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2003 Grant
Recipients
A Grant Program of the Preservation League of New York State and the New York State Council on the Arts
At its August meeting, the Preserve New York Grant Program
panel selected 11 projects in 10 counties for support totaling
$92,450. Preserve New York is a partnership grant program of
the Preservation League of New York State and the New York
State Council on the Arts.
To date, the program has provided
$863,226 to 150 not-for-profit groups and municipalities in
support of their important local initiatives.
The municipalities
and organizations receiving grant awards in 2003 are: |
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CAYUGA COUNTY
Foundation Historical Association,
Auburn
contact: Peter A. Wisbey, Executive Director, 315-252-1283
Grant
of $8,000 toward the cost of a historic structure report for the Seward
House property near downtown Auburn. The c.1816 brick house, with c.
1847 and 1860s additions, and its stone carriage houses are associated
with three generations of the Seward family. The report will address
restoration and interpretation of the house to reflect the leadership
roles that Statesman William Seward and his wife Frances played in
the moral justice issues of the 19th century and their achievements,
along with their son, William Jr., at national, state and local levels.
The report for this National Historic Landmark will be prepared by
Crawford and Stearns, Architects and Preservation Planners of Syracuse,
with assistance from Foundation staff and volunteers.
COLUMBIA COUNTY
Shaker
Museum and Library, Old Chatham
contact: Cherie Miller Schwartz, Director,
Mount Lebanon Project, 518-794-9100, x.203
Grant of $7,500 for a cultural
resource survey consisting of archeological investigations as part
of the planning and development of stabilization work required for
the Great Stone Barn and the Wash House on the former North Family
Shaker site. Located in the Town of New Lebanon, The Mount Lebanon
site was occupied from 1785 to 1947, and served as the central administrative
community for all other Shaker settlements in the United States. Karen
S. Hartgen, RPA, and Scott D. Stull, PhD of the Albany firm Hartgen
Archeological Associates will undertake the project. The organization
plans to adapt the stone barn, severely damaged by fire in the 1970s,
for the new museum site, and use the c. 1845 Wash House as a museum
and education center.
KINGS COUNTY
Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Project,
LDC, Brooklyn
contact: Jennifer Gerend, Executive Director, 718-230-1689
Grant
of $7,250 towards a cultural resource survey of the Myrtle/Wallabout
area located adjacent to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The documentation
by consultant Andrew Dolkart of New York City will focus on a 24-block
area of commercial, industrial and residential properties including
a number of 19th-century wood-frame houses. One of the first
residential developments in Brooklyn, the neighborhood became more
industrial later in the nineteenth century. The staff of Myrtle
Avenue Revitalization Project (MARP) and area residents plan to use
the survey in their efforts to designate the area as an historic district.
The project is an outgrowth of MARP’s successful efforts to strengthen
the commercial corridor along Myrtle Avenue.
NEW YORK COUNTY
Greenwich
Village Society for Historic Preservation, New York
contact: Andrew
Berman, Executive Director, 212-475-9585
Grant of $8,000 toward the
cost of preparing a survey of approximately 400 buildings in the South
Village of Manhattan. The 35-block area contains a wealth of architecturally
and historically significant buildings and sites constructed between
the 1820s and 1930s associated with the immigrant experience, bohemian
and artistic achievements (especially in music) and counter-cultural
movements. The project will be prepared by Andrew Dolkart of New York
City and will incorporate field survey and research previously completed
by interns. The project results will be used to raise awareness of
this significant neighborhood and to secure landmark designations at
the local, state and national levels.
SCHOHARIE and OTSEGO COUNTIES
Town
of Sharon and SHARE IT
contact: Nan Stolzenburg, Consulting Planner,
518-872-9753; Daniel Schuppel, Supervisor, Town of Sharon, 518-234-3038
Grant
of $12,500 toward the cost of completing a survey of five towns and
two villages participating in the SHARE IT program, a New York State
Quality Communities initiative. SHARE IT stands for “Save
Historic Assets and Renew Economies by Inviting Tourism,” and
is designed to encourage inter-municipal cooperation among the communities
in closest proximity to Cooperstown and is many tourist attractions.
The project will be completed by consultant Jessie Ravage of Cooperstown
and will provide documentation on the residences, farmsteads, religious
properties and public buildings that characterize this outstanding
rural region. The project also supports the area’s U.S. Route
20 planning and promotion initiatives.
