Oh no! New York’s legendary Ellis Island has joined the list of National Trust of Historic Preservation Endangered List. Click below to read the full story.

Melissa Nash

Hundreds of historic U.S. post offices nationwide face uncertain futures as the U.S. Postal Service downsizes, so preservationists on Wednesday added these American institutions to the list of the country’s most endangered historic places.

Post offices will join the list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places as a group for the first time. The National Trust for Historic Preservation is citing the bureaucratic process for disposing of thousands of post offices, saying developers and community groups interested in rehabilitating the historic buildings end up walking away when they don’t get timely or clear answers from the Postal Service.

The group also said New York’s Ellis Island hospital complex is threatened, even though it’s a popular historic destination, because the facility where thousands of immigrants received medical treatment upon their arrival has been left open to the elements.

Princeton Battlefield, which turned the tide of the American Revolution in New Jersey, also is facing imminent danger from housing development that would change the landscape, preservationists said.

The nation’s post offices, though, represent the largest number of sites that could be lost in towns and cities both large and small. Preservationists began getting calls more than a year ago about individual post offices, so they want to work with the Postal Service to help foster a process for adapting and reusing the historic buildings, said Stephanie Meeks, president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

“This isn’t about taking on the post office,” she said. “Of course we don’t quibble with the post office having to do what they have to do to manage their business, but we do want to make sure there’s a thoughtful process in place for managing the historic resources.”

One developer in Geneva, Ill., walked away from negotiations with the Postal Service after months of work, citing a lack of clear answers from the agency.

Another large group of sites being added to the endangered list includes the courthouses of Texas, with support from former first lady Laura Bush. The state’s courthouses were first listed in 1998, but at least 70 of them still need critical repairs. Most are still in use.

Other sites are facing even more imminent threats.

President Theodore Roosevelt’s Elkhorn Ranch in North Dakota’s Badlands, which inspired his views on conservation, is facing development of a road and bridge project that would “mar” the landscape and “stain Roosevelt’s legacy of conservation,” the group said.

Three sites from black history also are being added to the list: Joe Frazier’s gym in Philadelphia, the boyhood home of Malcolm X in Boston and Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn Historic District, where Martin Luther King Jr. was born and later preached.

This is the second time that Sweet Auburn has been among the most endangered sites. It was first listed in 1992 when the area around King’s birth home was at risk. Since then, much of the area has been revitalized, but much of the commercial corridor remains vacant and could be wiped out by new development, said Mtamanika Youngblood, president of the neighborhood’s Sustainable Neighborhood Development Strategies Inc.

“We fear that if we lose any more … we will lose the essence of Sweet Auburn,” she said, noting that the historic Atlanta Daily World Building and Atlanta Life Insurance Buildings stand vacant, along with the original Southern Christian Leadership Conference Building and others.

In practical terms, the area could also lose its historic district status if its commercial corridor disappears, she said.

“If this place is important enough for people to come halfway around the world to visit … there should be some civic will,” Youngblood said.

Federal and local officials do hope a coming $94 million streetcar project linking the Auburn Avenue district with downtown and the tourist hot spots near Centennial Park will attract businesses to a long-depressed economic area.

Diverse communities are often underrepresented in the preservation of cultural resources. Only 3 percent of the sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places represent diverse communities, Meeks said.

Additional sites being added to this year’s list:

– Bridges of Yosemite Valley, Calif. A National Park Service plan would leave three historic Rustic Style bridges in danger of removal.

– Terminal Island at the Port of Los Angeles. This major shipbuilding center where America’s tuna-canning industry was born and 3,000 Japanese Americans were held is threatened by long-term vacancy of its historic buildings.

– Village of Zoar, Ohio. This 195-year-old village was founded by religious separatists fleeing Germany but is threatened by the potential removal of a levee that could lead to massive flooding or require demolition of much of the town.