2015 11 Coltsville, Cont’D from Page 11

2015 11 Coltsville, Cont’D from Page 11

Connecticut Preservation News January/February 2015 Volume XXXVIII, No. 1 ConnecticutCOLTSVILLE Gets a New National Historical Park Congress officially designated Coltsville as Connecticut’s first national historical park in December. The provision was included in a defense authorization bill, and as CPN goes to press, President Obama has indicated that he will sign the bill into law. The act, sponsored by Representative John Larson (D-1st district) in the House and by Senators Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy (both D) in the Senate, specifically establishes the Coltsville National Historical Park as a unit of the National Park System. continued on page 10 _______________________________________ In This Issue... _______________________________________ Book Notes: The Merritt Parkway 2 _______________________________________ Funding for Preservation 5 _______________________________________ Around the State 6 Historic Properties Exchange 16 C. Wigren The Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation is a private, nonprofit organization. ISSN 1084-189X Book Notes The Merritt Parkway: A Public-Private Partnership Laurie Heiss and Jill Smyth, The Merritt Parkway: The Road that Shaped a Region (The History Press, 2014), 158 pages. $19.95. n Laurie Heiss and Jill Smyth’s new history of the Merritt I Parkway, New Haven architect Herbert Newman recalls childhood trips on the Parkway with his parents and squabbling siblings: When we came to the Merritt we were distracted from our battles. Here we were on a beautifully landscaped roadway…. The wonder of the Merritt was that it was conceived as a place to experience the state, not just get from here to there. To my mind, it’s Connecticut’s longest, perhaps most wonderful, work of architecture. The joy of that experience compared to other motoring experiences has always stood out. That’s what great works of art do: They renew you and get you in touch with your humanity. The Merritt does that. It’s a great work of art, I think. Constructed between 1934 and 1940, the Merritt ranks as one of the greatest achievements of the Connecticut Highway Department, forerunner of today’s Connecticut Department of Transportation (DOT). In the depth of the Great Depression, the Department bypassed professional parkway designers to create a road within a beautiful landscape and highlighted by a unique collection of decorative bridges—a road that brought wonder and Although it created the Merritt, in later years, the delight to the mundane business of travel. Ever since, the Merritt Connecticut Department of Transportation has been both an has been an object of fierce pride for all who worked on it, from ally and a threat. Under the leadership of Commissioner Emil legislators to engineers to laborers. Frankel in the 1990s, the Department instituted wide-ranging Laurie Heiss and Jill Smyth have delved deeply into archives plans to preserve and enhance the Parkway. It formed the and private collections, scoured newspapers, and interviewed key Merritt Parkway Working Group, which formulated design figures to tell the Parkway’s story, a job for which they are uniquely guidelines for the Parkway as a whole, as well as specific guide- qualified. As the former and current executive directors, respec- lines for the landscape and bridges; it formed a new Merritt tively, of the Merritt Parkway Conservancy, they and the orga- Parkway Advisory Committee to maintain regular contact with nization they represent have played central roles in maintaining, the Parkway towns and preservation and professional groups preserving, and improving the Merritt for nearly two decades. that have a stake in the Parkway’s preservation; it secured desig- Most histories of the Merritt concentrate on its origin, design, nation as a State Scenic Road; and it embarked on a program of and construction and devote only a final chapter to what happened restoration and sensitive upgrades that is still ongoing. after the opening in 1940. The great strength of The Merritt At the same time, entrenched road-building mindsets Parkway: The Road that Shaped a Region is that its decade-by- within and beyond the Department have continued to focus decade approach pays as much attention to post-1940 history as to on making the Parkway wider, straighter, and faster, as most pre-1940. dramatically seen in the plans to rebuild the interchange with In many ways it’s not a happy story, Almost immediately things Route 7 in Norwalk. In response to this threat, the Merritt started to go downhill: wartime restrictions and then changing Parkway Conservancy departed from its original non-confron- attitudes and priorities about transportation ate away at main- tational approach to lead the lawsuit that blocked construction tenance budgets. At the same time, the explosive growth of the and forced DOT to redesign the project. Most recently, massive postwar suburbs—ironically made possible in part by the greater tree-cutting in response to a heartbreaking accident and devas- access that the Merritt itself provided—brought rising traffic levels, tating storm damage in 2011 and 2012 has decimated stretches higher speeds, and pressures to expand the road at the expense of of the Parkway with only vague promises of repairing the land- its distinctive landscape, almost always under the banner of safety scape sometime in the future. continued on page 15 improvement. 