Developer Signs Easement To Protect S.C. Plantation's View

Middleton
Officials at Middleton Place have been working with a handful
of developers for the past 25 years, convincing all of them to
sign conservation easements to protect the National Historic
Landmark's viewshed.

Credit: Middleton Place Plantation

The two-mile view from a 265-year-old Charleston plantation will never be cluttered with townhouses, thanks to a conservation easement a developer signed in June.

Persuaded by the Middleton Place Foundation, the Ryland Group, Inc., recorded the final 150-foot conservation easement for property along the Ashley River. It was the last piece of riverfront land preservationists wanted to protect.

"We're really thrilled about it," says Charles Duell, president of the Middleton Place Foundation, which has been working for 25 years to conserve parcels visible from the National Historic Landmark. "We! were able to convince [Ryland officials] that they should be part of the conservation effort of the Ashley River. I think it helps their marketing."

Most of the land Middleton Place sought to protect was once owned by the Boy Scouts of America. In 1949, the Boy Scouts received a donation of 3,000 acres on the Ashley River; in the 1980s, it chose to sell the parcels to different developers.

"What a great result, demonstrating that perseverance is a vital component of historic preservation," National Trust President Richard Moe said in a statement. Because of development pressure, in 1995 the National Trust named the Ashley River Historic District one of America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places.

Meanwhile, a developer has asked permission to rezon! e 6,600 acres on Watson Hill for housing. For now, though, at least th e view from Middleton Place is the same as it has always been.

"Monticello and Mount Vernon have really led the effort [to preserve viewsheds]," Duell says. 

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