Title 54 › Subtitle Subtitle III— - National Preservation Programs › Chapter CHAPTER 3087— - NATIONAL MARITIME HERITAGE › § 308703
Creates a National Maritime Heritage Grants Program at the Department of the Interior to help more Americans learn about the Nation’s maritime history and culture. Each year the program gives two kinds of grants when money is available under section 308704(b)(1)(A): an annual grant to the National Trust to make subgrants for education projects, and grants to State Historic Preservation Officers for preservation projects. The Secretary must try to make the money for education and preservation equal when possible, and no more than 40 percent of the yearly grant money can go to projects involving maritime resources owned or run by the Federal Government. Education grants cover things like museum programs and exhibits, teaching traditional maritime skills and arts, building and using vessels for learning, waterborne experiences and archaeology field schools, heritage trails, and making replicas for teaching when originals are gone or would be damaged. Preservation grants cover finding and documenting maritime sites (including underwater archaeology), buying historic maritime resources to protect them, repairing or restoring sites or vessels to standards the Secretary sets, and doing research, planning, or recording as part of preservation work. To get a grant or subgrant, applicants must be a state or local government unit or a private nonprofit, show the project will reach a wide audience with good educational value, match the grant with non‑Federal funds on a 1-to-1 basis, keep and allow review of records, and promise to pay for ongoing care of any property after the project ends. The Secretary will publish one annual request for applications, priorities, and a single deadline. The National Trust runs the education subgrants, the Secretary manages direct preservation grants, and State Historic Preservation Officers handle preservation subgrants. These administrators must publicize the program, take and track applications, monitor projects, and report progress. They may work with qualified nonprofit partners. The Secretary must send an annual report to the named Senate and House committees listing applications, funded projects, results, and recommended priorities.
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National Park Service and Related Programs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
54 U.S.C. § 308703
Title 54 — National Park Service and Related Programs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73