Farmers Seek
Grants to Preserve Aging Barns
By JENNIFER FU
Capital News Service
HUNTINGTOWN - Driving in his red pickup truck, Larry Wilson
points to a housing development along state Route 263 in Calvert
County.
"I remember that being an open field, and where these
houses are, I used to plant tobacco," said Wilson, 54. "When I
was a young teenager . . . I helped my father, and I helped
other farmers, and that's how I made money to buy my school
clothes and my first car."
Wilson's family grew tobacco for four generations,
beginning with his grandfather and ending with his 30-year-old
son.
Remnants of those tobacco days lay inside the dusty grey
barn behind Wilson's three-story house in Huntingtown. The barn
that his grandfather built in 1928 hasn't been used to hang and
dry tobacco since Wilson stopped growing the crop three years
ago when it became unprofitable. Today, the barn holds the
machines and tools he once used for planting and harvesting.
Tobacco farming is a dying way of life in Southern
Maryland. But thousands of abandoned or deteriorating barns
stand as proof of a once-booming business. Now two groups are
aiming to save those vestiges as reminders of bygone days.
Save America's Treasures, a national nonprofit that
preserves historic sites is providing $200,000 to Maryland barn
owners to help save them.
The Maryland Historical Trust added $30,000 to restore
barns owned by nonprofits, said Preservation Maryland
spokeswoman Connie Anderton.
Preservation Maryland, a nonprofit historic preservation
group, will administer both grants.
The funds are expected to be doled out over three years,
with more than $75,000 awarded this year, Anderton said. The
money was earmarked after the National Trust for Historic
Preservation named Southern Maryland's tobacco barns on its 2004
list of 11 Most Endangered Places.
A nine-member selection committee expects to soon announce
the 10 to 15 Maryland barns that will receive funds, said Teresa
Wilson, a historic preservation planner in St. Mary's County who
is on the selection committee.
Fifty-five barn owners from five counties - Anne Arundel,
Calvert, Charles, St. Mary's and Prince George's - applied for
grants of up to $10,000 each for renovations. Five nonprofit
tourist sites, including Greenwell State Park and Summerseat
Farm in St. Mary's County, applied for money to restore barns.
Winners must match grants with their own money.
"The tobacco barns are really the most evocative
representation of the agricultural heritage in Southern Maryland
and certainly represented the tobacco industry -- which was
dominant in Maryland for centuries," said Joshua Phillips,
director of preservation services at Preservation Maryland.
Barns from each of the counties will most likely be
selected if they are visible to the public, are still being used
and were built in the 18th century, Phillips said.
Greenwell State Park along the Patuxent River applied for
$10,000 to restore what is the oldest barn in St. Mary's County,
said Kendall Sorenson-Clark, executive director of the park.
"It's a pretty unusual structure," Clark said. The initial
structure was built around 1785, but three additions were built
around it, all in different time periods, she said.
Larry Wilson said he hopes to restore the siding and frame
on his barn in Calvert County if he gets the $2,100 grant he
applied for. The barn serves mostly as a storage space. The
building is in fairly good condition, he said.
"Old tobacco barns I think are an integral part of the
scenery in Southern Maryland, especially in Calvert County," he
said. "What Calvert County and all of Maryland was built on was
the production of tobacco."
For more than 300 years, Southern Maryland farmers have
been commercially growing tobacco. But production of the crop
has sharply declined since the state initiated a "buyout"
program in 1999 that pays farmers to replace tobacco with
alternative crops.
"A lot of people just aren't willing to, just don't want
to work for themselves, which is what a farmer does, and just
don't see the value of putting in the sweat and labor of your
own hands," Larry Wilson said.
Still a farmer, he now grows pumpkins, tomatoes, corn and
various produce and sells them at a stand outside his home.
On a drive through any of the five counties, tobacco barns
can be spotted from the roadside. There are six types of tobacco
barns, and each has a different shape, Teresa Wilson said.
"They're sort of like different birds; there are different
profiles that you can recognize," she said.
She added that the effort to preserve tobacco barns goes
hand in hand with the movement to protect farmland.
"It's pretty key that to save agricultural buildings you
have to save agricultural land," she said.
Politicians have joined the movement to preserve Maryland
barns. The Maryland Legislature passed a bill this session that
would establish a $300,000 Maryland Barn Preservation Fund to
save historic agricultural buildings, said Delegate Paul S.
Stull, R-Frederick, lead sponsor of the measure. The bill is
waiting to be signed by the governor.
Additionally, at least 14 states run barn preservation
programs, including New York, Maine and Vermont, according to
the National Trust for Historic Preservation. |