Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Traditional Cultural Property (TCP): A Complete Guide to America's Living Heritage ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is a Traditional Cultural Property? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine a simple, ancient oak tree on a hill. To a developer, it might be an obstacle. To a historian, it might be just an old tree, not tied to a famous battle or president. But to a local Native American tribe, that specific tree might be the center of their world—a place where generations have held ceremonies, marked the seasons, and passed down stories. It's not a building, it's not a monument, but its importance is woven into the very identity of the community. This tree, this hill, this place of living culture is what the law can recognize as a **Traditional Cultural Property (TCP)**. A TCP is a location that is eligible for inclusion in the `[[national_register_of_historic_places]]` because of its association with the cultural practices, traditions, beliefs, lifeways, arts, or social institutions of a living community. It's a legal concept designed to protect places that are defined by people's relationship to them, not just by bricks, mortar, or grand events. It acknowledges that a place’s value might be intangible—found in a ceremony, a story, a traditional fishing spot, or a sacred mountain view. Understanding TCPs is crucial for communities seeking to protect their heritage and for anyone involved in a federal project that might impact these vital cultural landscapes. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **A Place of Living Culture:** A **Traditional Cultural Property** is a site whose historical significance is rooted in its importance to a living community's ongoing cultural traditions, not just past events. [[cultural_heritage]]. * **Protected by Federal Law:** The primary legal framework for protecting **Traditional Cultural Properties** is the `[[national_historic_preservation_act_of_1966]]`, especially through the `[[section_106]]` review process, which requires federal agencies to consider the impact of their projects on historic sites. [[federal_undertaking]]. * **Community is Key:** Identifying and defining a **Traditional Cultural Property** is a collaborative process that relies on the knowledge and testimony of the community—elders, traditional practitioners, and members—who hold the history and significance of the site. [[tribal_sovereignty]]. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Traditional Cultural Properties ===== ==== The Story of TCPs: A Historical Journey ==== The concept of preserving America’s heritage has deep roots, but for a long time, it focused almost exclusively on grand architecture, battlefields, and the homes of "great men." The idea that a seemingly natural or undeveloped place could be "historic" was revolutionary. The journey began in earnest with the passage of the **`[[national_historic_preservation_act_of_1966]]` (NHPA)**. This landmark law was a response to the massive destruction of historic sites caused by post-war highway construction and urban renewal. The NHPA created the `[[national_register_of_historic_places]]`, the official list of the nation's historic places worthy of preservation, and established a crucial review process known as `[[section_106]]`. However, in its early decades, the NHPA was still interpreted through a traditional, architectural lens. This began to change as Native American tribes and other communities voiced concerns that the system was failing to protect their most sacred and culturally important places—places that often lacked buildings or structures. These were places of ceremony, traditional resource gathering, and oral history. The turning point came in 1990 when the `[[national_park_service]]` published **`[[national_register_bulletin_38:_guidelines_for_evaluating_and_documenting_traditional_cultural_properties]]`**. This document was a game-changer. It provided official guidance on how to identify and evaluate places whose significance was cultural and traditional, not just architectural or archaeological. Bulletin 38 gave federal agencies, tribes, and preservation officers a common language and a clear framework for recognizing that a community's beliefs and practices could make a place historic. It formally acknowledged that living culture is a vital part of America's heritage. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== The protection of TCPs isn't based on one single law but on the interplay of several key federal statutes. * **The National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA):** This is the bedrock. * **`[[section_106]]` of the NHPA:** This is the most powerful tool for TCP protection in practice. It requires federal agencies to take into account the effects of their projects—known as "federal undertakings"—on any property that is listed on or **eligible** for the National Register. Since TCPs can be determined "eligible," this process forces agencies to stop, look, and listen before they proceed with a project, whether it's building a highway, licensing a dam, or permitting a mine on federal land. The process mandates `[[consultation]]` with interested parties, including the relevant `[[state_historic_preservation_officer]]` (SHPO), `[[tribal_historic_preservation_officer]]` (THPO), and descendant communities. * **`[[section_110]]` of the NHPA:** This section directs federal agencies to act as responsible stewards of the historic properties they own or control, requiring