HR-139-116
Received in the Senate. Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 550.
What it does
This bill would direct the Department of the Interior to conduct a special resource study of sites in Springfield, Illinois connected to the 1908 Springfield Race Riot, including an archeological site near Madison Street and the 10th Street Rail Corridor. Interior would evaluate whether these sites are nationally significant and determine whether it is suitable and feasible to designate them as a unit of the National Park System. The study itself would not create a new national park or monument.
Who benefits
Residents of Springfield, Illinois and the surrounding region who would gain increased historical recognition and potential tourism. Descendants of victims and survivors of the 1908 riot, particularly African American communities with historical ties to the event. Historians, educators, and researchers studying racial violence in early 20th-century America. Local businesses and tourism operators who could benefit if a national park unit is eventually designated. The National Park Service, which would receive a formal mandate to evaluate a historically underrepresented event.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers would bear the cost of conducting the study, though special resource studies are typically low-cost. Property owners near the studied sites could face uncertainty if a future park designation were to follow, potentially affecting land use or property values. Local or state governments could face competing jurisdiction or land-use considerations if a federal designation eventually results from the study.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 1908 Springfield Race Riot was a pivotal and nationally significant event — it directly spurred the founding of the NAACP and exposed the persistence of racial violence in the North, not just the South. They contend that the National Park System has historically underrepresented sites tied to African American history and racial violence, and that a formal study is a modest, responsible first step toward correcting that gap. Supporters note that the bill does not create a park or spend significant funds — it only authorizes a study, allowing evidence and expert evaluation to guide any future decision. Preserving and interpreting these sites, they argue, serves the educational mission of the National Park Service and ensures that a formative chapter of American civil rights history is not lost.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the federal government already manages an extensive and underfunded portfolio of National Park System units, and that adding new study mandates stretches Interior Department resources without addressing the maintenance backlog affecting existing parks. They contend that commemoration of the 1908 riot can be effectively handled by state and local governments or private historical organizations without federal involvement, keeping decisions closer to the affected community. Some opponents may argue that the bill, while limited in scope, is a precursor to a federal land designation that could impose restrictions on private property owners or displace local land-use authority. Others question whether the archeological significance of the specific sites meets the threshold for national park consideration compared to competing priorities.