Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER LIX–OO— - COLTSVILLE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK › § 410qqq
Creates the Coltsville National Historical Park in Connecticut once certain conditions are met. The Secretary of the Interior must first get enough donated land or land interests inside the park boundary, obtain a written donation of at least 10,000 square feet in the Colt Armory Complex for park offices and visitor services, and make a written agreement that State, city, or public land in the Coltsville Historic District will be managed to follow this law. When the Secretary makes that finding, they must publish a notice in the Federal Register within 30 days. The Secretary may buy, accept donations of, or exchange land (but may not use condemnation), and State-owned land may be taken only by donation. The Secretary can make cooperative agreements to identify, restore, and interpret historic properties, may require a 1-to-1 non-Federal match for federal money, must have access to public parts of covered properties, and must agree with partners before changing those properties. If a project is used in ways against the law’s purpose, the United States can be repaid the federal amount or the increased value attributable to federal money. The park will include and explain these sites shown on the official map dated May 11, 2010: East Armory; Church of the Good Shepherd; Caldwell/Colt Memorial Parish House; Colt Park; Potsdam Cottages; Armsmear; and the James Colt House. The map will be kept on file for the public. The Secretary will run the park under National Park Service laws, while the State and local governments keep their civil and criminal authority on non‑Federal land. A management plan is due within 3 fiscal years after funds are provided, must show cost sharing, and must be sent to the House Natural Resources Committee and the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. An 11‑member Coltsville National Historical Park Advisory Commission will advise the Secretary. Members are appointed by the Secretary after recommendations from state and local officials (including the Governor, legislature leaders, the Mayor of Hartford, Connecticut’s two U.S. Senators, and the First Congressional District Representative); the Commission must include two people with park or preservation experience, all members must know the Coltsville Historic District, and one member must live in the Sheldon/Charter Oak neighborhood. Members serve 3‑year terms and may be reappointed once. Members do not get pay but may get travel expenses; the Secretary provides staff help. The Commission ends 10 years after December 19, 2014, unless the Commission recommends and the Secretary approves an extension of up to 10 more years. Defined terms (one line each): city = Hartford, Connecticut; Commission = the Coltsville advisory group; Historic District = Coltsville Historic District; map = the park boundary map dated May 11, 2010 (T25/102087); park = Coltsville National Historical Park; Secretary = Secretary of the Interior; State = Connecticut.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 410qqq
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73