National Park Service History Electronic Library & Archive
The NPS History Electronic
Library & Archive is a portal to electronic publications covering the history of
the National Park Service (NPS) and the cultural and natural history of the national
parks, monuments, and historic sites of the (U.S.) National Park System. Also included
are documents for national monuments managed by other federal agencies, along with a
collection of U.S. Forest Service publications.
The information contained in this Website is historical in scope and is
not meant as an aid for travel planning; please refer to the official
NATIONAL
PARK SERVICE Website for current/additional information. While we are not affiliated
with the National Park Service, we gratefully acknowledge the contributions
by park employees and advocates, which has enabled us to create this free
digital repository.
New eLibrary Additions
Featured Publication
cover only National Park RangerAn American Icon(Charles R. "Butch" Farabee, Jr., 2003)
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The History of the Star Spangled Banner from 1814 to the Present (George J. Svejda, February 28, 1969)
Homestead National Monument: Its Establishment and Administration (Ray H. Mattison, reprinted from Nebraska History, Vol. 43 No. 1, March 1962; ©History Nebraska)
Homestead National Monument of America (H.C. Luckey, extract from Nebraska History Magazine, Vol. 16 No. 1, January-March 1935; ©History Nebraska)
How the West Was Settled (Greg Bradsher, extract from Prologue, Vol. 44 No. 4, Winter 2012)
Historic Structures Report: Bowman-Hite Farmhouse (Michael Spencer, October 2013)
Historic Structures Report: Bowman-Hite Farmhouse Part II (Quinn Evans Architects, June 2015)
Cultural Landscape Report: Freedom Riders National Monument (Laura L. Knott, May 2023)
Naming Bear Lodge: Ethnotoponymy and the Devils Tower National Monument, Wyoming (David R.M. White, 1998)
The Peoples of John Day: An Ethnographic and Ethnohistoric Overview of John Day Fossil Beds National Monument (Douglas Deur, Rochelle Bloom, Katie Wynia, Tricia Gates Brown, and the Traditionally Associated Tribes of John Day Fossil Beds, 2023)
Physical History and Condition Assessment: Antietam National Cemetery Lodge (architrave p.c. architects, March 5, 2003)
Historic Structure Report/Architectural Data Section: Old State House Boston National Historical Park Volume I - Physical History Draft (The Society of the Preservation of New England Antiquities, June 1988)
Historic Structure Report/Architectural Data Section: Old State House Boston National Historical Park Volume II - Systems Analysis Draft (John B. Marsh and Morgan Phillips, June 1988)
Cultural Landscape Report and Environmental Assessment: Sand Point/Munising UCSG Life Saving Station, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore (October 2017)
Historic Structure Report: Sand Point/Munising UCSG Life Saving Station, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore (October 2017)
Historic Structure Report: Flank Slaven's Roadhouse, Coal Creek, Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve, Alaska (Steven N. Peterson and Linda A. Cook, March 1990)
Historic Structure Report Update: Slaven's Roadhouse, Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve, Alaska (Hennebery Eddy Architects, April 2022)
Kennecott Mines National Historic Landmark Management Strategy Draft (July 2024)
Cattle, Copper, and Cactus: The History of Saguaro National Monument, Arizona Historic Resource Study (A. Berele Clemensen, January 1987)
Cultural Landscape Report: Scorpion Ranch and Smugglers Olive Orchard, Channel Islands National Park (Sang Bae, Susan Dolan, Vida Germano, Rich Freitas, Genna Mason and Keith W. Park, September 2021)