them to establish their own historic preservation programs to identify and protect these resources, including potential TCPs. * **American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978 (`[[american_indian_religious_freedom_act]]`):** While AIRFA doesn't have strong enforcement teeth (it doesn't create a cause of action to sue the government), it establishes a formal policy for the U.S. to protect and preserve the inherent right of Native Americans to believe, express, and exercise their traditional religions. This includes access to sites, use and possession of sacred objects, and the freedom to worship through ceremonials and traditional rites. It provides a crucial policy backbone that supports the arguments for protecting TCPs that are sacred sites. * **National Register Bulletin 38:** While not a statute, this guidance document from the `[[national_park_service]]` is the essential "how-to" manual. It lays out the criteria for determining if a property is a TCP, emphasizing that significance is determined by the community that values it. It clarifies that a TCP must be a tangible place, but its significance can be based on intangible beliefs and practices. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== TCPs are a federal concept tied to the National Register, but the day-to-day implementation of the NHPA is a partnership between federal, state, and tribal governments. This leads to variations in how TCPs are identified and considered. ^ **Jurisdiction** ^ **Approach to TCPs** ^ **What This Means for You** ^ | **Federal (NPS/ACHP)** | The federal government sets the official standards through the NHPA and Bulletin 38. The `[[advisory_council_on_historic_preservation]]` (ACHP) oversees the Section 106 process. | If a federal agency is involved (funding, permit, land), these are the rules that apply. Your rights to consult and participate are federally mandated. | | **Arizona** | The AZ State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) has extensive experience with TCPs due to the large amount of federal land and 22 federally recognized tribes. They often work closely with tribes and federal agencies on large-scale energy and infrastructure projects. | If you are in Arizona, the SHPO is a well-versed and critical player in any Section 106 consultation. They have established relationships and protocols for tribal consultation. | | **Oklahoma** | With 38 federally recognized tribes, the Oklahoma SHPO and the various Tribal Historic Preservation Officers (THPOs) are deeply involved in identifying TCPs, many of which are tied to historical events post-removal, as well as ancient ancestral sites. | The presence of numerous, highly active THPOs means that consultation in Oklahoma is complex and multifaceted. Federal agencies must consult with multiple sovereign tribal nations for any given project. | | **California** | The CA SHPO deals with a vast range of TCP types, from Native American sacred sites in the mountains and deserts to rural cultural landscapes associated with specific ethnic communities (e.g., Chinese-American mining communities, Japanese-American farming communities). | The definition of a "living community" is broader here. Your community doesn't have to be a federally recognized tribe to have a potential TCP, but the documentation standards will be just as rigorous. | | **Louisiana** | The LA SHPO recognizes TCPs related to Native American tribes (like the mounds of the Poverty Point World Heritage Site) but also cultural landscapes important to unique communities like Creoles and Cajuns, whose traditions are tied to specific bayous, fishing grounds, or prairies. | This shows that while the concept was developed with Native American sites in mind, it can be applied to any living community with a deep, long-standing traditional connection to a place. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== ==== The Anatomy of a Traditional Cultural Property: Key Components Explained ==== To be recognized as a TCP, a place must meet specific criteria outlined in Bulletin 38. It’s not enough for a place to be "special"; it must have specific qualities of association and integrity. === Element: Association with Cultural Practices or Beliefs === This is the heart of the TCP. The property must be tangibly associated with cultural practices or beliefs of a living community that are both **traditional** (passed down through generations) and **foundational** to that community’s history and cultural identity. This isn't about a one-time event; it's about a sustained relationship. * **Hypothetical Example:** A specific stretch of a river is not just a source of water. For the "River People" tribe, it's the place where a creator-being first taught their ancestors how to fish with traditional nets. For generations, they have returned to this exact spot not only to fish but to perform ceremonies that honor the creator and teach the youth. The **association** is the link between the physical riverbank and the foundational religious/cultural practice of fishing. === Element: Importance in Maintaining Cultural Identity === The practices and beliefs associated with the site must be important in maintaining the continuity and identity of the community. Losing access to the site or having it destroyed would be a damaging blow to the community's ability to be who they are. * **Hypothetical Example:** The "Mountain People" hold an annual pilgrimage to the peak of a specific mountain to conduct ceremonies for world renewal. This pilgrimage reinforces social