SUFFOLK COUNTY
Long Island Traditions,
Inc., Towns of Islip and Brookhaven
contact: Nancy Solomon, Executive
Director, Long Island Traditions
Grant of $5,000 for a cultural resources
survey of maritime heritage sites along a 20-mile section of Long Island’s
southern shore. Results of the survey will inform the management
plan of the South Shore Estuary Reserve Council at a time of growing
development pressures and the decline of the region’s maritime
industries. Along with the project consultant, Long Island Traditions,
the Council will use the survey to develop a “bayway” trail
and interpretive materials to promote the area’s resources.
Sag
Harbor Whaling and Historical Museum, Sag Harbor
contact: Zachary N.
Studenroth, Executive Director, 631-725-0770
Grant of $9,500 for an
historic structure report for the c.1845 Benjamin Huntting II House.
The house once served as the summer home of Mrs. Russell Sage (Olivia
Slocum Sage) and, today, separate areas of the building are used by
the Museum and the local Masonic Temple. The late-Greek Revival design,
which incorporates highly ornamental wood and plaster work, is attributed
to Minard LaFever, a prominent American architect. The investigation
will be carried out by Zachary Studenroth, executive director of the
Sag Harbor Whaling and Historical Museum, and Croxton Collaborative
Architects of New York City. The project partners’ work
will establish a plan for the restoration and re- interpretation of
the historic home and will attempt to confirm LaFever’s direct
involvement with the design of the structure.
TOMPKINS COUNTY
Downtown
Business Partnership, Ithaca
contact: Gary Ferguson, Executive Director,
607-277-8697 and Leslie Chatterton, Neighborhood and Historic Preservation
Planner, City of Ithaca, 607-274-6550
Grant of $7,200 toward the cost
of preparing a National Register of Historic Places nomination for
a historic district in downtown Ithaca. The project will provide documentation
on approximately 80 commercial and public buildings constructed between
1818 to 1949 including examples designed by some of the region’s
leading architects. The nomination will be completed by Jessie
Ravage of Cooperstown and will be used to support economic development
activities in Ithaca’s Business
Improvement District.
ULSTER
COUNTY
Town of Saugerties
contact: Greg Helmsmoortel, Town Supervisor,
845-246-2800 ext. 347; and Karlyn Knaust Elia, Town Historian, 845-246-4754
Grant
of $15,000 toward the cost of an architectural survey of approximately
500 buildings in the Town’s 18 hamlets and other rural sites.
Consultant Christina Plattner of Durham will lead a local committee
to document resources associated with the Hudson River heritage, early
railroads, industrial and agricultural economies and specific building
types such as stone houses. The survey will be used to assess
resources that may be designated as landmarks and historic districts
in the future.
Historical
Society of Shawangunk and Gardiner, Town of Wallkill
contact: Suzanne
Isaksen, President, Historical Society of Shawangunk and Gardiner,
201-619-2457
Grant of $7,500 towards the cost of an historic structure
report for the Society’s headquarters, the Andries Dubois House.
The property was purchased by the society from the Du Bois family who,
except for a brief period in the early 1900s, were the owners since
the building’s construction in the late 18th century. The
report will document the evolution of the building, barely altered
during the 20th century, and will provide a plan for its restoration
and interpretation. The Society had previously secured an Environmental
Protection Fund grant for the stabilization of the house, and plans
to open the building as a local history museum. The report will
be produced by the Albany firm of John G. Waite Associates, Architects.
WASHINGTON
COUNTY
Historic Salem Courthouse Preservation Association, Salem
contact: Katherine Tomasi, President, 518-854-7274
Grant of $5,000 toward the
cost of a historic structure report for the Old Washington County Courthouse
and Jail Complex located in a National Register of Historic Places
historic district in the Village of Salem. The
1869 Courthouse was designed by noted architect Marcus F. Cummings
of Troy; the jail is a 1906 addition. Between 1993 and 2003, all county
functions relocated to Fort Edward, leaving the complex vacant. The
report, to be prepared by John G. Waite Associates, Architects of Albany,
will guide the restoration and reuse of this landmark.
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For more information or to discuss your proposal,
please contact the Leagues’s regional directors of Technical
and Grant Programs:
Eastern New York, including NYC and
Long Island - Erin
Tobin - 518-462-5658 x12
Central and Western
New York, including Southern Tier - Tania
Werbizky - 607-272-6510 (Ithaca)
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