B Reactor (105-B Building) HAER No. WA-164 (B Reactor Museum Association, December 2000)
Plants, Tribal Traditions, and the Mountain: Practices and Effects of Nisqually Tribal Plant Gathering at Mount Rainier National Park (Greg Burtchard, David Hooper and Arnie Peterson, 2024)
The Short, Spectacular Life of Paradise Golf Course, Mount Rainier, Washington (Martin Pool, November 2016, rev. July 2023)
The Tioga Road: A History 1883-1961 (Keith Trexler, 1980)
Newspapers: Devils Tower (2024) • Wind Cave (2024) • Guadalupe Mountains/Carlsbad Caverns (Fall-Winter 1998-1999) • Grand Portage: (2022, 2024) • Lake Mead (Spring/Summer 2001) • Canyon de Chelly (Date Unknown) • Dinosaur (1999-2000) • Glen Canyon (1999) • Big South Fork (1999) • Black Canyon of the Gunnison/Curecanti (2003) • Buffalo (2012-2013) • Walnut Canyon/Sunset Crater Volcano/Wupatki: (1998-1999, 2000-2001) • Timpanogos Cave (2023) • Cape Hatteras/Fort Raleigh/Wright Brothers (2024) • Fossil Butte (Date Unknown) • Theodore Roosevelt (1991) • Klondike Gold Rush (2002) • Independence (March 2013) • Grand Canyon: (October 1998 - March 11, 1999, March 11 - May 25, 2001, Sept. 7 - Nov. 30, 2004 • Capitol Reef (1999) • Indiana Dunes (Summer 1993) • Mammoth Cave: (Oct. 24, 1994-March 17, 1995, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000 (Vol. 6 No. 1), 2000 (Vol. 6 No. 2)) • Gateway Arch (Winter 1999) • Mount Rainier (September 4 - December 31, 2007) • Great Smoky Mountains: (Spring 1992, Summer 1995, Fall 1996, Fall 1997, Fall 2005)
The Grand Portage Guide: 2003 • 2004 • 2018
History & Hope for Climate Action: An Interpretive Toolkit (Donna Graves and Elizabeth Villano, 2024)
Effects of Climate Change and Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition on Forest Understory Vegetation Communities in Selected U.S. National Parks NPS Science Repport NPS/SR-2024/169 (Todd C. McDonnell, Brian Knees, Michael D. Bell and Emmmi Felker-Quinn, August 2024)
Deeply Rooted: Trees at the Foundation of America's Environmental History UERLA History Report (Abby Murphy, 2023)
Using i-Tree Canopy to Asses Tree Canopy Cover and Ecosystem Services of Three Urban Forests Within the George Washington Memorial Parkway (Eric Wiseman, Agustin Chambard, Paul Kelsch and Nathan Heavers, August 5, 2023)
Summertime Ozone Production at Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico: Influence of Oil and Natural Gas Development (Andrey Marsavin, Da Pan, Ilana B. Pollack, Yong Zhou, Amy P. Sullivan, Lillian E. Naimie, Katherine B. Benedict, Julieta F. Juncosa Calahoranno, Emily V. Fischer, Anthony J. Prenni, Bret A. Schichtel, Barkley C. Sive and Jeffrey L. Collett Jr., extract from Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Vol. 129, 2024)
Restoration of the Tall Grass Prairie at Homestead National Monument, Beatrice, Nebraska (David E. Hutchinson, extract from Rangelands, Vol. 14 No. 3, June 1992)
Mammoth Cave National Park's 10th Research Symposium: Celebrating Diversity of Research in the Mammoth Cave Region (Shannon Trimboli ,ed., 2013)
Carmel Formation of The Zion Park Region Southwestern Utaha Review U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1244-J (W.B. Cashion, 1967)
Checklist of the Vascular Plants of Glacier National Park Montana, U.S.A. Montana Academy of Sciences Monograph No. 4 (Peter Lesica, Volume 44, 1985)
Deglaciation and postglacial environmental changes in the Teton Mountain Range recorded at Jenny Lake, Grand Teton National Park, WY (Darren J. Larsen, Matthew S. Finkenbinder, Mark B. Abbott and Adam R. Ofstun, extract from Quaternary Science Reviews, Vol. 138, 2016, ©Elsevier Ltd.)
