Trust Me: Inside the National
Trust
BY ARNOLD BERKE
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(Art by Richard Thompson)
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Flood and flames cost Grand
Forks, N.D., a lot in 1997, when the Red River
overran its banks and a huge fire hit downtown. Nearly
a fourth of the city's National Register stock was
lost, and new flood dikes would claim even more. Yet
much of its past was rescued, reports Marsha
Gunderson, chair of the preservation commission,
who praises the Trust for abetting that victory. Soon
after the flood, Gunderson writes, Trust staff members
were in "constant contact" with the commission, serving
as "mentors, advisers, and cheerleaders. Their help
was tremendously important in the recovery of historic
Grand Forks." Ten years on, she reports, the city
is reborn and recognizable, "both secure and true
to itself."
... The Trust was also soon
on the scene, postdisaster, in Evanston, Wyo.,
where a fire in May nearly did in the 1917 Strand
Theatre. Its walls survived, but loss of the roof
and the interior led the fire department to call for
the building's demolition. Uinta County Museum Director
Barbara Bogart brought
in the mountains/plains office, which hired an engineer
to assess the structure. His verdict, that the building
was salvageable, prompted the city to save it. Meanwhile,
owners Kim and Kendra West
are stabilizing the Strand, which prefire was a movie
house, as they plan its future.
... They're coming back. Mid-20th
century buildings are being rediscovered, reassessed,
and—like their older brethren—razed. From prominent
landmarks (office towers, apartment blocks) to everyday
Americana (ranch houses, branch banks, storefronts),
structures that people once loved to hate—especially
when they unseated earlier architecture—are now themselves
endangered. To aid their rescue, there's a new Trust
guide that helps sort out the modern styles, determine
which places need protection, and win over a public
whose first reaction to saving such gems is all too
often, "Are you kidding?" Preserving Resources
from the Recent Past, by Jeanne Lambin, will also
take you through historic designation, financing restoration,
and saving landscapes. Order at www.preservationbooks.org
or (202) 588-6296.
... The first and only director of Brucemore,
a Trust historic site in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is retiring
in October. For 26 years, Peggy
Whitworth has run the 1886 Queen Anne mansion,
home to a succession of three prominent families.
In interpreting that colorful history, guiding restoration
in both house and gardens, and hosting a full schedule
of cultural events, Whitworth has made Brucemore an
especially appealing place. Two September events will
honor her service—a "Concert for Peggy" on the 9th
(to include what is billed as "a few gentle roasts
from area celebrities") and an open house on the 16th.
"When I retire," says Whitworth, "I plan to read,
write, travel, consult, and do more political work.
Or I might just get a paper route."
... A lawsuit by Utah's Kane
and Garfield counties against the Bureau of
Land Management was dismissed in federal court in
June. The counties had challenged BLM's plan for Grand
Staircase-Escalante National Monument, seeking to
control the use of roads there. In 2003, Kane County
had removed 31 BLM signs that curbed off-road entry
to vehicles, seen by many as destructive to natural
and cultural values, then in 2005 put up its own signs
freeing up access ("Magnificent Possession," Preservation,
May/June 2006). Joining the suit as intervenor-defendants
for BLM were the Trust, the Sierra Club, the Wilderness
Society, and the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.
The counties have appealed the ruling.
Read more from our September/October 2007
issue online, look for Preservation on
newsstands, e-mail
us to purchase a copy.
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