Title 16 › Chapter 1— NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter LIX–BB— NEW BEDFORD WHALING NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK › § 410ddd
Creates the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park to protect and explain New Bedford’s role in 19th‑century whaling. The park includes the New Bedford Historic District, the Schooner Ernestina, and other nearby waterfront and street areas shown on map NAR–P49–80,000–4 dated June 1994. The Secretary of the Interior may also help preserve and interpret nearby piers, parks, museums, and related sites. The law requires the park to recognize the role of Alaska Natives in whaling and to provide financial and other help to link the park with the North Slope Borough Cultural Center in Barrow, Alaska. Definitions: “park” = New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. “Secretary” = Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary must run the park under National Park Service rules, make cooperative agreements with local groups, accept donations, and only acquire land by donation for essential visitor facilities. Cooperative payments follow matching rules: Federal funds at $1 for every $4 from non‑Federal sources; construction and major restoration at $1 Federal for every $1 non‑Federal. A general management plan must be sent to Congress by the end of the second fiscal year after November 12, 1996, and put into action as soon as practical. Congress may fund operations and the Alaska link, but construction money is capped at $5,000,000, no Federal funds may pay to operate the Schooner Ernestina, and up to $50,000 per year in Federal funds may support Ernestina education programs under cooperative agreements.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 410ddd
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60