Natural Resource Condition Assessment, War in the Pacific National Historical Park NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/150 (Terry J. Donaldson, Maria Kottermair and Taryn N. Mesa, July 2024)
Geologic Resources Inventory Report, San Antonio Missions National Historical Park NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/146 (Matthew Harrington, June 2024)
Geologic Resources Inventory Report, American Memorial Park NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/147 (Trist L. Thornberry-Ehrlich, June 2024)
Geologic Resources Inventory Report, Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/163 (Katie KellerLyn, August 2024)
Geologic Resources Inventory Report, Roosevelt-Vanderbilt National Historic Sites NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/171 (Tim C. Henderson, August 2024)
Geologist Willis T. Lee's 1925 Visit to the Mammoth Cave Region of Kentucky (Bob Thompson, extract from The Journal of Spelean History, Vol. 38 No. 2 Issue 126, July-December 2004)
Caribou Trails: News from the Western Arctic Caribou Herd Working Group (Issue 24, Summer 2024)
Natural Resource Condition Assessment, George Washington Memorial Parkway (2024 Revision) NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/175 (Brianne M. Walsh, Simon D. Costanzo, William C. Dennison, Mark Lehman, Megan Nortrup, Brent Steury and Simone Monteleone, August 2024)
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR 1849-2024
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National Park Service Deferred Maintenance: Overview and Issues Congressional Research Service R48136 (Laura B. Comay, July 25, 2024)
National Park Service: FY2025 Appropriations (Congressional Research Service In Focus, July 23, 2024)
2023 National Park Visitor Spending Effects: Economic Contributions to Local Communities, States, and the Nation NPS Science Report NPS/SR-2024/174 (Matthew Flyr and Lynne Koontz, August 2024)
National Park Service Electric Vehicle Transition (February 2023)
Foundation Document, Gateway Arch National Park, Missouri (October 2023)
Fort Ontario Special Resource Study, New York (2024)
Kentucky Wildlands National Heritage Area Feasibility Study (December 2023)
Fire Management Plan Environmental Assessment, Alaska Region Coastal Park Units (June 2024)
Blackwell School National Historic Site: Foundation Document Newsletter / Documentos Fundacionales BoletÃn (June 2024)
Foothills Parkway Section 8D Environmental Assessment (July 2024)
General Management Plan / Development Concept Plan, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia (January 1983)
Summary of the General Management Plan / Development Concept Plan, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia (January 1983)
General Management Plan Environmental Assessment, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia (June 1981)
Draft General Management Plan / Development Concept Plans / Environmental Impact Station, Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona (September 1991)
Visitor Access Management Draft Plan and Environmental Assessment, Yosemite National Park (August 2024)
Cultural Resource Overview of the Malheur, Umatilla, and Wallow-Whitman National Forests, Northeast Oregon/Southeast Washington Vol. I Cultural Resource Management Reports No. 1 (Lorelea Hudson, Gary G. Ayers, George F. Gauzza and Joseph Randolph, October 2, 1978)
Gifford Pinchot National Forest: Early History (Date Unknown)
Paths More Traveled: Predicting Future Recreation Pressures on America's National Forests and Grasslands FS-1034 (Donald B.K. English, Pam Froemke and Kathleen Hawkos, June 2015)
Point Iroquois Light Station (brochure) (Date Unknown)
NPS Reflections
(Harpers Ferry Center)
NINETY SIX NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE
". . .We have been prosecuting the Seige [sic] at this place with all
possible diligence with our little force . . ., and our poor Fellows are
worne out with fatigue. . . . The [British] Works are strong and
extensive. The position [is] difficult to approach and the Ground
extremely hard." So wrote Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene on June 9, 1781, in
his report to the president of the Continental Congress with regards to
the siege of the British fortifications at Ninety Six, South Carolina.
Almost two hundred years later the United States Congress would
establish a national historic site not only to commemorate this
ill-fated siege but the colonial and early settlement history of a
backcountry village known as Ninety Six.
Prior to the English settlement of South Carolina, the area known as
Ninety Six was used by Native American tribes particulary the Saludas,
the Waterees, and Cherokees for hunting and fishing. The name Ninety Six
originated from its distance to Keowee, a Cherokee town farther along
the Cherokee Path. Increased trading with Native Americans in the early
to mid-1700s opened the backcountry to settlers. One such settler was
Robert Gouedy, who purchased property at Ninety Six in 1751 and opened a
a trading post servicing settlers and Indian traders.
Hostilities between the British and French in the 1750s filtered down
to the backcountry of South Carolina in the form of attacks by Cherokees
on the English settlers. Gouedy's barn was enveloped by a small fort in
1759 in response to the threatening situation. It became known as Fort
Ninety Six.
In 1760, Fort Ninety Six was attacked twice by the Cherokees but did
not fall. With the capture of Fort Loudoun on August 7, 1760, Fort
Ninety Six's importance as a supply station to the backcountry increased
considerably. In 1762, a treaty with the Cherokees brought peace to
Ninety Six, and with peace the lands reopened to new settlers.
The citizens of Ninety Six built a village about 500 yards north of
Fort Ninety Six. After its designation as one of seven new judicial
districts in 1769, a courthouse and jail were added to the prospering
village in 1772. The populous of the backcountry differed from their
coastal counterparts economically and politically. With the outbreak of
war in 1775, many residents in and around Ninety Six remained loyal to
the crown in opposition to their coastal neighbors, while others were
indecisive and wavered from one side to the other. The American
Revolutionary War was truly a civil war in South Carolina pitting
neighbor against neighbor and brother against brother. Over the next six
years the British would attempt to take advantage of this partisan
atmosphere in their quest for control over the southern colonies. The
burgeoning village would be pulled into the conflict repeatedly over the
next six years.