2 CONNECTICUT PRESERVATION NEWS, January/February 2015 At the Trust From the Executive Director ow that the Connecticut Trust for non-profit and for-profit developers, plus beautiful Lyman house in Durham. N Historic Preservation Revolving real estate professionals, attorneys, and 2015 marks the 40th anniversary of Fund is up and working (see Waterbury, architects. Please visit www.cttrust.org the Trust’s founding as Connecticut’s page 9), Gregory Farmer, one of the for more information. statewide non-profit historic preservation Trust’s Circuit Riders, has agreed to add In November, Jane Montanaro, organization. Much has changed in the managing its operations to his responsibili- Director of Preservation Services, Greg world of historic preservation since 1975; ties. His charge is to build the fund into Farmer, and I attended Past Forward, on the other hand, much is the same. With a major resource for financing historic the National Trust for Historic that in mind, the Trust will be presenting rehabilitation projects. The REV fund, as Preservation’s annual conference in a conference on historic preservation in it is called, provides short-term financial Savannah. A highlight of the week was Connecticut, looking forward to the next assistance that fills funding gaps for an all-day convening of more than eighty 40 years as we build on the continuing preservation projects. Pre-development representatives of organizations offering interest in preserving our historic resources and bridge loans and real estate purchase revolving funds. The session, which as the centerpiece of Connecticut’s options will focus on towns and cities featured developers, funders, and practi- vibrancy. In addition to the conference in that have been served by the Trust’s grant tioners of the funds, was sponsored by The the fall, we will offer biking tours, historic programs. These are places where our 1772 Foundation, to whom the Trust gave bar crawls, and special-access tours of investment will serve as a catalyst to stimu- our Harlan Griswold Award for Excellence historic places. late economic development and contribute in Historic Preservation in 2013. The Our social media outlets will feature to placemaking across the state. The REV 1772 Foundation is the major leader on stories on past preservation challenges and fund is now its own 501(c)(3) organization, preservation funding in the country and successes throughout the year. Make sure separate from the Connecticut Trust for has provided much-needed capital to you are a friend on our Facebook page Historic Preservation; however, the two many revolving funds, including our own. and receive our tweets. It’s going to be an entities will work hand-in-hand. The Board Without their support we could never have exciting year for the Trust, and we want of Directors of the REV fund includes sustained eighteen months of owning the you to be part of our celebrations. —Helen Higgins The Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation is a nonprofit statewide membership organization established by a special act of the State Legislature in 1975. Working with local preservation groups and individuals as well as statewide organizations, it encourages, advocates and facilitates historic preservation throughout Connecticut. Upcoming Meetings Board of Trustees Advisory Council Design: David Wolfram, Middletown Officers Martha Alexander, New Haven Printing: Kramer Printing, West Connecticut Historic Charles Janson, Chairman, Darien J. Barclay Collins, Sharon Haven Preservation Council Garry S. Leonard, Vice-Chairman, Madison William R. Crowe, Canton Edith Pestana, Secretary, Hartford Jared Edwards, FAIA, West Hartford Connecticut Preservation News is pub- February 4, 2015, at 9:30 a.m. Inger Elliott, Stonington lished bimonthly by the Connecticut Trust Edward W. Munster, Treasurer, Haddam for Historic Preservation, 940 Whitney March 4, 2015, at 9:30 a.m. Theodore F. Ells, Branford Avenue, Hamden, Connecticut 06517. Richard N. Wies, AIA, ________ Gerald Farrell, Jr., Wallingford Publication is made possible by support of Assistant Treasurer, Branford the members of the Connecticut Trust for Walter Fiederowicz,

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