National Register of Historic Places listings in eastern Puerto Rico
Appearance
This portion of National Register of Historic Places listings in Puerto Rico covers the eastern region of Puerto Rico, from Carolina in the northeast to Arroyo in the southeast. It also includes the islands of Culebra and Vieques.
Names of places given are as appear in the National Register, reflecting name as given in NRHP application at the date of listing. Note, the National Register name system does not accommodate Spanish á, ñ and other letters.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 1, 2024.[1]
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Faro de Punta de las Figuras | October 22, 1981 (#81000687) |
Punta de las Figuras, southeast of Arroyo Pueblo 17°57′18″N 66°02′52″W / 17.954976°N 66.047657°W | Palmas | Spanish-built Neoclassical lighthouse from 1893, operated by the U.S. Army during the Second World War. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Villarán Bridge | July 19, 1995 (#95000835) |
Highway 9959, km 3, spanning Río Canóvanas 18°22′45″N 65°53′32″W / 18.379213°N 65.892087°W | Canóvanas Pueblo and Canóvanas | Built in 1892 on the 19th century highway between Río Piedras and Río Grande, this iron and masonry bridge is the best preserved example of an Eiffel pony truss bridge in Puerto Rico or the United States. By 1994, it had been replaced by an adjacent span for vehicular use, but it remained open for pedestrian use.[4] |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Church San Fernando of Carolina | September 18, 1984 (#84003160) |
Muñoz Rivera St., Town Plaza 18°22′52″N 65°57′23″W / 18.381072°N 65.956317°W | Carolina Pueblo | One of the two churches designed by state engineer Antonio Maria de Vizcarrondo y Guitian. Built between 1860 and 1862. | |
2 | Edificio Alcaldia | December 28, 1983 (#83004197) |
Sánchez Osorio St. at José de Diego St. 18°22′53″N 65°57′27″W / 18.381253°N 65.957427°W | Carolina Pueblo | Former city hall built between 1927 and 1930, designed by Rafael Carmoega in a Spanish Colonial Revival style. | |
3 | Quebrada Maracuto | August 27, 2004 (#04000909) |
Address restricted[5] | Cacao and Santa Cruz[6] | Pre-Columbian site with petroglyphs found across seven boulders in Maracuto Creek. Part of the Prehistoric Rock Art of Puerto Rico MPS. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ceiba Fire Station | February 13, 2013 (#13000012) |
226 Lauro Piñero Avenue 18°15′59″N 65°38′52″W / 18.266333°N 65.647698°W | Ceiba Pueblo | Art Deco fire station from 1954, designed and built by the Department Public Works of Puerto Rico. Part of the Fire Stations in Puerto Rico MPS. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Faro Isla de Culebritas | October 22, 1981 (#81000686) |
Isla Culebrita 18°18′49″N 65°13′39″W / 18.313694°N 65.227444°W | Fraile | Spanish-built lighthouse from 1882, it used to aid in the navigation through the Virgin Passage and the Vieques Sound. Located in the island of Culebrita, part of the Culebra National Wildlife Refuge. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Church Santiago Apóstol of Fajardo | September 18, 1984 (#84003144) |
Town Plaza 18°19′30″N 65°39′11″W / 18.324873°N 65.653066°W | Fajardo Pueblo | A former parish church (now cathedral) from 1776. Part of the Historic Churches of Puerto Rico TR. | |
2 | Faro de las Cabezas de San Juan | October 22, 1981 (#81000692) |
Northeast of Soroco 18°22′53″N 65°37′05″W / 18.381457°N 65.618134°W | Cabezas | Spanish-built lighthouse from 1880, it played an important role in the Puerto Rico campaign of the Spanish–American War. Located in the Las Cabezas de San Juan Nature Reserve. | |
3 | U.S. Custom House | February 10, 1988 (#88000077) |
Union Street 18°20′02″N 65°37′50″W / 18.333942°N 65.630564°W | Playa Puerto Real[7] | Customs house from 1930, designed by Albert B. Nichols. Also served as a U.S. Post Office throughout its life. Part of the United States Custom Houses in Puerto Rico MPS. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Casa Roig | November 17, 1977 (#77001550) |
66 Antonio López Street 18°08′53″N 65°49′30″W / 18.147971°N 65.824867°W | Humacao Pueblo | A Prairie School building from 1920, designed by Antonin Nechodoma for prominent sugarcane magnate Antonio Roig. Now a Historic house museum operated by the University of Puerto Rico at Humacao. | |
