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2006 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 nine counties for support totaling
$82,200. 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
over $1.1 million to 187 not-for-profit groups and municipalities
in support of their important local initiatives.
The organizations
and municipalities receiving grant awards in 2006 are: |
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ALBANY COUNTY
Historic Albany Foundation,
Albany
Grant of $7,000 for a statewide survey and documentation of
Lustron houses to be used for a thematic nomination to the State and
National Registers of Historic Places. The pre-fabricated, all-steel
structures with walls of enamel-coated panels were developed to meet
post-World War II housing needs. Despite a short production span
of two years (1948-1950), there are at least 70 remaining houses in
New York State, and many of these are located in the greater Capital
Region. They are a unique aspect of built resources from the “recent
past” however, as modest-sized homes, they are frequently in
danger of alteration and demolition. The survey and nomination
will be produced by Kimberly Konrad Alvarez of Landmark Consulting
in Albany. Historic Albany Foundation will also work with staff
at the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation
on the project which will include an educational component for owners
of these little-known, but important buildings.
Underground Railroad
History Project of the Capital Region, Albany
Grant of $10,000 to
support an historic structure report for the Stephen and Harriet
Myers Residence at 194 Livingston Avenue in Albany. The 1847 house
is listed on the National Register, the National Park Service’s “National
Network to Freedom” and Heritage New York’s “Underground
Railroad Trail.” It was occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Myers
in the 1850s while they were active in the Underground Railroad,
hosted Vigilance Committee meetings and worked on important local
education issues. The report will guide the restoration and
interpretation of the historic site and will be produced by Stephen
Tilley, Architect, based in Dobbs Ferry.
ALLEGANY COUNTY
Cuba Friends of Architecture,
Cuba
Grant of $8,800 toward the cost of preparing a historic structure
report for the Palmer Opera House, which is included in the 42-building
Main Street Historic District listed in the State and National Registers
of Historic Places. Constructed in 1875, the opera house boasts of
Italianate-style details and an intact cast iron storefront manufactured
in Wellsville, NY. Vacant for nearly five years, the building suffered
a roof collapse in January 2006. This grant will allow Friends to
plan for the stabilization and rehabilitation of this once well-used
landmark. The report will be completed by Flynn Battaglia Architects
of Buffalo, NY.
BROOME COUNTY
Broome County Department of Planning
and
Economic Development, Binghamton Grant of $6,800 toward the
cost of a cultural resources survey of historic and engineering resources
associated with the Chenango Canal in Broome County. Opened in May
1837, the 97-mile canal linked Binghamton to Utica and provided access
to the state’s
trade waterway, the Erie Canal. Fifteen miles of the original north-south
canal ran through Broome County. Another 15 miles extending west
from Binghamton was dug in 1863 but never watered. Eclipsed by rail
service, the entire canal closed in 1878 and was abandoned. The survey
of canal features including locks, culverts, dams and towpaths, will
be prepared by Cynthia Carrington Carter, Renaissance Studio of Syracuse,
who completed similar surveys funded by the Preservation League in
Chenango (1995) and Madison (2002) counties. The county and local
municipal agencies will use the grant results in their development
of greenway and river trail projects to ensure that canal resources
are sensitively incorporated into these recreational paths.
CAYUGA
COUNTY
Howland Stone Store Museum, Sherwood Grant of $4,710 toward
the cost of completing a nomination to the State and National Registers
of Historic Places for the hamlet of Sherwood in the Town of Scipio.
Between the 1830s and the early 1900s, Sherwood was a hotbed of local,
state and national social reform issues including Abolitionism, Women’s
Rights and Temperance. Much of the reform activity was due to several
generations of the Howland family, Quakers who were active in the
Underground Railroad and sponsors of freedom seekers who passed through
or settled in southern Cayuga County. Today over a dozen of the hamlet’s
properties – homes, a cemetery, business buildings, and a one-room
schoolhouse – are associated with social justice themes. The nomination
will be prepared by Dr. Judith Wellman, Historical New York Research
Associates of Fulton, who was responsible for a countywide survey
of Abolition and Underground Railroad sites funded by Preserve New
York in 2004. The project is a result of that effort and supports
the 2006 listing of Sherwood in the Preservation League’s Seven
to Save program.
COLUMBIA COUNTY
City of Hudson Historic Preservation
Commission, Hudson
Grant of $9,000 for the survey and documentation
of Hudson neighborhoods that contain a mixture of commercial, industrial
and residential structures. The
survey area includes approximately 1,300 buildings that were not
included in similar work in 1985 which led to the listing of several
historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places. Of
the houses to be studied, some are 20th-century buildings which were
not eligible for designation as historic sites when the earlier survey
was completed, and others are modest, 19th-century, “working
class” structures. The
survey results and report will be used for future historic district
designations and will aid the Historic Preservation Commission in
their review of proposed building and preservation projects. The
work will be undertaken by consultant Ruth Piwonka of Kinderhook. The
Preservation League has worked closely with the Hudson preservation
community since the City was designated a Seven to Save site in 2001
due to threats from the proposed St. Lawrence cement plant. The
League has provided technical and legal assistance to the preservation
commission from its inception in 2003.