bonds, transfers traditional knowledge from elders to children, and reaffirms their spiritual beliefs. If a communication tower were built on the peak, it would desecrate the site and disrupt the ceremony, thereby weakening the **cultural identity** that the pilgrimage helps maintain. === Element: Integrity of Relationship === For TCPs, "integrity" is different from the architectural integrity of a building. It doesn't mean the place must be perfectly pristine or unchanged. Instead, it refers to the **integrity of the relationship** between the place and the community. Is the connection still alive and recognizable? Can the traditional practices still occur there in a meaningful way? * **Hypothetical Example:** A valley has been used for generations by a community to gather specific medicinal plants. A highway was built through one end of the valley 50 years ago. While the physical landscape has been altered, the community still gathers plants in the rest of the valley, and the beliefs associated with the plants and the valley remain strong. The **integrity of the relationship** is still intact, even if the physical integrity isn't perfect. However, if a housing development paved over the entire valley, that integrity would be destroyed. === Element: Continuous Use or History (Generally 50+ Years) === The `[[national_register_of_historic_places]]` generally requires a property to be at least 50 years old to be considered historic. For a TCP, this means the association or use of the property must extend back at least 50 years. In most cases, especially with Native American TCPs, the connection goes back centuries or millennia. * **Hypothetical Example:** A rock art site has been visited by a tribal community for hundreds of years. Oral history and ethnographic accounts confirm that elders took youths there to teach clan histories as recently as the 1960s. Even if regular visits have become less frequent due to access issues, the **continuous history** of association for well over 50 years makes it eligible. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a TCP Case ==== * **The Community/Tribe:** They are the experts. They hold the knowledge about the site's significance, history, and use. They are the primary consulting party. * **Federal Agency:** The entity proposing the project, or "undertaking" (e.g., `[[federal_highway_administration]]`, `[[bureau_of_land_management]]`, `[[army_corps_of_engineers]]`). They are legally responsible for initiating and completing the `[[section_106]]` process. * **`[[State_Historic_Preservation_Officer]]` (SHPO):** The state-level official responsible for administering the national historic preservation program. They advise and assist federal agencies, consult on projects, and officially concur with eligibility determinations. * **`[[Tribal_Historic_Preservation_Officer]]` (THPO):** A federally recognized tribe can assume the responsibilities of the SHPO for actions on its own tribal lands. In any consultation, the THPO is the formal representative of a sovereign tribal government. * **`[[Advisory_Council_on_Historic_Preservation]]` (ACHP):** An independent federal agency that oversees the Section 106 process. They can be called in to resolve disputes and ensure the process is followed correctly. * **`[[National_Park_Service]]` (NPS):** The keeper of the National Register of Historic Places. The NPS formally lists properties and provides the critical guidance, like Bulletin 38. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Face a TCP Issue ==== This guide is for a community member, landowner, or local advocate who believes a place of cultural importance is threatened by a project involving a federal agency. === Step 1: Identify the Potential TCP and the Threat === - **Recognize the Place:** Is there a location that your community has used for generations for ceremonies, gatherings, storytelling, or traditional practices? - **Identify the Project:** Find out what is being proposed. Is it a new road, a cell tower, a mining permit, a logging sale, or a change in federal land management? - **Find the Federal Link:** Determine which federal agency is involved. Are they funding it, permitting it, or doing it on their own land? This "federal nexus" is what triggers the Section 106 review. === Step 2: Assert Your Right to Consult === - **Contact the Federal Agency:** Write a formal letter to the lead federal agency. State that you/your community has a cultural or historical interest in the project area and wish to be a "consulting party" in the Section 106 process. - **Contact the SHPO/THPO:** Send a copy of your letter to your `[[state_historic_preservation_officer]]` and, if applicable, your `[[tribal_historic_preservation_officer]]`. They are your key allies in the process. === Step 3: Document and Articulate the Significance === - **Gather Evidence:** This is the most critical step. The burden is on the community to explain *why* the place is significant. This doesn't require you to reveal sensitive or secret information. * Work with elders to record oral histories about the site. * Collect old photographs, maps, or letters that mention the site. * If possible, work with an ethnographer or cultural anthropologist to prepare a formal study. * Explain how the site meets the TCP criteria: its association, its importance to cultural identity, its integrity, and its history of use. === Step 4: Participate in the Consultation Process === - **Attend Meetings:** Show up to public meetings and Section 106 consultation meetings. - **Submit Comments:** Provide