U.S. National Park Service
U.S. Government: Agencies/Departments/Divisions | Federal Agencies
Recent News About U.S. National Park Service
-
The National Park Service (NPS) has partnered with experts on historic preservation and the Cold War to identify two dozen locations across the country to review as possible National Historic Landmarks.
-
A Meet the Artist reception is set for 1-3 p.m. Nov. 13, in conjunction with the new display at Biscayne National Park called “Water, Water, Everywhere…” featuring 20 art quilts highlighting water’s importance.
-
The National Park Service named 24 sites worthy of national historic landmark consideration.
-
The National Park Service will spend approximately $1 million to improve transportation to and in the country's national parks through construction projects and travel forecasts.
-
The National Park Service has announced that the Devils Hole pupfish population has reached a 19- year high.
-
Former National Park Service Director Mary Bomar died Aug. 28 following a fight with cancer.
-
The National Park Service's (NPS) American Battlefield Protection Program (ABPP) recently awarded $489,200 in grants to six projects.
-
The National Park Service recently ended a search and rescue operation for an Arizona woman.
-
The National Park Service (NPS) recently revealed $2.1 million in grants to assist with repatriation of ancestral remains and sacred objects.
-
Richmond, Va., and the National Park Service celebrated recently the life and achievements of an African American woman born in the post-Civil War south, who became a teacher, founded a newspaper, was the leader of a national fraternal humanitarian order and the first African American woman to charter a bank.
-
Visitors to Wyoming's Fort Laramie this Saturday can participate in special "Fort Laramie After Dark" events, starting in the middle of the afternoon.
-
Visitors to two national parks in Louisiana's Mississippi River Delta region added more than $17 million to local communities last year, the U.S. National Park Service reported recently.
-
Park rangers at Pictured Rock National Lakeshore recently announced intentions to partner with mountaineering guides from the Superior High Angle Rescue Professionals team to perform increasingly difficult rescues.
-
Mammoth Cave National Park Supt. Barclay Trimble sees the stretch of underground land as a huge national attraction for Kentucky.
-
Water levels at Lake Mead National Recreation Area near Boulder City, Nev., have dropped to almost "dead pool" levels but is still open to visitors and has a new superintendent.
-
The National Park Service recently named Sula Jacobs as the Olympic National Park superintendent.
-
U.S. National Park Service announced more than $7.2 million revitalization grants in 10 states for economic development in those rural communities.
-
Pam Sanfilippo, the museum services and interpretation program manager at Gateway Arch National Park in St. Louis, wants everyone to visit the urban park this summer.
-
National Park Service at Zion National Park held a public online meeting to present a proposal for the redesign of Zion Canyons' south entrance to improve access from Springdale, Utah.
-
Extensive repairs to a seven-mile section of US Route 209 within Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area will begin this week and are expected to be completed by the end of the year.