14.12, 14.28
Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities, 14.29,
14.30, 14.33
Somerset House, 5.1
Sorber, James, 4.73
South Carolina, 2.27
South Georgia Chapter, AIA, 2.8
Speake, James F., 7.14
Spiegel, Nancy, 4.77
Spude, Robert L. S., 6.53, 14.4
Staehli, Alfred M., 6.45
Stamm, Alicia, 1.7, 11.3
Stanford University Press, 4.11
Steenhusen, Allan H., 7.10
Steinrock, George, Jr., 4.77
Stephens, [Burns], Deborah, 1.10, 7.21
Stevens, S.K., 6.46
Stevenson, Donald, 14.8
Stolberg, Mary M., 4.35
Stott, Peter H., 14.12, 14.29, 14.39
Stotz, Charles Morse, 3.2
Strayhorn, Martha I., 4.79
Taft, William G., 4.36
Tatum, George B., 1.7
Technical Preservation Services Division, NPS, 14.23
Technical University of Vienna, 16.14
Technology Review, 16.4
Temple University Press, 2.25
Tennessee, 4.79
Tennessee Historical Commission, 4.79
Texas, 2.28, 4.80, 14.2
Texas Technological University, Water Resources Center, 14.2
Theater Historical Society, 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.56, 4.69, 4.74
168
INDEX
Theaters, 4.27, 4.45, 4.48, 4.56, 4.69, 4.74
Theobald, Ursula M., 4.3
Thomas, Selma, 14.5, 19.1
Thompson, William P., 2.10, 2.11, 4.24
Thompson, Erwin T.,
Thorman, Jan, 3.6, 13.2
Tompkins, Sally Kress, 4.32, 4.59, 4.60, 4.61, 6.53, 6.54, 7.25,
8.12
Trinity University Press, 2.28
Tripartite Memorandum of Agreement, 6.37, 7.1, 8.8
Turner, Mary J., 4.35
Tyler, Richard, 2.25
U.S. Coast Guard, 4.59, 4.60
U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21, 4.22,
4.23, 4.26
U.S. Conference of Mayors, 4.1
U.S. Department of Energy, 14.23
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 9.5
U.S. ICOMOS, 3.9, 6.54
University Microfilms, 6.17
University of Alabama Press, 2.1
University of Delaware, 4.73
University of Georgia Press, 2.7
University of Illinois Department of Architecture,
University of Iowa Press, 2.12
University of Lowell, 14.13
University of Missouri Press, 6.47
University of Pittsburgh Press, 3.2
University Press of Virginia, 2.6, 2.31, 6.28
Urban Design and Development Corporation, 4.28
Utah, 2.29; 14.2
Utah Heritage Foundation, 2.29
Vanderbilt University Press, 4.79
Vantage Press, 4.65
Vaseff, James, 14.44
Vaux, Trina, 4.52
Vider, Elise, 6.55
Vint, Thomas C., 7.1, 8.1
Virginia, 2.31, 4.4, 4.82, 4.83, 4.84, 4.85, 6.15, 14.47;
Brookneal, 4.82; Danville, 14.47; Fort Monroe, 4.82; Stratford
(Lee Family Home), 4.84
Virginia Division of Historic Landmarks, 6.15
Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission, 2.31
Virgin Islands, 2.30, 4.81
Virgin Islands National Park, 4.81
Vogel, Robert M., 4.7, 6.56, 14.31, 16.14
Waite, Diana Steck, 4.61, 4.63, 14.28
Waite, John G., 14.28
Wallace, Kim E., 4.71, 4.72, 4.77
Ware, Donna M., 14.43
169
INDEX
Washington, D.C., see District of Columbia
Waterman, Thomas T., 6.31
Wayne State University, 14.15
Webster, Richard J., 2.25
Weitzman, David, 16.13
Werner, Constance; see Ramirez, Constance W.
Westchester County (NY) Historical Society, 3.12
Western Reserve Historical Society, 4.67
West Virginia, 4.86, 15.1, 15.2; Betz, 15.1; Malden, 4.86;
Morgantown, 15.2
West Virginia Department of Culture and History, 4.86
West Virginia Historic Preservation Office, 4.86
Wheaton, Rodd L., 4.3, 7.10
Wheeler, Lucy Pope, 2.28, 4.45, 4.56, 4.69, 8.10
White House (D.C.), 4.29, 4.30
White House Historical Association, 4.30
Wilkins, Woodrow W., 4.15
Will, Margaret Thomas, 6.57
Wilson, Samuel, Jr., 1.7, 6.58
Winterthur Portfolio, 6.31
Wisconsin, 2.32; Prairie du Chien, 4.87
Woodbridge, Sally B., 2.3
Woodstock National Historic District Commission, 14.46
Works Progress Administration, 9.7
Wormsloe Foundation, 2.7
Wrangull-St. Elias National Park and Refuge, 14.4
Wright, E. Kipling, 4.82
Wright, Frank Lloyd, 1.7, 4.40, 6.18
Wright, Helena E., 16.14
Wright, Philip C., 14.10
Wyoming, HABS records, 4.50
Wyrick, Connie H., 4.84
Yang, Isabel, 4.76
Yearby, Jean P., 8.7, 8.9, 8.12, 13.3
Zembala, Dennis M., 14.46
170
DATE DUE