2 | Church Dulce Nombre de Jesús of Humacao | September 18, 1984 (#84003140) |
Town Plaza 18°09′01″N 65°49′34″W / 18.150157°N 65.826199°W | Humacao Pueblo | Late Gothic Revival cathedral church from 1869. Part of the Historic Churches of Puerto Rico TR. | |
3 | Guzmán Family Pantheon | April 17, 1995 (#95000436) |
Junction of Padre Rivera and Miguel Casillas Streets 18°09′08″N 65°49′40″W / 18.152327°N 65.827904°W | Humacao Pueblo | Eclectic style mausoleum and funerary chapel from 1864. Also known as the Guzmán Hermitage. | |
4 | Humacao Customs House | May 18, 1995 (#95000599) |
Junction of Marina and Aduana Streets 18°09′54″N 65°44′38″W / 18.164909°N 65.743989°W | Punta Santiago | Spanish Colonial building built by the Department of Public Works of the Spanish Government in Puerto Rico in 1872, designed by Julian Cruellas y Rovira to be the Humacao customs house at its port in Punta Santiago. | |
5 | Humacao District Courthouse | May 18, 1995 (#95000596) |
Junction of Dr. Vidal and Antonio López Streets 18°08′58″N 65°49′27″W / 18.149531°N 65.824152°W | Humacao Pueblo | Classical Revival Federal-style courthouse from 1925 designed by Rafael Carmoega. Also served as a city hall, reception venue and currently a local fine arts museum. | |
6 | Palmira López de Pereyó House | April 14, 1995 (#95000435) |
Junction of Font Martelo and Minerva Streets 18°09′02″N 65°49′20″W / 18.150545°N 65.822218°W | Humacao Pueblo | Prairie School house from 1930 designed by Francisco Valinés Cofresí for Luis Pereyó y Rodríguez, former District judge from Humacao. | |
7 | Antonia Sáez School | May 18, 1995 (#95000597) |
Junction of Font Martelo and Isidro Ortiz Streets 18°09′06″N 65°49′49″W / 18.151750°N 65.830288°W | Humacao Pueblo | A Mission/Spanish Revival school from 1922. It also served as a public marketplace between 1966 and 2004. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Cueva del Indio | September 4, 2003 (#03000884) |
Approximately 1.2 km (0.75 mi) north of Highway 198 18°11′50″N 65°52′24″W / 18.1972°N 65.8733°W | Quebrada Arenas | Site of a former ceremonial ball court (batey) and containing examples of indigenous rock art found throughout large batholitic boulders. Part of the Prehistoric Rock Art of Puerto Rico MPS. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Roberto Clemente Walker Crash Site | August 31, 2022 (#100008070) |
PR 187 km. 6, Punta Maldonado and 1.5 nautical mi. offshore in the Atlantic Ocean 18°27′45″N 65°57′30″W / 18.4625°N 65.958333°W | Loíza vicinity | Site of the 1972 Puerto Rico DC-7 crash caused by a failed engine, where baseball legend Roberto Clemente died. | |
2 | Cueva de Los Indios | June 24, 1982 (#82003823) |
Address restricted[5] | Torrecilla Baja | Well-preserved small cave with indigenous petroglyphs. Also known as the Cueva Punta Maldonado site, within the management boundaries of Piñones State Forest. Part of the Part of the Prehistoric Rock Art of Puerto Rico MPS. | |
3 | Parroquia del Espiritu Santo y San Patricio[a] | September 8, 1976 (#76002251) |
Plaza de Loíza 18°26′00″N 65°52′47″W / 18.433238°N 65.879610°W | Loíza Pueblo | Historic parish church dating from 1729, representative of the local Afro-Puerto Rican heritage.[8] |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Williams Products Corporation | November 14, 2012 (#12000938) |
Highway 992, km 0.3 18°22′16″N 65°43′07″W / 18.370986°N 65.718615°W | Mata de Plátano | Historic factory building from 1957 designed in the Modernist style. Also known as La Williams Factory. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Casa Alcaldia de Maunabo | August 23, 2022 (#100008050) |
Calle Santiago Iglesias #8 18°00′25″N 65°53′59″W / 18.006922°N 65.899667°W | Maunabo Pueblo | Historic city hall building from the early 20th century. | |
2 | Faro de Punta de la Tuna | October 22, 1981 (#81000688) |
Southeast of Puerto Maunabo 17°59′18″N 65°53′07″W / 17.988370°N 65.885274°W | Emajagua | Historic Neoclassical lighthouse from 1892. Part of the Lighthouse System of Puerto Rico TR. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bridge No. 122 | July 19, 1995 (#95000836) |
Highway 3, km 9, spanning the Santiago River 18°11′18″N 65°43′30″W / 18.188386°N 65.725108°W | Río and Húcares | Historic reinforced concrete bridge designed by Félix Benítez Rexach spanning the Santiago River notable for its ornamental details. | |
