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V. NATIONAL REGISTER <br />CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION <br />The National Register's standards <br />for evaluating the significance of <br />Properties were developed to recog- <br />nize the accomplishments of all <br />people who have made a contribution <br />to our country's history and heritage. <br />The criteria are designed to guide <br />State and local governments, Federal <br />agencies, and others in evaluating <br />potential entries in the National <br />Register. <br />The quality of significance in <br />American history, architecture, <br />archeology, engineering, and culture <br />is present in districts, sites, buildings, <br />structures, and objects that possess <br />integrity of location, design, setting, <br />materials, workmanship, feeling, and <br />association and: <br />A. that are associated with events that <br />have made a significant contribution <br />to the broad patterns of our history; or <br />B. that are associated with the lives of <br />persons significant in our past; or <br />C. that embody the distinctive charac- <br />teristics of a type, period, or method <br />of construction, or that represent the <br />work of a master, or that possess high <br />artistic values, or that represent a <br />significant and distinguishable entity <br />whose components may lack indi- <br />vidual distinction; or <br />91 <br />D. that have yielded, or may be likely <br />to yield, information important in <br />prehistory or history. <br />Criteria considerations: Ordinarily <br />cemeteries, birthplaces, or graves of <br />historical figures, properties owned <br />by religious institutions or used for <br />religious purposes, structures that <br />have been moved from their original <br />locations, reconstructed historic <br />buildings, properties primarily <br />commemorative in nature, and <br />properties that have achieved signin- <br />cance within the past 50 years shall <br />not be considered eligible for the <br />National Register. However, such <br />properties will qualify if they are <br />integral parts of districts that do meet <br />the criteria or if they fall within the <br />following categories: <br />a. a religious property deriving <br />primary significance from architec- <br />ture or artistic distinction or histori- <br />cal importance; or <br />b. a building or structure removed <br />from its original location but which <br />is significant primarily for architec- <br />tural value, or which is the surviv- <br />ing structure most importantly <br />associated with a historic person or <br />event; or <br />c. a birthplace or grave of a historical <br />figure of outstanding importance if <br />there is no other appropriate site or <br />building directly associated with his <br />or her productive life; or <br />d. a cemetery that derives its primary <br />significance from graves of persons <br />of transcendent importance, from <br />age, from distinctive design fea- <br />tures, or from association with <br />historic events; or <br />e. a reconstructed building when <br />accurately executed in a suitable <br />environment and presented in a <br />dignified manner as part of a <br />restoration master plan, and when <br />no other building or structure with <br />the same association has survived; <br />or <br />f. a property primarily commemora- <br />tive in intent if design, age, tradi- <br />tion, or symbolic value has invested <br />it with its own historical signifi- <br />cance; or <br />g. a property achieving significance <br />within the past 50 years if it is of <br />exceptional importance. <br />