national register nomination for boulevard park historic
national register nomination for boulevard park historic
national register nomination for boulevard park historic
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City of Sacramento, “Sacramento Residential Survey,” Charles Hall Page & Associates, January 1976<br />
McGuire, Pamela, “Historic Overview <strong>for</strong> the Oak Park Redevelopment Area and Determination of<br />
Eligibility <strong>for</strong> Inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places <strong>for</strong> the Oak Park Land Development<br />
Areas (1) and (2),” (Survey prepared <strong>for</strong> City of Sacramento, April 1980)<br />
Robinson, Charles Mul<strong>for</strong>d, “The Improvement of Sacramento.” Report prepared <strong>for</strong> City of Sacramento,<br />
November 1908<br />
Theses and Manuscripts<br />
Patterson, John, The development of public recreation in the city of Sacramento. (Thesis: Sacramento State<br />
University, 1957)<br />
Archival Collections<br />
Leslie Crow Papers, Processed by Leigh Johnsen, Holt-Atherton Department of Special Collections,<br />
University of the Pacific Library, Stockton, CA, 2008<br />
The elements of the Leslie Crow collection used in this <strong>nomination</strong> are a set of binders and folders<br />
collected by the Historic Boulevard Park Committee (HBPC), an organization of Boulevard Park residents<br />
who collected documents related to neighborhood history including building surveys, newspaper articles,<br />
<strong>historic</strong> photos, maps and other related ephemera. Tables of plumbing and building permits, census and city<br />
directory in<strong>for</strong>mation, and custom-designed assessment <strong>for</strong>ms created <strong>for</strong> the project were also included in<br />
this collection. The consultant, Leslie Crow, received these documents after she accepted a contract from<br />
the city of Sacramento to complete a National Register <strong>nomination</strong> <strong>for</strong> the neighborhood. They were part of<br />
the documents submitted to the University of the Pacific after Leslie Crow’s death.<br />
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