Posts tagged NPS

National Park Service Units Map

This map illustrates the National Park Service Inventory & Monitoring (I&M) networks and all park units in the NPS system. I created this map in response to frequent inquiries for maps showing the extent of the I&M programs.

This was a really fun map to create.  It quickly became an often-requested product of the NPS Natural Resource GIS program office.

Design Features

The map shows each inventory & monitoring network with a shaded area colored to associate with the natural bio-region the network covers.  For instance, North Coast & Cascades Network is shaded with a darker green to coincide with the predominant forests found in that region.  On the other end, desert areas are represented with buff or terra-cotta colors to associate with the sandy and rocky landscapes.

All park units existing in 2006 are included on the map.  Park units are colored green or gray to indicate if they are part of the I&M network programs (gray parks are excluded from the I&M program).

East coast park labels are grouped together off the shore by the city area they are found in.  The labels for the cities point towards the location of the park unit grouping.

You may find a PDF version of the map here.

 

National Park Service Units Map

National Park Service Units Map

 

NPS Units Map (Southwest Detail)

NPS Units Map (Southwest Detail)

Visiting Kansas Black History Sites

While visiting family in Kansas over Independence Day weekend his year I had the chance to visit two national park sites that were important in the struggle for racial equality and economic survival for African Americans. Kansas seems an odd place for these sites since it is a predominately white Midwestern state, but important events in the Civil Rights battle occurred here too.

Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site, Topeka Kansas

Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site, Topeka Kansas

In Topeka, we found Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site. The park is housed in one of Topeka’s old elementary schools just south of downtown. Inside, the story of the struggle for African American civil rights is told through videos and displays tracing events from slavery through the 1960s demonstrations and court battles.

The museum gives a good overview of the topic. The wall displays are high-quality and graphically interesting, and the multimedia presentations are great for providing a more impactful presentation. In one room, we walked through a hall of large video monitors running film clips of police beating demonstrators, white people screaming racial slurs while children are led into a newly-desegregated school, among other distressing images.

While serving well as a national civil rights museum, the park falls short by not weaving its local story in to the broader tale. Little is provided about the actual Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case other than a series of five minute videos covering the five cases that were concurrently argued before the court. And we saw nothing that explained why the school building we were walking through was important and why it was selected to house this museum.

Nicodemus National Historic Site, Kansas

Nicodemus National Historic Site, Kansas

Later, while on our trip back across the Great Plains of western Kansas to Colorado, we stopped to visit Nicodemus National Historic Site, a historic black farming settlement on the western Kansas high plains. Nicodemus was promoted in the late 1870s to recently freed slaves in the South (Kentucky mostly) who were stuck in the sharecropping trap. For five dollars, those who settled here could have 160 acres and a mule in the “Promised Land.”

Those who followed the promoters west were usually disappointed upon arriving to find the barren and dry high plains on which their new town was being raised. Adding to disappointment was the realization that they would be living in sod houses made from patches of grass and dirt.

Some kept moving on to other places, but most stayed and learned how to farm and live on the plains. The town grew steadily until being passed by the railroad which was built five miles to the south.

Nicodemus has been in a slow decline since that time. There are only thirty people remaining here in 2011. The National Park Service is trying to preserve some of the more important buildings in town – the St Francis Hotel, the A.M.E. and Baptist churches, the grammar school, and the Township Hall – as parts of this newish national park site.

I look forward to seeing more of the structures open and more tours available on a future visit.

 

For more information:

Brown v. Board of Education NHS

NPS Site     Brochure/Map

Nicodemus NHS

NPS Site     Brochure/Map     Walking Tour

 

Parklands of the Colorado River

Parklands of the Colorado River - Front

Parklands of the Colorado River - Front

 

In 2009, the National Park Service created this brochure to highlight the interconnectedness of the national park units in the Colorado River Basin.  I was asked to create the map for the brochure.

This map is featured in the background on the front page of the map.  This brochure was intended to be given out to visitors at NPS information centers around the Colorado River Basin.

View the full brochure by clicking this link:

Parklands of the Colorado River (NPS Brochure)

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