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  • News from Franklin

    Purchase isn’t only way to keep homes off golf course

    By CLINT CONFEHR / Review Appeal Senior Staff Reporter

    Short of a public-private collaboration to buy the Country Club of Franklin, there may be a way to make sure the golf course isn’t developed as a housing subdivision, one of the preservationists on Franklin’s Board of Mayor and Aldermen said on Sunday afternoon.

    It’s called a conservation easement, a publicly recorded contract between a property owner and a qualified entity which can include local government. The Land Trust for Tennessee Inc. is another legal entity which monitors conservation easements. It’s unclear whether golf qualifies as a conservation purpose here, but it has elsewhere.

    Alderwoman Pam Lewis spoke briefly about this alternative to a controversy that’s disturbed hundreds of city residents.

    A conservation easement could be accomplished with a payment or exchange of something of value to the owner of land where development would be restricted.

    While Mayor Tom Miller denies Franklin City Hall has any plan to buy the fairways and greens visible from Lewisburg Pike, Lewis has acknowledged her interest in preserving that open space since the property’s owner, Rod Heller of Washington, D.C., challenged the community at-large to do something about it.

    Heller paid $5 million to a businessman who planned to sell the property rented by the Country Club of Franklin, club members and city officials have said. The previous owner had another buyer who reportedly planned to build homes there. Heller is interested in preserving the open space since he’s a descendant of the family that built Carnton Mansion, a former chairman of the national Civil War Trust, and he’s a golfer.

    Lewis’ observation followed a tour and Civil War history lesson at the Collins Farm, just northwest of the country club and Historic Carnton Plantation. She was asked what she thought of the situation which includes Country Club of Franklin members and other city residents who oppose city spending to transform a golf course into a battlefield park, and the historic backdrop detailed by leaders of Save the Franklin Battlefield Inc.

    “It’s very compelling that it’s battlefield property,” Lewis said of the Collins Farm which was part of the McGavock family plantation, better known as Carnton, and the golf course between the mansion and Lewisburg Pike.

    “The question is whether we can prevail,” she said.

    “One option is to buy the development rights,” said Lewis, explaining that could be “done with a conservation easement.”

    The cost “would be less than $5 million,” the alderwoman said.

    “It would leave the golf course and open options to buy other properties,” she said after about 30 people learned about combat on the eastern front in the Battle of Franklin.

    The audience included Tom Greuel and Hank Beyke, residents of Dallas Downs subdivision southeast of the Country Club of Franklin, who used to live, respectively, near the Civil War battlefield at Manassas, Va., and Fort Recovery, Ind., which was recovered from the Shawnee.

    “I’m glad there’s some movement,” Beyke said before the history lesson in the Collins Farm parking lot. “It’s unfortunate we’ve had to wait so long. The longer you wait, the harder it is” to create a battlefield park.

    Greuel, who knew only a little about the golf course situation before the history lesson, said he would favor anything that could be done to expand the public’s view of the battlefield.
    Mike "Dusty" Chapman

    Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

    "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

    The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

  • #2
    Re: News from Franklin

    They have just now started thinking about a conservation easement?
    Matthew Rector

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: News from Franklin

      Battlefield tourism could quell tax increases

      The Review Appeal Editorial Franklin and Williamson County are known throughout the Southeast as “15 miles and 100 years down the road from Nashville.” This theme focuses on Williamson County’s vast historical resources, many of which have been lovingly restored or maintained and add significantly to Williamson County’s quality of life.

      One thing which admittedly has not been maintained is the site of the Civil War’s Battle of Franklin. Filled with homes and businesses and buried under years of neglect, the battlefield stretches along Columbia Highway into town around the Carter House.

      A recent move has been to preserve what is known as the eastern flank of the battlefield in an area encompassed by the Country Club of Franklin and located adjacent to the historic Carnton Mansion.

      Last year, wealthy preservationists Rod and Kay Heller put their money where others had only given lip service and paid $5 million for the country club property, stopping development of the land and igniting again a discussion of the battlefield’s worth as a tourist destination.

      According to a recent national survey of tourists visiting one of seven Civil War battlefields in the Southeast, there is money to be made in the local economy from a battlefield project.

      The Civil War Preservation Trust initiated the survey, which set out to gauge the impact visitors have on the economies surrounding battlefields maintained by federal, state and local groups.

      The survey showed the average battlefield visitor is 50 years of age and, on average, these Civil War tourists have already visited seven battlefields. These tourists also spend $51.73 per day, per person during their visit, which, on average, lasts two to three nights.

      At locally owned sites, such as the Corinth Battlefield in Mississippi, visitors spent more than $220,000 in the local economy in 2003. On average that translates to $54.54 per person, per day, supporting $102,000 in resident income, $8,000 in local government revenue and $23,000 in state government revenue.

