Adam Thomas | adam@historitecture.com |  Managing Principal, Architectural Historian  Ph.D. Cadidate, American History, Johns Hopkins University  M.A. History, Colorado State University. Concentrations in architectural history, historic preservation, industrial history, and modern design.  B.S. Journalism, Medill School, Northwestern University. Concentration in American history.  Adam Thomas combines his writing experience with a passion for history. He has inventoried and documented thousands of properties across Colorado, and has published numerous historical and architectural contexts. As well, he has written and produced a number of interpretive guides and video documentaries. Adam is also an adjunct professor of history at Colorado State University-Pueblo, and lectures on architectural history and historic preservation to educational and non-profit institutions across the country.  resume   Cheria Yost | cheri@historitecture.com | Architectural Historian, Landscape Architect, Project Manager  M.A. History, Colorado State University. Concentrations in landscape history, historic preservation, early American furnishings, architectural history  B.S. Landscape Architecture, Colorado State University.  Experienced in the study, preservation, and interpretation of American material culture, Cheri Yost combines her interests in history with a degree in landscape architecture. Her landscape architecture and historical training make Cheri particular well-suited to create site plans, historical resource management policies, and other planning materials. Cheri serves as site manager of historic McGraw Ranch, a National Register Historic District within Rocky Mountain National Park and she is currently overseeing the $4 million restoration of the Historic Colonial Hotel, in Meyersdale, Pennsylvania.  resume  Dr. Mary Therese Anstey | marytherese@historitecture.com | Architectural Historian, Western Operations Manager  Ph.D. European Urban Conservation, University of Dundee (Scotland). Dissertation: The Ideal Owner: A Comparative Study of Scottish and American Home Restoration.  M.A. Public History and Historic Preservation, Colorado State University.  B.A. American History, Colorado College.  Dr. Anstey is one of Colorado’s foremost experts in the recordation and protection of historic architectural resources. Before coming to Historitecture, Dr. Anstey served as the historical and architectural survey coordinator for the Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation at the Colorado Historical Society. Shed also drafted a statewide strategic plan for historical and architectural survey to guide work between 2010 and 2020. This report features strategies for recording under-represented resources, increasing accessibility to survey results, educating the next generation of survey professionals, and making wider use of technological advances in the collection and storage of survey data.  During her more than five years working in the Colorado State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), Dr. Anstey was responsible for enhancing both the accuracy and the quality of all data collected as part of grant-funded historical and architectural survey projects. She possesses extensive experience with both survey standards (reviewing approximately 2,500 forms) and eligibility criteria for the National Register of Historic Places, the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties, and various local landmark programs.  Dr. Anstey has worked extensively with local communities across Colorado to explain and help initiate the architectural and historical survey process. She also created and led architectural history survey seminars, overseeing class project work and developing both curriculum and associated materials to teach  resume  Jeffrey DeHerrera | jeffrey@historitecture.com | Architectural Historian, Research Historian, Survey Technician  A lifelong resident of Pueblo, Mr. DeHerrera has been the principal researcher for Historitecture projects for the past five years. In 2007 he began working for Historitecture, mining historical repositories across the state and interpreting historical resources. Mr. DeHerrera conducted most of the property research for phase two of Pueblo’s North Side Neighborhood Survey as well as the East Side Survey. In addition, he researched and authored most of the lauded East Side Neighborhood historical and architectural context. Because he is a respected member of the community and bilingual (English and Spanish), Mr. DeHerrera is often able to build relationships with property owners to obtain records that would remain otherwise undiscovered.