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Text 3459, 199 rader
Skriven 2006-10-19 23:31:36 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0610192) for Thu, 2006 Oct 19
====================================================

===========================================================================
Mrs. Bush's Remarks at the Preserve America Summit
===========================================================================

For Immediate Release
Office of the First Lady
October 19, 2006

Mrs. Bush's Remarks at the Preserve America Summit
U.S. Customs House
New Orleans, Louisiana



9:22 A.M. CDT

MRS. BUSH: Thank you, John, thank you for your nice remarks and the great
work you're doing as Chairman of the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation. Governor Landrieu, thank you very much for joining us today
in this absolutely magnificent Customs House building. There's no better
place for this meeting than here in New Orleans. Lynn Scarlett, the Deputy
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Interior, thank you very much for
joining us, as well.

And here on the front row are some of our federal partners, our cultural
partners, I should say -- the Chairman of the National Endowment for the
Arts, Dana Gioia; Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities,
Bruce Cole; the Director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services,
Ann-Imelda Radice; Adair Margo, the Chair of the President's Council on
Arts and Humanities; and Dick Moe, Chairman of the National Trust for
Historic Preservation.

Thanks to each and every one of you for what you do every day to protect
our special culture and soul of the United States. (Applause.)

Welcome, everyone, to the Preserve America Summit. Today we gather to mark
40 years of national historic preservation.

When President Lyndon Johnson signed the National Historic Preservation Act
on October 15, 1966, he launched the first coordinated federal effort to
safeguard our country's heritage. By creating institutions like the
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the State Historic Preservation
Offices, and the National Register of Historic Places, the National
Historic Preservation Act has saved priceless artifacts of American
history, and led to four terrific decades of preservation work throughout
the United States.

The National Historic Preservation Act originated, as John told us, as a
response to rapid urban development and highway construction that
threatened historic neighborhoods across America during the 1960s. Today,
we still face some of these challenges, but we also face a new set of
preservation challenges. Modern technologies must be adapted to help
safeguard our national icons. The historical narrative we preserve must
include the contributions of many cultures, and tell the stories of all
Americans. And as we protect our country's history for our children and
grandchildren to enjoy, we also must educate American children so that
they'll continue our work when we're gone.

Over the last 40 years, the challenges of preserving our national treasures
have evolved, and the federal government's approach to protecting our
heritage must evolve with them.

In 2003, President Bush announced the Preserve America Initiative to
encourage communities to preserve our cultural and natural heritage.
Preserve America can also help boost local economies, because historical
landmarks attract visitors and businesses.

Over the last three years, we've honored historical organizations, history
teachers, and entire communities -- 401 of them, in fact -- for their
commitment to preservation. But one of the most valuable contributions of
the Preserve America Initiative is this Summit, which will build on the
legacy of the National Historic Preservation Act by bringing our country's
approach to historic preservation into the 21st century.

Many of you have already been hard at work on this task. Throughout the
summer, in pre-summit forums, you've analyzed how businesses, foundations,
educational institutions, governments, and private citizens can modernize
historic preservation throughout the United States. You've shown how we can
encourage young people to be good stewards of our historical and cultural
treasures, by encouraging their teachers to use historical sites as
educational resources. And you've discussed how communities throughout the
country can use their cultural attractions to benefit local economies.

Now, this is especially important here on the Gulf Coast, where
well-preserved and well-presented history can revive local tourism and
speed economic recovery. In the aftermath of the hurricanes, private
foundations and federal cultural organizations have given millions of
dollars in grants to revitalize museums, libraries, and arts institutions
throughout Louisiana and Mississippi.

Here in New Orleans, local preservation groups have fanned out into the
city's historic neighborhoods, showing residents how their homes -- from
Creole cottages to shotgun houses -- can be reclaimed, offering residents
expertise and comfort and hope.

Representatives of many of these organizations are here today, and have
offered their insights on how cultural institutions across the United
States can be better prepared for a disaster. Thank you for these
contributions, and thank you for the important preservation work you're
doing here on the Gulf Coast. (Applause.)

In addition to governments, the private sector -- businesses, philanthropic
groups, historical organizations, educational institutions, and private
citizens -- also have a crucial role to play. Public-private partnerships
are already supporting excellent preservation work throughout our country,
and they'll be vital to preserving our national treasures in the years
ahead.

