Historic American Engineering Record
The Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) document achievements in architecture, engineering, and landscape design in the United States and its territories through a comprehensive range of building types, engineering technologies, and landscapes, including examples as diverse as the Pueblo of Acoma, houses, windmills, one-room schools, the Golden Gate Bridge, and buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Administered since 1933 through cooperative agreements with the National Park Service, the Library of Congress, and the private sector, ongoing programs of the National Park Service have recorded America's built environment in multi format surveys comprising more than 556,900 measured drawings, large-format photographs, and written histories for more than 38,600 historic structures and sites dating from Pre-Columbian times to the twentieth century.
From the description of Quincy Mining Company Survey for Historic American Engineering Record, Circa 1978. (Michigan Technological University). WorldCat record id: 720650498
...
Publication Date | Publishing Account | Status | Note | View |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016-08-19 06:08:18 am |
System Service |
published |
||
2016-08-19 06:08:18 am |
System Service |
ingest cpf |
Initial ingest from EAC-CPF |
|