About Preservation Texas
Founded in 1985, Preservation Texas is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to providing a range of statewide preservation programs. We protect historic places through direct investments, grants, and by empowering people and organizations through advocacy, collaboration, and education.
Preservation Texas is governed by a volunteer board of directors drawn from across the state. In 2024, we published a Strategic Vision for Preservation Texas that will guide our work over the next decade. Through the implementation of five Strategic Directions, Preservation Texas will develop the professional and financial resources to empower Texans to protect our cultural heritage, while we embark upon our own restoration projects statewide.
1920 Lampasas Colored School, Lampasas
Our Mission
Preservation Texas empowers Texans to preserve their cultural heritage, and stewards significant buildings, collections, and cultural landscapes to ensure their permanent protection.
Organizational Purposes:
To educate the general public, and all persons, organizations, and agencies active in historic preservation, on public policy, legislative, legal, and economic development issues that impact historic preservation, and to advocate in the process for proposals benefitting historic preservation goals;
To acquire, by purchase, gift, devise or bequest, with or without restriction, and to preserve, restore, maintain and present to the public those areas, sites, buildings, monuments, artifacts, artworks, books, documents, and objects which are significant in the history, prehistory, archaeology, architecture, heritage and culture of Texas;
To disseminate information about the history, prehistory, heritage and culture of Texas, and historic preservation practice and trades;
To engage in historical and archaeological research on the activities of past Texans; and
To foster, encourage and develop a general appreciation and understanding of the lives and activities of past generations of Texans in order that the lives of present and future generations may be enriched.
c. 1928 Sycamore Grove Filling Station, Glen Rose