your documentation and written comments to the agency. Clearly state your concerns about the project's potential "adverse effects" on the property. An adverse effect is any action that diminishes the qualities that make the property significant. - **Propose Alternatives:** Consultation is about finding solutions. Work to find ways to avoid, minimize, or mitigate harm to the TCP. This could mean moving the project, creating a buffer zone, or ensuring continued access for the community. === Step 5: Understand the Outcome === - **No Adverse Effect:** The agency may determine the project will have no harmful impact. You have the right to disagree and can appeal to the `[[advisory_council_on_historic_preservation]]`. - **Adverse Effect:** If the agency finds the project will cause harm, they must continue to consult to find ways to resolve it. This often results in a **Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)** or **Programmatic Agreement (PA)**, which are legally binding documents outlining how the adverse effects will be mitigated. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (NPS Form 10-900):** While the federal agency is often responsible for preparing this, community members can provide the essential information. The form requires a detailed narrative explaining the property's significance and integrity. For TCPs, this narrative is based on ethnographic information and oral history. * **Cultural Resource Survey / Ethnographic Study:** This is not a "form" but a formal report, often prepared by a professional, that documents the TCP. It includes interviews with community members, historical research, and a detailed analysis of how the site meets the National Register criteria. It is the single most powerful piece of evidence. * **Formal Consultation Letters:** Your letters to the federal agency, SHPO, and THPO are part of the official administrative record. They document your participation and your concerns, which is critical if the process breaks down and requires intervention from the ACHP or legal action. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== The story of TCPs is told less through Supreme Court rulings and more through high-stakes consultations and conflicts on the ground that defined the boundaries of the law. ==== Case Study: Mount Shasta, California ==== * **The Backstory:** Mount Shasta is a towering volcano in Northern California. For several Native American tribes, including the Wintu, Karuk, and Pit River peoples, it is a profoundly sacred place—the center of creation, a home for powerful spirits, and a destination for healing and ceremony. * **The Legal Question:** In the 1980s, a ski resort proposed a major expansion on the mountain, which is located on U.S. Forest Service land. This triggered the Section 106 process. The core question was: Could a massive, largely natural landmark be considered a "historic property," and would a ski resort "adversely affect" its spiritual value? * **The Outcome and Impact:** Through the consultation process, the tribes documented the mountain's immense cultural significance. The Forest Service ultimately determined that the entire mountain was a potential TCP and that the ski resort would impair its integrity. The project was eventually defeated. **This case was instrumental in establishing that a large natural feature could be a TCP and that impacts on spiritual or cultural values, not just physical impacts, constitute an "adverse effect" under the NHPA.** ==== Case Study: The Medicine Wheel/Medicine Mountain, Wyoming ==== * **The Backstory:** Located in the Bighorn National Forest, the Medicine Wheel is an ancient arrangement of stones in a 75-foot wheel pattern with 28 spokes. For centuries, numerous tribes, including the Lakota, Cheyenne, and Crow, have used the site for ceremonies, vision quests, and astronomical observation. It is one of America's most revered sacred sites. * **The Legal Question:** Increased tourism, logging, and development proposals in the surrounding forest threatened the site's sanctity, quiet, and the integrity of the broader landscape. How could the `[[u.s._forest_service]]` manage a "multiple-use" forest while protecting the unique spiritual needs of the site? * **The Outcome and Impact:** In 1988, after extensive consultation, the Forest Service and the consulting parties developed a Historic Preservation Plan. The site was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1970 and formally recognized as a TCP. The plan created a buffer zone, restricted tourist access during ceremonies, and set a precedent for co-management. **This case demonstrated how the TCP framework could be used not just to stop a single project, but to create a long-term, collaborative management plan to protect a site's character while still allowing for public access.** ==== Case Study: Standing Rock and the Dakota Access Pipeline ==== * **The Backstory:** In 2016, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and its allies protested the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, which was slated to cross the Missouri River just upstream of their reservation. The tribe argued the pipeline threatened their water supply and would destroy sacred sites and burial grounds in its path. * **The Legal Question:** The `[[army_corps_of_engineers]]` approved the pipeline's river crossing, stating in its environmental assessment that a full Environmental Impact Statement was not needed. The tribe argued that the Corps had failed in its duty to conduct meaningful government-to-government consultation under the NHPA and other laws, and had not properly identified and protected TCPs in the pipeline's corridor. * **The Outcome and Impact:** The conflict drew global attention and resulted in a massive protest camp and a years-long legal battle. While the pipeline was ultimately built, the courts repeatedly found that the Corps had failed to adequately consider the tribe's treaty rights and the pipeline's environmental justice implications. **Standing Rock became a powerful, albeit painful, modern symbol of the critical importance of the TCP concept and the disastrous consequences when the consultation process is seen as a mere box-checking exercise rather than a meaningful dialogue between sovereigns.