The Hudson Area Association
Library, Hudson
Grant of $6,550 to support the costs of an historic
structure report for the 1818 Federal-style Hudson Area Association
Library building which has served as the public library since 1959. Originally
built as an almshouse, the library building was also used as a private
home, a girls school and an orphanage. The report will be produced
by Walter Sedovic, Architects, based in Irvington. The Hudson
Area Library Association successfully nominated the building to the
Preservation League’s Seven to Save program in 2005 and purchased
the building from the Hudson School District in the same year. As
with many other libraries across the state, the Hudson building faces
the challenge of accommodating the needs of a 21st-century library
in a significant historic structure, and the report will guide the
rehabilitation of the local landmark.
ERIE COUNTY
Village of Williamsville,
Williamsville
Grant of $7,000 toward the cost of completing an historic
structure report for the Williamsville Water Mill. The heavy timber
frame building is located half a block from Main Street on Ellicott
Creek and is the sole survivor of a once extensive milling area along
the waterway. The building may include elements of the original
1811 sawmill on the site but it was largely constructed in 1827 and
attains its significance as one of the earliest commercial manufacturers
of natural or hydraulic cement. On the interior, grinding wheels,
a water chute and machinery remain intact, reflecting a succession
of mill uses. Commercial development pressures which could have led
to demolition caused the village to acquire the vacant building in
2005. The report, which will be completed by Bero Architecture of
Rochester, will guide the village’s efforts to rehabilitate,
interpret and reuse this local and State and National Register-listed
landmark.
MADISON COUNTY
Madison County Historical Society, Oneida
Grant
of $6,340 toward the cost of completing an intensive level survey
of hop-related resources and a State and National Register of Historic
Places nomination for hop houses in the county. The survey will document
the homes, farms, commercial establishments and public facilities
associated with the growing of hops. Introduced to the state
in 1808 in Madison County, hop cultivation was once a major economic
and cultural force in New York, reaching a peak of production in
1880. The fortunes of
farmers, merchants and entire communities rested on the crop, an
important ingredient in beer brewing. Hop houses or kilns, which
were used for processing and drying, are the most easily recognized
building type associated with hop culture. Although there were once
thousands of such buildings, there may be no more than 300 kilns
remaining in the state. Of these, 35 are in Madison County
and will be the subject of a nomination to the State and National
Registers of Historic Places. The project will be completed by Dr.
Michael Tomlan, Cornell University; Nell Ziegler, DeRuyter; and volunteers.
The project springs from the inclusion of Hop Kilns in Central New
York in the League’s
2006 Seven to Save list.
MONROE COUNTY
Rochester Cemeteries Heritage
Foundation, Rochester
Grant of $8,000 toward the cost of an historic
landscape report for the 1838 Mount Hope Cemetery which is the oldest
municipally-owned Rural, Victorian cemetery in the United States. In
addition to significant historical figures such as Frederick Douglass,
Susan B. Anthony, Lewis Henry Morgan and Fletcher Steele, there is
an impressive list of leaders in the arts, sciences and industry
buried at the cemetery. Important landscape features include
300 year-old trees of the area’s original forest, specimen
trees given to the cemetery in 1847 by the well-known Ellwanger and
Barry Nursery and topographic elements shaped by glaciers. The project
is a collaboration among the Rochester Cemeteries Heritage Foundation,
the City of Rochester and the Friends of Mount Hope Cemetery. W.
Paul Fritz and Jo Anne Gagliano of Environmental Design and Research,
P.C. based in Syracuse are the consultants. The report will
guide the planning efforts and help determine the priorities for
restoration projects and maintenance of the site while preserving
the characteristics of the historic cultural landscape.
ORANGE
COUNTY
City of Newburgh
Grant of $8,000 towards the cost of an historic
landscape report for the Downing Vaux Park located on Broadway in
downtown Newburgh. Designed by Downing
Vaux in 1904, the park was intended to provide a pedestrian link
on a steep hill between the waterfront (and former train station)
and the commercial area. The small park remains a gateway to
the central business district while preserving important views of
the Hudson Highlands. The report will be completed by Patricia
O’Donnell
of Heritage Landscapes based in Charlotte, Vermont, and will provide
the master plan for the park’s restoration and preservation.
The project comes at a crucial time as the park is located in a key
area facing development and Newburgh is working on a comprehensive
plan which will directly impact the waterfront area.
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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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