2 | Church Nuestra Señora del Rosario of Naguabo | December 10, 1984 (#84000456) |
Town Plaza 18°12′43″N 65°44′09″W / 18.212062°N 65.735754°W | Naguabo Pueblo | One of the oldest structures in the town of Naguabo, built in 1856 in a Spanish Colonial style with Eclectic ornamentations being added at the beginning of the 20th-century. | |
3 | Icacos Petroglyph Group | December 1, 2015 (#15000855) |
Address restricted[5] | Address restricted[5] | Ensemble of Taino petroglyphs found across several large boulders at the confluence of the Icacos and Cubuy Rivers in El Toro Wilderness of El Yunque National Forest. Also known as the Río Blanco Petroglyphs site. | |
4 | Villa Del Mar | June 23, 1983 (#83002293) |
Highway 3, km 66.2 18°11′21″N 65°42′54″W / 18.189168°N 65.714985°W | Húcares | Now ruined 1917 Queen Anne-inspired Criollo-style residence formerly owned by a wealthy sugarcane plantation owner also known as "El Castillo" located in the Malecón of Naguabo. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | María Dávila Semidey School | November 14, 2012 (#12000939) |
300 Muñoz Rivera Street 18°00′21″N 66°01′01″W / 18.005906°N 66.017068°W | Patillas Pueblo | Mission Revival-style school building from 1925, designed by Francisco Gardón Vega. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Baño de Oro | January 21, 2020 (#100004891) |
Highway 191, km 12.1 Coordinates missing | Mameyes II | Historic Civilian Conservation Corps-built visitor infrastructure named after the natural area of the same name in El Yunque National Forest. | |
2 | Baño Grande | February 28, 2017 (#100000685) |
Highway 191, km 11.85 18°18′06″N 65°47′07″W / 18.301616°N 65.785388°W | Mameyes II | Former swimming pool built by the Civilian Conservation Corps by damming a section of La Mina River in El Yunque National Forest. Also known as La Mina Pool. | |
3 | Jimenez Petroglyph Site | May 28, 2024 (#100008398) |
Address Restricted | Río Grande vicinity | Ancient Taino petroglyph site with rock art uniquely carved onto red clay, located in El Yunque National Forest. | |
4 | Mt. Britton Tower | May 30, 2024 (#100010421) |
181 metres (594 ft) southeast of FS Road 10 at km. 1.3 18°18′04″N 65°47′36″W / 18.3010°N 65.7932°W | Río Grande vicinity | Civilian Conservation Corps tower located in the summit of Mount Britton, the 8th tallest peak in El Yunque National Forest. Built in the 1930s. | |
5 | Río Grande Fire Station | January 29, 2013 (#12001248) |
6 Juan R. González Street 18°22′46″N 65°49′49″W / 18.379540°N 65.830289°W | Río Grande Pueblo | Historic Art Deco firehouse built in 1951 by the Department of Public Works of Puerto Rico. Part of the Fire Stations in Puerto Rico MPS. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Rafael Acevedo House | March 17, 1994 (#94000249) |
Víctor Duteil Street between San José and Baldorioty Streets 18°09′00″N 65°26′35″W / 18.149938°N 65.443051°W | Isabel Segunda | Historic house built in a Neoclassical Vieques Creole-style in 1900, representative of architectural influences from the British and French West Indies. Also known as the Mirella Acevedo Sanes House. | |
2 | Algodones 2 (12VPr2-204) | August 21, 1991 (#91001037) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | An archeological site of an indigenous village with evidence of inhabitation throughout different cultural periods since 600 CE. Located in the former Vieques Naval Reservation. | |
3 | Algodones 3 (12VPr2-205) | August 21, 1991 (#91001038) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Another village archeological site, found within the borders of the Vieques National Wildlife Refuge. | |
4 | Algodones 6 (12VPr2-229) | August 21, 1991 (#91001032) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Another village archeological site, found within the borders of the Vieques National Wildlife Refuge. | |
5 | Camp Garcia (Campo Asilo) 3 (12VPr2-164) | August 21, 1991 (#91001041) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Ferro | Site of petroglyphs, also found within the borders of the Vieques National Wildlife Refuge. | |
6 | Casa Alcaldía de Vieques | March 17, 1994 (#94000174) |
Junction of Carlos LeBrun and Benítez Guzmán Streets 18°08′59″N 65°26′30″W / 18.149654°N 65.441606°W | Isabel Segunda | Former "casa del rey founded in 1850 in the settlement of Isabel Segunda to re-establish Spanish colonial control of the island of Vieques. Today it serves as the municipal city hall. | |
