Message for World Heritage Convention
Press Statement
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
March 16, 2012
140 years ago, the United States established Yellowstone as our very
first national park. A century later, as a charter member of UNESCO, we
proposed the World Heritage Convention, initiating a global movement to
protect the earth's resources and treasures.
Since then, the World Heritage Convention has been the most widely
accepted international conservation treaty in history. In the United
States alone, over twenty landmarks have been added to the World
Heritage List, inspiring people from everywhere to think themselves
about what is worth saving and preserving right where they live.
I have had the honor of visiting many of these sights and
the opportunities to meet those who have dedicated their lives to this
important project of preservation. As we celebrate this 40th
anniversary, let us pay tribute to those who have worked to preserve and
protect sites in the United States and across the world. And let us
renew our commitment to the next 40 years so that future generations
have also the opportunity and the challenge to experience the places
that reflect our unique heritage, and to help tell the story of the ties
that bind us all together. This is an extraordinary commitment to the
past, the present and the future. Let's work together to make it even
better in the decades ahead.
Thank you very much.