Battlefield site to be preserved
By LAUREN HOUGH / Journal Staff Writer
SHEPHERDSTOWN — Local preservationists are about one-third of the way toward their goal of saving a significant portion of the Shepherdstown Battlefield for future generations.
On Friday, conservation easements through the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board were established on 59 acres of the nearly 300-acre piece of history, located east of Trough Road along the Potomac River.
“We’re trying to save what amounts to half the battlefield,” said Ed Dunleavy, president of the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association.
The group’s effort is focused on saving the land where most of the 1862 Battle of Shepherdstown took place — land that has remained relatively pristine, Dunleavy said.
According to information provided by Grant Smith, president of the Land Trust of the Eastern Panhandle, Miriam Ellis signed easement papers on her 37-acre farm, while Lew Pamplin and Dianna Mills signed off on 22 acres of property they own.
The land under easement remains in the hands of its owners, but is permanently protected from future development, according to Smith.
The National Park Service’s American Battlefield Protection Program and the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board funded the easements, with the assistance of the Civil War Preservation Trust and the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association.
The easements placed on Friday are located right in the core of the battlefield, Dunleavy said.
Though a significant amount of the action likely occurred on the 22 acres, the recent easements are no more or less important than other acreage at the site, said Dunleavy, who has been working on preservation efforts for more than two years.
In addition to efforts made by Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., to include the battlefield site as a part of an existing national park, several grants have also helped contribute to the cause.
This summer, $100,000 in federal money was earmarked for the purchase of land at the battlefield site.
According to Smith, Friday’s easements brought to 1,800 acres, the amount of land protected by the Land Trust in the three counties of the Eastern Panhandle, with 1,232 acres protected by the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board. Included in both totals are 325 acres of historic properties.
All three easement donors are members of the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association, according to Dunleavy.
“They’re supportive of what we’re trying to do,” he said.
— Staff writer Lauren Hough can be reached at 263-8931, ext. 163, or at lhough@journal-news.net
By LAUREN HOUGH / Journal Staff Writer
SHEPHERDSTOWN — Local preservationists are about one-third of the way toward their goal of saving a significant portion of the Shepherdstown Battlefield for future generations.
On Friday, conservation easements through the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board were established on 59 acres of the nearly 300-acre piece of history, located east of Trough Road along the Potomac River.
“We’re trying to save what amounts to half the battlefield,” said Ed Dunleavy, president of the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association.
The group’s effort is focused on saving the land where most of the 1862 Battle of Shepherdstown took place — land that has remained relatively pristine, Dunleavy said.
According to information provided by Grant Smith, president of the Land Trust of the Eastern Panhandle, Miriam Ellis signed easement papers on her 37-acre farm, while Lew Pamplin and Dianna Mills signed off on 22 acres of property they own.
The land under easement remains in the hands of its owners, but is permanently protected from future development, according to Smith.
The National Park Service’s American Battlefield Protection Program and the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board funded the easements, with the assistance of the Civil War Preservation Trust and the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association.
The easements placed on Friday are located right in the core of the battlefield, Dunleavy said.
Though a significant amount of the action likely occurred on the 22 acres, the recent easements are no more or less important than other acreage at the site, said Dunleavy, who has been working on preservation efforts for more than two years.
In addition to efforts made by Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., to include the battlefield site as a part of an existing national park, several grants have also helped contribute to the cause.
This summer, $100,000 in federal money was earmarked for the purchase of land at the battlefield site.
According to Smith, Friday’s easements brought to 1,800 acres, the amount of land protected by the Land Trust in the three counties of the Eastern Panhandle, with 1,232 acres protected by the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board. Included in both totals are 325 acres of historic properties.
All three easement donors are members of the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association, according to Dunleavy.
“They’re supportive of what we’re trying to do,” he said.
— Staff writer Lauren Hough can be reached at 263-8931, ext. 163, or at lhough@journal-news.net
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