7 | Casa Augusto Delerme | February 2, 1994 (#93001555) |
7 Benítez Guzmán Street 18°09′00″N 65°26′31″W / 18.150084°N 65.441849°W | Isabel Segunda | A 4-Room Vieques Creole vernacular-style house built in 1850 for a local prominent French-born landowner. | |
8 | Casa Delerme-Anduze No. 2 | November 22, 1993 (#93001205) |
355 Antonio Mellado Street 18°08′55″N 65°26′29″W / 18.148710°N 65.441300°W | Isabel Segunda | A six-room Vieques Creole vernacular-style house from 1876 owned by a wealthy landowner from Guadeloupe. | |
9 | Casa de Jaime Puig Lemoine | April 14, 1994 (#94000363) |
161 65 de Infantería Street 18°08′55″N 65°26′35″W / 18.148680°N 65.442993°W | Isabel Segunda | Bungalow/Craftsman house from 1930, designed by Jaime Puig. | |
10 | Central Playa Grande | September 10, 1992 (#92001236) |
Address restricted[5] | Llave | An archaeological site consisting of a former sugarcane plantation and mill with architecture by Matias Hjardemaal and others. | |
11 | Delerme-Anduze House | February 2, 1994 (#93001556) |
361 Antonio Mellado Street 18°08′55″N 65°26′29″W / 18.148601°N 65.441414°W | Isabel Segunda | A vernacular French Caribbean Creole-style gallery house from 1850. | |
12 | Faro de Vieques | November 17, 1977 (#77001551) |
Punta Mulas 18°09′16″N 65°26′38″W / 18.1545°N 65.4438°W | Puerto Diablo | Spanish-built lighthouse from 1896. Now also houses a maritime history museum. | |
13 | Fuerte de Vieques | November 18, 1977 (#77001552) |
Calle del Fuerte 18°08′51″N 65°26′21″W / 18.147436°N 65.439070°W | Isabel Segunda | Well-preserved Spanish-built fortress from 1845 established to provide protection to Isabel Segunda and its harbor. Now it also houses the Vieques Museum of Art and History. | |
14 | Hacienda Casa del Francés | November 18, 1977 (#77001548) |
Near Esperanza 18°06′09″N 65°28′15″W / 18.102381°N 65.470786°W | Puerto Real | Historic residence and plantation manor of Henri Muraille from 1910. Also known as the Sportsmen's House. Destroyed by fire in 2005.[10] | |
15 | Laguna Jalova Archeological District | September 10, 1992 (#92001237) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Archaeological district consisting of different pre-Columbian village sites. Also known as "Western Friendly Front Line". | |
16 | Llave 13 (12VPr2-175) | August 21, 1991 (#91001036) |
Address restricted[5] | Llave | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
17 | Loma Jalova 3 (12VPr2-219) | August 21, 1991 (#91001034) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
18 | Monte Largo 2 (12VPr2-172) | August 21, 1991 (#91001042) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
19 | Paramayon 2 | September 10, 1992 (#92001241) |
Address restricted[5] | Llave | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
20 | Le Pistolet (12VPr2-168) | August 22, 1991 (#91001040) |
Address restricted[5] | Punta Arenas | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
21 | Playa Grande 9 (12VPr2-212) | August 21, 1991 (#91001035) |
Address restricted[5] | Llave | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
22 | Playa Vieja | September 10, 1992 (#92001235) |
Address restricted[5] | Punta Arenas | Archaeological evidence of prehistoric human inhabitation, particularly from the Saladoid and Ostionoid cultures. Also known as Site 12VPr2-70. | |
23 | Punta Jalova | September 10, 1992 (#92001239) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
24 | Resolucion Historic District[b] | September 10, 1992 (#92001242) |
Address restricted[5] | Punta Arenas | Industrial archaeological site of the first sugarcane plantations and mills established in the island of Vieques and designed by T. J. J. M. Le Guillou and others.[11] | |
25 | Smaine–Ortiz House | February 2, 1994 (#93001554) |
341 Antonio Mellado Street 18°08′49″N 65°26′29″W / 18.146970°N 65.441358°W | Isabel Segunda | Vieques Creole vernacular residence. Also known as the Porfirio Ortiz House. | |
26 | Las Tumbas de J. J. María le Guillou | August 26, 1994 (#94000923) |
Highway 200, near Isabel Segunda 18°09′10″N 65°25′57″W / 18.152750°N 65.432444°W | Puerto Diablo | Graveyard from 1843 built in a Classical Revival style for the Le Guillou family, who founded the modern municipality of Vieques and established its first modern sugarcane plantations. | |
