|  National Trust for Historic Preservation's     50th AnniversaryRemarks by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton
  The National Building Museum Washington, D.C.
 October 21, 1999
 Thank you very much. Thank you, Dick. I am honored to join all of you in this     beautiful venue for the celebration of the National Trust for Historic Preservation's     Anniversaryand to thank all of you for the many contributions that you     make to communities throughout our country, and indeed for some of you, places     throughout the world.
 I want to thank Nancy Campbell for her very hard work, and for taking on this     new challenge on behalf of the Trust. And William Hart, congratulations. And     I am particularly pleased to see the dynamic trio who was just up here of Robert     Bass, John Bryan, and Dick Jenrette, whom I know are making this campaign under     Nancy's leadership a great success.  It is a privilege to be here with all of you, and I could certainly recite     the many accomplishments that are represented in this room by those of you who     have been stalwart preservationists and supporters of this Trust over the years.     I want to thank the many members of Congress who are here, and those who were     unable to be here but whom have made sure that the federal government monitors     its commitment to our parks, our culture, and our history. I also want to thank     the co-chairs who organized this gala. And I want to thank Stanley Lowe for     his enthusiasm; Nancy Campbell and Bill Hart, again, for their vision of leadership.     
 I was delighted that Save America's Treasures is the theme of this conference.     I want to thank everyone who has participated in and supported this campaign,     for coming here tonight, and for the many many ways that you have made this     a success because of your energy and generosity. I want to thank the staff of     Save America's Treasuresat the National Trust, the White House Millennium     Council, the National Park Service and Foundationbecause they are the     federal partner of this effort.
 And I want to say a special word of thanks to Dick Moe. Anyone who has been     around Dick for more than a minute knows how passionately he cares about the     causes that the Trust advocates. He has been and will continue to be a strong     proponent of the work of all of the rest of us. What does it say that he often     leaves out that one important point when he talks about the Trust or Save America's     Treasures or the $65 million or so that it has raised? Because certainly none     of that would have been possible without his imagination and commitment.  So on behalf of everyone here, and on behalf of all those monuments and artifacts     and other expressions of our heritage that have been saved, I want to thank     Dick Moe and all of you who are our partners at the National Trust for Historic     Preservation.  Now I have been on a few road trips with Dick, Nancy and other leaders at the     Trust. And of course we have a saying: What happens on the road stays     on the road. But I can report to you that they are often treated a little     bit like rock stars in preservation settings. People come up to them, shake     their hands, and thank them for all the Trust has done to save their proudest     symbolsfrom the Conservatory of Flowers in San Francisco's Golden     Gate Park to the Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado. In so many different     settings around our country, I have seen and heard and experienced the impact     that preservation has made and is making.  For example, on our trip to Mesa Verde, I heard a wonderful story about how     a park ranger, when he gives tours to children through those marvelous monuments     of that ancient civilization, gathers them in a circle and asks them to cup     their hands together and hold them, just for a moment, in the silence of the     beauty around them. And then he tells them that they are holding the spirit     of the place, and the beauty that it represents. And he asks them always to     honor the ancestral Pueblo people, and to go through life preserving these kinds     of areas, those buildings and other things of beauty. This is really what the     Trust has done now for 50 years. It has asked us to cup our hands together and     just imagine that we were, as I believe we are, the stewards and the trustees     of the history and the culture and the beauty around us.  Back when the Trust began, I'm told there were only two people working     there: Fred Rath and Betty Walsh. And there were no members at all. I can only     imagine what they'd think of this extraordinary gathering this eveningthe     thousands of preservationists who've traveled from all over this country     to attend this conference, who have dedicated themselves to holding our history     in their hands and never letting it disappear. As many of you know, Save America's Treasures is part of the White House     Millennium Council that the President and I created over two years ago. When     we began thinking about this unique moment in historythe end of a century     and a millennium, the beginning of the nextwe knew we wanted to do more     than just attend a great New Year's Eve party. We thought that this would     give us all an opportunity to ask Americans to find a way to honor the past     and imagine the futurebecause after all, they do go together.  We stand here today knowing that not only the blood, but the experiences and     hopes of our ancestors run through our veins. And it is through their languages     and legends, their living monuments and living traditions that we can understand     who we are, where we came from, and what we want to be.   That is the purpose of Save America's Treasures, as well as the work     of the Trust. In the last 50 years, we have continued to expand the treasures     that we hold in our hands. And it isn't just the famous monuments and artifacts.     We need to see Main Street as a treasure. A series of shotgun houses in Jackson,     Mississippi, as a treasure. A WPA mural in a post office as a treasure. Our     photo albums, our scrapbooks, the letters that record how those of us came to     be Americansthey are all treasures. And so I have been very privileged in the last two years to travel from one     end of our country to the other, and to see firsthand how you have worked to     hold those treasures dear. At the Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged, for example, I saw powerful reminders     of one of the most painful chapters in our history and the people who fought     to overcome slavery. You could almost hear Harriet Tubman's voice as she     led slaves to safety. She would always repeat her motto, no matter what dangers     were faced: Keep going. If you are scared, keep going. If you are in danger,     keep going. If you want justice, keep going.