** It highlighted the immense challenges tribes face in protecting cultural resources that lie outside their reservation boundaries. ===== Part 5: The Future of Traditional Cultural Properties ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== * **Confidentiality vs. Public Disclosure:** To protect a TCP, a community must often share detailed information about its location and significance. But many sacred sites are sacred precisely because they are private. Tribes are constantly struggling to provide enough information to satisfy legal requirements without exposing sensitive locations to vandalism or desecration. * **Private Property Rights:** The NHPA's Section 106 process applies to federal undertakings. It does not give the government power to regulate what a private landowner does on their own land with their own money. This creates immense conflict when a TCP, like a burial ground or sacred spring, is located on private property. * **Defining "Meaningful Consultation":** Many communities feel that federal agencies treat consultation as a one-way information session rather than a true dialogue. The debate rages over what constitutes "meaningful" consultation and how to ensure agencies listen to and incorporate community concerns into their final decisions. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **Climate Change and Environmental Threats:** Rising sea levels are inundating coastal shell mounds and village sites in Louisiana and Alaska. Wildfires of increasing intensity are destroying sacred groves and archaeological sites in the West. Preservation is shifting from a focus on preventing human-caused harm to a desperate race to document and protect TCPs from catastrophic environmental change. * **Renewable Energy Development:** The push for green energy has created a new wave of potential conflicts. Massive solar arrays in the desert, wind turbines along sacred ridgelines, and geothermal plants near hot springs can have devastating impacts on cultural landscapes and TCPs, setting up a difficult battle between climate goals and cultural preservation. * **Digital Preservation and GIS:** New technologies offer powerful tools. Tribes and communities are using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to create confidential maps of their cultural resources. 3D laser scanning and drone footage can document sites with incredible precision, preserving a record even if the physical site is lost. Virtual reality can be used to create immersive experiences to teach younger generations about places they may no longer be able to access. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **`[[advisory_council_on_historic_preservation]]` (ACHP):** The independent federal agency that promotes preservation and oversees the Section 106 process. * **`[[consultation]]`:** The process of seeking, discussing, and considering the views of other participants in the Section 106 process. * **`[[cultural_landscape]]`:** A geographic area that has been shaped by human activity and holds cultural significance. * **`[[ethnography]]`:** The scientific study and description of the customs of individual peoples and cultures. * **`[[federal_undertaking]]`:** Any project, activity, or program funded, permitted, licensed, or approved by a federal agency. * **`[[integrity]]`:** The ability of a property to convey its historical significance; for TCPs, this focuses on the integrity of the relationship between the place and the community. * **`[[memorandum_of_agreement]]` (MOA):** A legally binding document that records the terms of a Section 106 agreement to resolve adverse effects. * **`[[national_historic_preservation_act_of_1966]]` (NHPA):** The foundational U.S. law for historic preservation. * **`[[national_register_of_historic_places]]`:** The official list of the Nation's historic places worthy of preservation. * **`[[sacred_site]]`:** A location held in reverence by a community; many, but not all, sacred sites can be TCPs. * **`[[section_106]]`:** The specific part of the NHPA that mandates the federal review process for undertakings that may affect historic properties. * **`[[state_historic_preservation_officer]]` (SHPO):** The state-appointed official who coordinates historic preservation activities at the state level. * **`[[tribal_historic_preservation_officer]]` (THPO):** The official appointed by a federally recognized Indian Tribe to direct the tribe's preservation program. * **`[[tribal_sovereignty]]`:** The inherent right of tribes to govern themselves and their people. ===== See Also ===== * `[[national_historic_preservation_act_of_1966]]` * `[[section_106]]` * `[[native_american_graves_protection_and_repatriation_act]]` (NAGPRA) * `[[environmental_justice]]` * `[[federal_land_policy_and_management_act]]` * `[[cultural_heritage]]` * `[[tribal_sovereignty]]`