America's National Monuments
The Politics of Preservation
Hal K. Rothman
280 pages, 36 photographs, 1 map, 6 x 9
Developmkent of Western Resources
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0672-6, $15.95
With the stroke of a pen, Theodore
Roosevelt created the Grand Canyon National Monument in 1908.
Without his quick action, commercial developers, already coveting
this national treasure, would have invaded the canyon's floor.
Not until eleven years later did Congress make it a national
park, an act that provided funds for development and preservation
unavailable to national monuments.
According to Hal Rothman, the designation of national monument--decided
at the discretion of the president--was the saving grace for
many natural and archaeologically significant sites as debates
on national park designations languished in Congress. But lacking
sufficient financial backing, national monuments inevitably ended
up taking a back seat to the national park system in the early
twentieth century.
Looking at the history of the national monuments, from the
passage of the Antiquities Act of 1906--allowing for presidential
designation of monuments--to the present, Rothman traces the
evolution of federal preservation. He shows how laws, policies,
personalities, personal and bureaucratic rivalries, and a changing
cultural climate affected preservation efforts. And he illustrates
how the national park system has functioned and changed over
the years as public officials have tried to implement federal
policy at the grassroots level.
The Antiquities Act, he contends, has been undervalued and
ignored by contemporary observers and historians. In fact, he
demonstrates, it is the most important piece of preservation
legislation ever enacted by the U.S. government. Without it,
many significant sites would have been destroyed as a result
of congressional inertia and indifference.
Rothman examines the evolution of this vital legislation,
originally designed to preserve archaeological sites in the Southwest
but later also used to maintain other significant prehistoric,
historic, and natural features. He explains how the act became
less significant as New Deal financing became available for the
park system in the 1930s; how expansion and reorganization of
the National Park Service brought more money and status to national
monuments; and how, by the 1960s, national monuments had been
integrated into the modern management system for park areas.
Set in the context of the regulatory century, this book offers
important new insights about how the American past has been preserved
and packaged for the public.
"It is high time that a historian analyzed the role of
the Antiquities Act of 1906 as a tool for historic preservation.
This story is replete with heroes and villains (or at least obstructionists).
It is a judicious view of the debates over the fate of our public
lands."--Charles B. Hosmer, Jr., in Pennsylvania
Magazine of History and Biography
"Rothman makes a persuasive case for giving the monuments
their earned place in the history of preservation. He has a particular
talent for choosing revealing case studies."--Patricia
Nelson Limerick in the Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"No one interested in the national park system, the national
monuments, or the history of archaeology can afford to ignore
this book--or will want to."--Stephen J. Pyne in
Pacific Northwest Quarterly
"Rothman has full comprehension of the environmental
movement and deftly weaves the history of the national monuments
into the unfolding of the bigger story. A major work for all
interested in the environmental and historic preservation movements."--Melody
Webb in the Journal of Arizona History
HAL K. ROTHMAN is a professor of history at the University
of NevadaLas Vegas and editor of Environmental History.
Among his books are Devil's Bargains:
Tourism in the Twentieth-Century American West,
"I'll Never Fight Fire with
My Bare Hands Again": Recollections of the First Forest
Rangers of the Inland Northwest; The Greening of a Nation?
Environmentalism in the U.S. Since 1945; On Rims and Ridges:
The Los Alamos Area Since 1880; and Reopening the American
West. He was featured in a four-hour television special,
"Las Vegas," on the Arts and Entertainment network.
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