Open space funds for Trinity land

CORNWALL — A $464,750 Open Space grant has been awarded to the Cornwall Conservation Trust (CCT) toward the purchase of acreage planned for preservation and recreation as the Trinity Camp Forest.

This covers more than half the purchase price of 317 acres from Trinity Wall Street and signals the launch of an official fundraising campaign for the remaining costs. CCT plans to reach out to its highly committed supporters and the public to raise additional funds. It has until June 2015 to do so.

CCT President Barton Jones said late last week he had received news that Jim Blake, a former resident who owns 5 acres in the middle of the forest, will donate that land.

Word also came to The Lake-ville Journal of a very significant donation in the offing.

Jones said it has been an amazing experience to work with the church to make the sale of the property advantageous to all involved.

“We are really pleased with the work done by our elected officials and the state,” Jones said, “and Trinity church has been very cooperative. They gave us an open-ended contract that allows us to back out of the sale if we can’t raise the money, and I am sure they would give us more time if we need it. They sent a letter to their parishioners telling them they were helping to save the forest.”

It is a remarkable piece of property, much of which has never been touched. It offers a variety of land types, from wetlands to steep slopes, as it rises quickly up from the Housatonic River to a hilltop. It has been used for recreation and has naturally protected wildlife habitats.

When it comes to conservation, the goal is to piece together acreage to create large swaths of undeveloped land. It connects pieces to the east of the Housatonic River, including the 665-acre Housatonic State Forest and CCT’s 47-acre Brokaw Preserve. That’s more than 1,000 combined acres in Cornwall, accessible to the public for hiking, snow-shoeing, cross-country skiing and such.

That land also represents memories.

More than 100 years ago, the Rev. Edward H. Schlueter, a vicar of St. Luke’s Chapel in New York City, bought farmland by the river. He ran a camp for children until he retired in 1945 and sold it to Trinity Church.

Land was added over the years and hundreds of children, many of them local, visited the camp until it was phased out in 1994. CCT’s official name for the forest will recognize that legacy.

“It is an important part of Cornwall’s history and ecology. It has streams, a beaver pond  and boulder fields,” Jones said. “It will provide a wildlife corridor, while the public can continue to use the old logging roads for recreation. 

“CCT members and other volunteers and campers have helped maintain the trails over the years, so there isn’t a lot to be done. We want to create some shorter trails for hiking and a parking area up on Dibble Hill.”

Trinity developed about 100 acres along the Housatonic River and operated a retreat and conference center there for 20 years, before closing the facility two years ago. Plans to sell sparked local concerns about how the property at the south end of Lower River Road would be used, and about impacts to the local economy.

Trinity Wall Street officials gave their assurances, with the backing of the church’s constituents, that they wanted to be good stewards of the land. Just within the last few weeks, a deal began coming together for the sale of the conference center to Brooklyn Zen Center as a retreat facility. That portion of the property is listed at $2.485 million.

Trinity Wall Street is also keeping separate several, valuable building lots on 35 acres at the eastern end of the property on Dibble Hill Road.

Taking those lots out of the equation, Jones said, made the remaining acreage affordable for CCT, at $715,000.

Add to that costs to close the sale, do some trail and public accessibility work and create a small endowment, and the real figure is about $750,000. The grant leaves about $285,000 to be raised.

CCT has been busy in recent years with numerous conservation projects. It is about to close on the Cooley Farm property, for which is raised about $930,000.

Jones said they have very committed supporters, and that is not a well that is likely to run dry. Between now and the end of the year, fundraising will be in the “quiet phase.” If there is still a need after that, CCT will plan fundraising events.

“We also want the general public to have a chance to be a part of this. Any size donation is welcome. They all add up.”

That said, Tim Abbott, of the Litchfield Hills Greenprint Program, said that just last week he paired the Trinity project up with a donor who will likely cover half of the remaining funding need.

The state is awarding $7.8 million in Open Space grants to 25 communities. A total of 2,237 acres are poised to be preserved.

Also receiving an Open Space grant is the Goshen Land Trust. It will receive $382,500 toward the purchase of the 127.31 acres Fisher property in northwestern Goshen off Route 63. According to Abbott, who has mapped the region, it is the land one sees when traveling north on Route 63 and cresting the top of “Robert’s Hill,” where there are spectacular long views to the northeast.

It is a diverse parcel with hardwood forests, successional wildlife habitats and a stream that flows through more than 12 acres of grasslands and wetlands. It abuts the state-owned Northern Goshen Wildlife Management Area to the northeast.

More information about the Trinity Camp Forest property and how to donate are at www.cornwallconservationtrust.org.

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