Susan Pearl wrote a few notes that were helpful regarding the article on the Historic Preservation Reception last month:
"It was not the Maryland Historical Trust that started an "Endangered Properties" list this year - it was Preservation Maryland, Inc., a non-profit preservation advocacy organization, based in Baltimore, that used to be called the Society for the Preservation of Maryland Antiquities. And the idea for their "Endangered Properties" list did not come from Prince George's County, but rather from the "Eleven Most Endangered" list that the National Trust for Historic Preservation has been putting out for many years. (It's from the NTHP list that we got the idea of doing our own for Prince George's County.)
"Also, the fire in Nottingham was in the year 1901. And Gwynn Park (Robert Brinckloe's house) is in T.B., not Brandywine . . . .
"Hope you don't mind my interference - I wouldn't bother with it at all if I didn't think your blog is a good and useful thing! Thanks so much for doing it!!!! Keep up the good work!
Best, Susan (Pearl)"
Thanks, Susan, for your comments. I hope you'll be a frequent contributor to the blog.
Showing posts with label reception. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reception. Show all posts
Monday, June 25, 2007
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Trust's "Preservation Strategic Plan" Lauded at Annual Celebration
At their annual gathering held at Snow Hill Manor in Laurel on May 18, political and preservation leaders from across the county heard about the hottest issues and biggest challenges facing their community. For the third year in a row, a group comprised of members from the Trust, Prince George's Heritage, and the Historical Society compiled a "15 Most Endangered Properties" listing. Last year, the Maryland Historic Trust copied that initiative and prepared their own statewide list of endangered sites. Another Prince George's innovation, the Historic and Cultural Trust's dynamic "strategic plan for preservation," was lauded by speakers at the event. That plan is designed to increase the numbers of preservationists in Prince George's, to jumpstart new historic districts in the county, and to broaden the definition of heritage sites beyond traditional museum houses and residences.
The 2007 "15 Most Endangered List" was unveiled by Heritage board member
Mike Arnold. It included bricks-and-mortar structures such as Bostwick House near the Anacostia, and the rare African American freeman family home, the Butler House, along the Potomac River. However, the listing was far more than a house listing. Maryland's most threatened open space -- the 70-acre Fennell tract that is threatened by plans for a 54-house subdivision in the heart of the Broad Creek Historic District -- made the list, along with the County's "rapidly vanishing rural preserves" and the trend toward shrinking the size of "settings" around significant resources.

Political leaders in attendance included Council Members Thomas Dernoga and Eric Olsen, and County Executive Jack Johnson's Chief of Staff Michael Herman. Herman thanked the assembly for saving the best parts of the County. He honored Trust Chairman Alfonse Narvaez and Historic Preservation Commission Dave Turner, and the County Executive-appointed panelists who serve as board members for the two organizations.

Two homeowners were sited for successful rescues of their properties this year. Magnolia Knoll, an 1850 farmhouse built on a spectacular stretch of the Patuxent River, was rehabilitated by
HPC Commissioner Jack Thompson. Magnolia Knoll is a two-part frame structure with a salt-box roof and a one-story kitchen addition. It is significant as the only 19th century structure to have survived the fire that destroyed much of Nottingham in 901.

Also receiving one of the heavy brass plaques for placement on his home was Robert Brinklow, owner of Gwynn Park in Brandywine. Built in 1857, Gwynn Park is two-story, side-gabled brick house with full-Georgian plan and an unusual decorative cornice composed of courses of molded corbelled bricks. It is a noticeable local landmark, now at the center of the recently developed Hampton Subdivision.
HPC Chairman Turner addressed the challenge that property rights advocates are presenting to preservationists, and outlined the Commission's goal to make Prince George's the nation's premier African American Heritage County.
Labels:
historic sites,
preservation,
reception,
vision
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
Historic Preservation Reception
May 17, 2007
Prince George’s County Historic Preservation Reception
Snow Hill Manor, Laurel from 6 to 8pm.
Historic Preservation Reception celebrating historic preservation in the County with Dr. William Kirwan, Chancellor of the University System of Maryland. In addition, the 2007 List of Endangered Historic Places in Prince George’s County will be announced at the reception.
Free (RSVP required). For more information, contact Pam Cooper, 301-390-0797. Sponsored by M-NCPPC, Prince George’s Heritage, Prince George’s Historical Society, Prince George’s Historic Trust and others.
Update: RSVP quickly! The due date for RSVP’ing was May 9th, so if you plan to come please RSVP immediately to 301-627-2270.
Prince George’s County Historic Preservation Reception
Snow Hill Manor, Laurel from 6 to 8pm.
Historic Preservation Reception celebrating historic preservation in the County with Dr. William Kirwan, Chancellor of the University System of Maryland. In addition, the 2007 List of Endangered Historic Places in Prince George’s County will be announced at the reception.
Free (RSVP required). For more information, contact Pam Cooper, 301-390-0797. Sponsored by M-NCPPC, Prince George’s Heritage, Prince George’s Historical Society, Prince George’s Historic Trust and others.
Update: RSVP quickly! The due date for RSVP’ing was May 9th, so if you plan to come please RSVP immediately to 301-627-2270.
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