NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ADMINISTRATIVE POLICIES
for the Recreation Areas of the National Park System
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Appendix H
GUIDELINES ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Washington, D. C. 20240
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE GUIDELINES FOR MAKING
RECOMMENDATIONS ON GEOGRAPHIC NAME PROPOSALS
Supplementing United States Board on Geographic Names
Guidelines of March 5, 1946
These guidelines are intended to supplement the
United States Board on Geographic Names guidelines of March 5,
1946. The Board, cojointly with the Secretary of the Interior,
Formulates Federal Government principles, policies, and procedures
related to both domestic and foreign geographic names and determines the
choice, spelling and application of these names for official use.
The Service guidelines consist essentially of two
sets of criteria and some general principles designed to guide the
National Park Service Committee on Geographic Names in formulating its
recommendations to the United States Board on Geographic Names on
proposals to name geographic features in the areas administered by the
Service for individuals, including its former or deceased employees. The
two sets of criteria are subdivided for convenience into Classifications
A and B. The numbered criteria under Classification A closely relate to
those correspondingly numbered under Classification B, differing
principally in the higher degree of importance of those in
Classification A.
CLASSIFICATION A
A proposal will, as a general rule, be recommended by
the Service Committee for adoption by the Board on Geographic Names if
the individual qualifies under one or more of the following
criteria:
1. His public service, achievements, or fame are of
transcendent national importance and are recognized as enduring in
character.
2. He contributed in substantial degree to the
knowledge of the feature itself, or the general area in which it is
located, through discovery, exploration, survey, or scientific
investigation.
3. His personal efforts resulted in the conservation
of the feature or the area in which it is situated, or both, or
contributed to their proper long range preservation, or development for
appropriate public enjoyment and use.
4. He died in the line of duty while performing an
act of heroism result in the granting of a posthumous Valor Award or for
which the Valor Award in all probability would have been granted had
provision for it existed at the time the act of heroism was
performed.
5. He was an early occupant or owner of
recognized historical note himself, particularly in relation to the
feature proposed to be named for him.
6. His name is already firmly established by local
usage and tradition with respect to the feature.
CLASSIFICATION B
If the individual does not qualify under at least
one of the criteria under Classification A, his name may receive
further consideration if it meets two or more of the following
requirements under classification B:
1. His public service, achievements, or fame are
recognized and will likely endure in the locality or region in which the
feature proposed to be named for him is located.
2. He donated land, structures, or historical or
scientific objects or collections of recognized value to the
administration, management, or interpretation of the area in which the
feature proposed to bear his name is located.
3. He, as a former or deceased employee of the
service, made lasting contributions for transcending the normal
requirements of his position.
4. He died upon, or in proximity to, the feature, or
met death in line of duty, including service in the armed forces,
through no negligence of his own, and was formerly associated with the
feature, or its immediate vicinity.
5. He was an early occupant or owner of, or
was associated in some other manner such as through work or residence
with, the feature or the immediate area for a considerable period of
time.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Several compelling reasons exist as to why proposals
to name features in areas administered by the Service for its former or
deceased employees should be critically evaluated. The simple fact that
the unnamed geographic features yet available are becoming
progressively more scarce is one good reason for this. Another is that a
highly sensitive matter of propriety is involved in taking actions
which tend to preempt the remaining unnamed features in areas the
Service administers for its former or deceased employees at the
exclusion of other individuals.
It is also important to recognize that it is not an objective of the
program on geographic names proposals to name features in the areas
administered by the Service for every individual whose qualifications
meet the criteria. Moreover, an individual may already be adequately
memorialized in other ways and in other locations. For example, the
great naturalist, John Muir, has probably been sufficiently
memorialized, though not every area the Service administers with which
John Muir was significantly associated contains a feature named for
him.
Some additional general principles which will prove
helpful to the committee in its deliberations appear in the numbered
sections below:
1. Suggested Five-year Waiting Period. The
Board on Geographic Names adheres to the following quoted policy
statement in connection with proposals to name geographic features for
individuals:
An existing name of a geographic feature should not
be replaced unless it is a duplicate or is inappropriate. Descriptive
names or names associated with nearby features are preferred in naming
unnamed natural features. These features may be named for individuals
when the association between the area or feature and the individual is
of transcending importance. The individual should not be so honored during
his lifetime, or, except in extremely unusual situations, within the
five-year period after the death of the individual.
Observance of a five-year waiting period after the
death of an individual before considering proposals to name geographic
features for him resolves some of the inherent difficulties. In any
event, the waiting period should extend beyond the emotion-charged
interval which usually follows an untimely death.
A minimum of five years generally allows sufficient
time for a sober evaluation of the contribution the individual has made
and of the other aspects relating to his overall worthiness for
memorialization.
2. Use of Unnamed Category. Opportunities
exist in some areas to promote an atmosphere of complete naturalness by
retaining single natural features, or clusters of such features, in a
nameless category. As an illustration, it has been found that the
"Unnamed Wilderness Peaks" of the Alaskan Range rival Mount McKinley in
visitor interest. The fact that the peaks are unnamed, and that they are
so designated, contributes much to the feeling and atmosphere of
wilderness associated with them.
3. Latitude in Naming Manmade Features. The
jurisdiction of the Board on Geographic Names does not cover proposals
for the naming of manmade features. Therefore, considerable latitude
exists in the choice of names for features such as buildings, bridges,
roads, and trails except for those officially named in legislation
pertaining to them. The dedication of suitable memorial markers or
plaques erected for features in this category can be made the occasion
for appropriate ceremonies. Whether it be a proposal to name a manmade
or a natural feature, a reasonable degree of consistency should prevail
between the significance or magnitude of the feature on the one hand and
the qualifications of the person for whom it would be named on the
other.
The Statement of Policy for Applying Names of
Persons to Natural Features, issued on March 5, 1946, is used by
the United States Board on Geographic Names in considering
proposals.
Approved:
12-12-66
GEORGE B. HARTZOG, JR.,
Director
admin_policies/policy3-apph.htm
Last Updated: 05-Jun-2007
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