We all know, though, that historic preservation is about more than just
protecting the physical artifacts of our past. Historic preservation has
the power to unite us, entire communities, through a desire to preserve our
shared heritage -- communities like Gloucester, Massachusetts.

First settled in 1623, Gloucester has witnessed almost four centuries of
American history. The city's archives contain records from the earliest New
Englanders, the American Revolution, and the Civil War. The seaside
enclave's rocky shores and sunsets have inspired great American artists
like Winslow Homer and Fitz Henry Lane, and gave rise to the Luminous
school of American painting.

The heart of Gloucester, however, has always been fishing. For nearly 400
years, Gloucestermen have braved the Atlantic in pursuit of cod, haddock,
halibut, and swordfish. The perils confronted by Gloucester fishermen
inspired Rudyard Kipling to chronicle their adventures in his novel
Captains Courageous. A more somber testament to Gloucester's bond with the
ocean is found at the water's edge, where the town's famous "Man at the
Wheel" statue pays tribute to the 5,000 Gloucestermen lost at sea.

But in recent decades, fishing dwindled. Gloucester's angling industry has
gradually been replaced by manufacturing, technology and tourism. Only 30
miles from Boston, Gloucester is increasingly becoming a commuter
satellite, prompting concerns among residents that their community will
soon lose its distinctive heritage. "We recognize that the town has to
change," says the chair of the Gloucester's Historical Commission, Maggie
Rosa. "The question is, how do you do it?"

The Gloucester community is determined that those changes will respect the
history and traditions that make their town unique. The local government
has pledged to renovate Gloucester's 130-year-old City Hall. Local
volunteers spend hours in the hall's basement every day maintaining the
city's archives, which date back to 1642.

Every year, the city stages a schooner festival to recreate the era when
hundreds of clipper ships and schooners dotted the harbor. Historical
organizations are working to preserve Cape Ann's iconic paint factory --
which manufactured the copper paint that kept barnacles off the bottom of
fishing boats -- as well as the facility where Clarence Birdseye first
developed his process for freezing and preserving food.

Three hundred local Gloucester residents worked to build the Gloucester
Maritime Heritage Center, which preserves the country's oldest Marine
Railway, and presents historic fishing vessels and other artifacts of
Gloucester's maritime tradition. In partnership with NOAA, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Center educates visitors about
the ocean life found in nearby Stellwagen Bank, New England's only national
marine sanctuary.

And the entire Gloucester community -- nonprofit groups, local businesses,
and private citizens, with federal support from Save America's Treasures
and Preserve America -- has come together to preserve the Adventure: the
last authentic schooner from Gloucester's old fishing fleet.

Safeguarding Gloucester's maritime heritage has energized the town's
residents, including nearly 1,300 volunteers who devote their time and
energy to these preservation projects. According to the town's mayor, John
Bell, Gloucester people view keeping their community authentic as a
personal calling. Salty old Gloucestermen will come up to him and say,
"Mayor, that's my building. Keep it that way. It's been that way forever."

That sense of personal connection to the town's history, Mayor Bell says,
"is part of the mentality -- it's the soul of the city." Gloucester people
are keeping their city's soul alive. They're preserving priceless icons of
their history -- and America's -- because, as Mayor Bell explains, they
"have no other choice. We love Gloucester -- and this history is part of
who we are." Ladies and gentlemen, we have no other choice. (Applause.)

Across the United States -- from the seaport of Gloucester, to farming
communities in Texas, to mining communities in Colorado, and of course here
in New Orleans and all along the Gulf shore -- Americans are working to
preserve the local culture that defines who we are, and that's so very
important for our country.

Thanks to each and every one of our federal preservation partners for your
contributions over the last 40 years of preservation, and for supporting
this Summit to improve our government's approach to preservation in the
21st century. Thanks to all of the scholars, the experts and the dedicated
preservationists here for your hard work throughout the summer and over the
next two days. And thanks to each and every one of you for your commitment
to protecting the rich history and culture of the United States of America.

Thank you all very much. (Applause.)

END 9:35 A.M. CDT
===========================================================================
Return to this article at:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/10/20061019-2.html

 * Origin: (1:3634/12)