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For
Immediate Release
September 15, 2004
UNIQUE
PARTNERSHIP SAVES HALLOWED GROUND AT CHANCELLORSVILLE
Developer,
local officials, and CWPT join together to save the historic
Mullins Farm
(Chancellorsville,
Va.) - At a public hearing Tuesday night,
the Spotsylvania County Board of Supervisors unveiled a proposal
to preserve 140 acres of the historic Mullins Farm on Chancellorsville
Battlefield. The deal is the result of an unique alliance
between local homebuilder Tricord Homes; Spotsylvania County,
Virginia; and the Civil War Preservation Trust (CWPT).
Two
years ago, few believed that the Mullins Farm could be saved,
remarked CWPT President James Lighthizer. Now, thanks
to this unusual partnership, an irreplaceable part of Chancellorsville
Battlefield will be protected for future generations of Americans.
It is no exaggeration to say that this is the most significant
battlefield preservation victory in a decade.
The linchpin
of the deal is preservation of 140 acres of core battlefield
land associated with the opening clash of Chancellorsville.
Tricord Homes, a local family-owned development company, acquired
the eastern half of the Mullins Farm 227 acres in total
in July of this year. Soon thereafter, talks began
that resulted in an agreement that permits Tricord to build
age-restricted housing on 87 acres of the farm in exchange
for the protection of the remaining 140 acres. CWPT is contributing
$3 million toward the purchase of the preserved land.
This
is a real partnership where everyone wins, Lighthizer
noted. Tricord is able to build quality housing for
seniors, the county is getting open space for its citizens,
and preservationists are getting a battlefield of enormous
historic significance.
Since
2002, the Mullins Farm has been the focus of a national campaign
to save this important part of the Chancellorsville Battlefield.
In March 2003, a proposal to build a 2,000-house development
on the Mullins Farm was rejected by the county Board of Supervisors.
In January 2004, a plan to put a highway interchange on the
property was turned down by the local transportation authority.
However,
it was not until the Tricord proposal was announced Tuesday
evening that any battlefield land on the Mullins Farm was
set aside for preservation. Tricord recognized early
on that preserving the battlefield was the path, not the obstacle,
to a deal at the Mullins Farm, Lighthizer stated.
Although
pleased with the Tricord deal, CWPT remains concerned that
the western segment of the Mullins Farm remains slated for
development. Lighthizer hopes to begin talks with Toll Brothers,
the owner of the 566-acre western portion of the Mullins Farm,
in the coming weeks. There is still much more work to
be done at Chancellorsville, he observed.
With 60,000
members, CWPT is the largest nonprofit battlefield preservation
organization in the United States. Its goal is to preserve
our nations endangered Civil War sites and to promote
appreciation of these hallowed grounds through education and
heritage tourism. CWPTs website is located at www.civilwar.org.
The Coalition
to Save Chancellorsville Battlefield is an informal group
of 12 national and local preservation, conservation and civic
groups representing more than 600,000 members nationwide.
The coalition is dedicated to preserving and protecting Chancellorsville
battlefield. Its website is located at www.chancellorsville.org.
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Contact:
Jim Campi (Civil War Preservation Trust) at 202-367-1861.
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