The first act of partisan warfare in South Carolina involved Ninety
Six in July of 1775. Fearing the backcountry Loyalists might use the
arms and ammunitions stored at Fort Charlotte against their Patriot
neighbors, Whigs ordered MaJ. James Mayson to remove the military
supplies from Fort Charlotte to Ninety Six. Betrayed by his assistant,
the ammunition was recaptured and Mayson was arrested by the local
militia. Mayson was held in the Ninety Six jail but was soon released on
bail. Four months later, the first land battle of the American
Revolution in South Carolina would be fought at Ninety Six.
In November, the Cunningham brothers (Loyalists) captured gunpowder
on its way to Cherokees inciting more hostility between Patriots and
Loyalists. A stockaded fort under the command of Andrew Williamson
(Patriot) was built a short distance from Ninety Six. On November 19,
three hours after being completed, the fort was surrounded by Loyalists
under Patrick Cunningham. The battle lasted until November 21, when a
truce was declared with both sides parting company. James Birmingham was
killed in this battle becoming the first South Carolina Patriot to die
for America's independence. Loyalist opposition subsided over the next
four years but was revived with the British Southern Campaign in 1780.
Ninety Six's strategic location in the backcountry made it a focal point
for British operations. Patriots found themselves prisoners of war on
parole with Loyalists in control.
(National Park Service photo)
In 1780, the Continental forces in the South were put under the
command of General Nathanael Greene. Victories at Kings Mountain and
Cowpens diminished the British position in South Carolina. By the spring
of 1781, Lord Charles Cornwallis was in North Carolina on his way to
Virginia leaving South Carolina with a greatly reduced British force.
Greene took advantage of the situation by attacking the British
outposts, finally reaching Ninety Six on May 22, 1781, with 981 men. The
British forces fortified the village with a palisade enclosure and a
star redoubt northeast of the village. The Continental army's siegeworks
were engineered by Thaddeus Kosciuszko over the next four weeks drawing
ever closer to the British position, ironically held by Loyalists under
Col. Harris Cruger, an American. News of approaching British Troops
forced the Continentals to attack the star redoubt on June 18. Unable to
capture the redoubt, Greene's army suffered heavy losses and was forced
to retreat.
The British forces evacuated Ninety Six one month later, burning the
village as they departed. A new village was built a quarter of a mile
from the ruins of its predecessor. In 1787, the new village of Ninety
Six became known as Cambridge after the school erected in the town in
1785. By i860 Cambridge had lost its position as a judicial district.
Even its stagecoach and railroad services were moved to a new town two
miles to the north known as Ninety Six. Although the once prosperous
village of "Old" Ninety Six ceased to exist, its history was still
remembered by local inhabitants. In Benson Lossing's The Pictorial
Field-Book of the Revolution, James M. McCracken was noted as
observing that "The trees and shrubbery on the battleground are
considered by the inhabitants too sacred to be molested." (Vol. 2, p.
485). Reverence for the battleground would be held by coming generations
resulting in the establishment of a national historic site at this
backcountry settlement.
Oh August 19, 1976, Public Law 94-393 authorized the establishment of
Ninety Six National Historic Site "in order to preserve and commemorate
for the benefit and enjoyment of present and future generations an area
of unique historical significance associated with the settlement and
development of of the English Colonies in America and with the southern
campaign of the American Revolutionary War, including the Star Fort . .
. ." The passage of this act ended a fifty-year debate on the national
significance of a site whose role in the American Revolution
overshadowed its equal and possibly greater importance in the
development of South Carolina as an English colony. The Star Fort
Historical Commission (SFHC) of South Carolina which was created in 1963
was the primary force behind the park's establishment. This
administrative history addresses the commitment of the dedicated group
which recognized the integrity of an isolated and neglected historical
landmark and strove to have it designated a national historic site.
Although it is one of the lesser-known areas in the National Park
System, the cultural resources of Ninety Six are impressive and include
18th century military features and arcbeological remains which make this
site worthy to be acknowledged for its place in American history.
Text from The Administrative History of Ninety Six National Historic Site, Karen G. Rehm, March 5, 1988
(William A. Bake photo)
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