 On a very, very hot July afternoon, with a very big crowd of citizens from the     surrounding area of Auburn, New York, we watched young children from the church     that now controls the property where the Tubman home is reenact that journey     and those struggles, using those words and singing songs of freedom. So for     them, the Tubman house and the Tubman story were not something that was to be     read and forgotten in a schoolbook, but to be experienced.
 I've also stood on the steps of the small, modest house and put up a flag     that the National Trust would recognize this house as the home of a young Irish     immigrant woman, Kate Mullany, who founded a union of collar workers, those     who washed collars in laundries.  I've also been in Longfellow's home, looking with such interest at     all of the documents that had been saved that truly chronicle the life of that     family, and understanding the triumphs and tragedies of the history of poetry     and what it reminds us of the human condition.  I've seen scientific discoveries at the Thomas Edison Invention Factory,     where ideas gave birth to the movie projector, industrial research and development,     and so many inventions that have revolutionized our lives. And I've seen the proud history of Native Americans in the Pueblo of Acoma.     On top of a mountainwhich is the oldest continuously inhabited community     in the United Statessits an ancient church which holds our religious traditions     and the people that have passed them on from generation to generation.  Sometimes on our road trips, we have been fortunate enough to bring additional     resources to these sites. Sometimes we have brought attention and recognition.     But we have always tried to bring the message that preservation is not a luxury,     but a necessity. Because if we lose our heritage, we lose our collective memory;     we lose our heritage; we lose our ability to revitalize communitiesfor     we know that preservation and development must go hand in hand. If we lose our     heritage, we lose an opportunity to understand and respect each other, and we     abdicate the obligation each of us has to be caretakers of the past. Over the past 50 years, as the circle of treasures we want to save has grown,     so too has the circle of responsibility. Because as we know more of our history,     we do have to step forward and be ready to act. And to everyone who has done     soin the private and the public sectors, through small contributions to     multi-million dollar onesI'm very grateful to all of you for the     many contributions you have given that enabled us to raise the private match     to the federal money that has enabled Save America's Treasures to reach     and preserve 62 historic sites and collections. Last year, Congress approved     $30 million dollars to save important treasures, and that funding has been more     than matched, dollar for dollar. As we gather tonight, in the midst of the budget     negotiations, we hope and expect Congress will approve another $30 million for     the year 2000.  There are many wonderful stories about all of the sites we have visited. One     of my favorites comes from a group of young preservationists, third-graders     in Boulder, Colorado. For three years, they have raised money for Mesa Verde     by doing extra chores and selling calendars they made themselves that they call,     Adopt a Ruin Calendars. The teacher who developed this project tells     her students that they are having a hand in history, and she is right. One of     the students who worked hard to raise pennies for preservation wrote, I     think Adopt-a-Ruin' is a good idea because in 40 years, my kids will     probably want to see the ruins. So far, I have raised $15, and I think the best     part of that will be when I grow up and see the expressions on my kids'     faces. Well, there is hardly a better description of why preservation     is important.  And I'm told that in 1883, the architect of this great building also wanted     it to serve as a time capsule. So he placed in the columns around us things     like war records, newspapers, maps, and copies of the Constitution and Declaration     of Independence. He wanted to preserve our symbols of freedom and democracy.     Well, that is what we are attempting to do by saving these treasures. And I     hope, as we end this century and begin another, that we will continue to increase     our commitment to ensuring that our collective memory never fails. So that on     the 100th anniversary of the Trust, whether we need to be here in person or     in virtual reality, we will be able to say that we too gave gifts to the future:     the gift of freedom; the gift of memory; the gift that only culture, art and     history can represent. And we will have done our part, not only to save America's     physical pleasures, but the ideas and values they represent.  So let us honor the past, and demand a new future, and make sure we can create     a future worthy of our ancestors, and one that every American feels a responsibility     to hold carefully in his hand. Thank you all so very much for what you have done. |