27 | Ventana Archeological District | September 10, 1992 (#92001238) |
Address restricted[5] | Llave | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
28 | Ventana 4 (12VPr2-171) | August 21, 1991 (#91001039) |
Address restricted[5] | Punta Arenas | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
29 | Vieques Pharmacy | March 2, 1994 (#94000061) |
Junction of Carlos LeBrun and Víctor Duteil Streets 18°08′58″N 65°26′30″W / 18.149341°N 65.441751°W | Isabel Segunda | Former town general store, pharmacy, post office and customs house, established by the vice-consul of Denmark in Vieques to tighten the ties between the Spanish and Danish Virgin Islands. Today a restaurant. | |
30 | Yanuel 8 (12VPr2-173) | August 21, 1991 (#91001043) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. | |
31 | Yanuel 9 (12VPr2-220) | August 21, 1991 (#91001033) |
Address restricted[5] | Puerto Diablo | Pre-Columbian archaeological site. |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | Barrio | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yabucoa Fire Station | February 13, 2013 (#13000015) |
22 Luis Muñoz Rivera Street 18°03′07″N 65°52′38″W / 18.051979°N 65.877330°W | Yabucoa Pueblo | Historic Art Deco fire station from 1943. Also known as the Parque de Bombas de Yabucoa. |
See also
[edit]- National Register of Historic Places listings in Puerto Rico
- National Register of Historic Places listings in southern Puerto Rico
- National Register of Historic Places listings in northern Puerto Rico
- National Register of Historic Places listings in western Puerto Rico
- National Register of Historic Places listings in central Puerto Rico
- National Register of Historic Places listings in San Juan, Puerto Rico
- History of Puerto Rico
Notes
[edit]- ^ The name of the Parroquia del Espiritu Santo y San Patricio is presented here without the accent on "Espíritu" in conformance with the usage in the church's National Register nomination form[8] and Federal Register announcement of listing.[9]
- ^ The name of the Resolucion Historic District is presented here without the accent on "Resolución" in conformance with the usage in the site's National Register nomination form[11] and announcement of listing.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 1, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ Pumarada O'Neill, Luis (July 31, 1994), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Villarán Bridge (PDF), retrieved January 3, 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Federal and state laws and practices restrict general public access to information regarding the specific location of this resource. In some cases, this is to protect archaeological sites from vandalism, while in other cases it is restricted at the request of the owner. See: Knoerl, John; Miller, Diane; Shrimpton, Rebecca H. (1990), Guidelines for Restricting Information about Historic and Prehistoric Resources, National Register Bulletin, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, OCLC 20706997.
- ^ Oficina Estatal de Conservación Histórica (April 1, 2014), Quebrada Maracuto (PDF) (summary sheet), retrieved March 10, 2016.
- ^ U.S. Customs Service (1991). Global Trade Talk: The U.S. Customs Service Journal for the International Trade Community. The Service. p. 9-PT183. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
- ^ a b Tarr, Jashina Alexandra (July 12, 1976), National Register of Historic Places Inventory — Nomination Form: Parroquia del Espiritu Santo y San Patricio (PDF), retrieved January 7, 2016.
- ^ "Department of the Interior, Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service: National Register of Historic Places; Annual Listing of Historic Properties", 44 FR 7416 (February 6, 1979), at p. 7581.
- ^ Fundación Puertorriqueña de las Humanidades (January 4, 2010), "Vieques: Casa del Francés Estate", Puerto Rico Encyclopedia, archived from the original on May 12, 2015, retrieved January 12, 2016.
- ^ a b Vescelius, Gary S. (July 5, 1980), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Resolucion Historic District (redacted PDF), retrieved January 13, 2016.
- ^ National Park Service (September 25, 1992), Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 9/14/92 through 9/19/92 (PDF), retrieved January 13, 2016.