      The survey results show there is money to be made in such a venture and if officials continued to capitalize on existing resources — such as the fine historic sites already open to the public, plus developed new resources such as a historic trolley tour utilizing the city’s trolley system — potential for increased heritage tourism exists whether the country club property is restored as a battlefield or not.

      At a time when governmental budgets are straining to maintain revenue without tax increases, letting someone else pay the bill can’t be ignored as an option.
      Mike "Dusty" Chapman

      Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

      "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

      The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: News from Franklin

        Money speaks to those who do not listen to the voices of history. The more ways we can engage people with environmental and financial interests, the more effectively we can preserve battlefield land. Morris Island is a great example.

        Thanks for posting the updates, Dusty.

        Comment


        • #5
          Letter to the Editor in TN

          Preserve Franklin Battlefield for its historical importance

          To the Editor:

          I know all of the arguments about how it is in the best economic interests to preserve the battlefield at Franklin — how it will create jobs, bring tourist dollars into the city and county, etc. As important as those things are, for me, the most important reason to save this place is because for our nation, it is the right thing to do.

          As we commemorate Memorial Day this weekend, patriotic Americans all across the country are reflecting on the sacrifices that were made in generations past, and which are still being made today. American soldiers did fight on that ground at Franklin, and many passed over that ground as they marched to their deaths. This Civil War battle was one of the most dramatic and significant of the entire war, and we now have a chance to get some of it back.

          Even if the critics were correct, that minimal combat happened on those acres of hallowed ground, it is still important ground for telling the story of how important Franklin is to American history. Hundreds of acres of land are preserved at Valley Forge, Pa., and they have a huge, beautiful visitors center that draws thousands of tourists every year … and Valley Forge was a campsite! No blood was ever shed there, but does that mean it should be paved over? Of course not.

          This does not imply that every inch of ground everywhere needs to be preserved. You do have to be balanced. But you can build a golf course just about anywhere; you cannot change what happened on that hallowed ground, or re-create it someplace else. The blood of those Americans soldiers and the valor of their deeds are part of that ground and essential to that place … forever.

          Hank Brockman
          1407 Old Hillsboro Road
          Franklin 37069
          Mike "Dusty" Chapman

          Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

          "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

          The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: News from Franklin

            Good Posting Dusty. I just wonder though how much some folks in that community are using the battlefield as leverage for other development? When they tear down the Pizza Hut and put up a marker for the famous fallen general I bee a bit more convinced of their desires.
            Franklin was the Picketts Charge of the west, and has been greatly ignored by modern history. I wonder how much more history in the next generation will sanitized, folded, spindled, and mutilated?
            Dusty Lind
            Running Discharge Mess
            Texas Rifles
            BGR Survivor


            Texans did this. Texans Can Do It Again. Gen J.B. Hood

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: News from Franklin

              Another letter to the editor concerning the golf course purchase.


              New Country Club of Franklin owner giving residents a grand opportunity


              To the Editor: New Country Club of Franklin owner Rod Heller has given the citizens of Williamson County a tremendous opportunity to do something different. The chance to save part of the Franklin battlefield is an example of something few communities have the courage or wherewithal to do. Deciding on how to use our precious resources should involve more than traffic studies, utility issues and tax implications. Rather, preserving spaces laced with the blood and drama of past generations is a much higher calling. Mr. Heller has given us the challenge by offering the country club land for preservation if the funding for a purchase can be found. How will we respond?

              There are those who want the club kept as it is and understandably do not want to see it go. However, their claims that no actual fighting took place on the grounds in question is clearly, well, silly. Over the years I have personally walked the club’s perimeter finding shell fragments and other evidence of fighting. Firsthand reports of troops marching through these fields toward what may be their deaths are very documented. Areas of tremendous historical significance cannot be replaced; golf clubs can.

              Others say public money should not be spent on such an endeavor. While there is sound concern and we must be wise in the use of the public treasury, there is ample precedent. Our great parks, resorts, lakes, libraries, museums, and yes, many public golf courses are all supported by tax dollars. According to the opponents of the preservation of the battlefield, all of these are clearly a waste of public money.

              It does seem to me, however, all who want more open space preserved for whatever reason should now step up. Mr. Heller has laid out the opportunity. So, instead of expecting government to pay for the Country Club of Franklin acreage, why don’t we begin a concerted effort to help pay for the land with preservation/historical groups leading the way? It might mean even more to those who enjoy the land in the future while refreshingly giving the citizens control of the grounds they wish to save.

              Gregory L. Wade
              113 Century Oak Drive
              Franklin 37069
              Mike "Dusty" Chapman

              Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

              "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

              The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

              Comment

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