SELT Receives $240,000 Grant Award to Preserve the John Prescott Chase Farmhouse in Epping

LCHIP awards $4.1 million to Support Natural and Historic Resource Projects Statewide 

EPPING – The Board of Directors of the Land and Community Heritage Investment Program (LCHIP) has announced $4.1 million dollars in matching grants awarded to thirty-two projects across the state, including SELT’s project to rehabilitate the historic John Prescott Chase Farmhouse at Burley Farms in Epping, NH. 

LCHIP awarded $240,000 to support this effort, which fully rehabilitates the building into two units of workforce housing,  while achieving enhanced energy efficiency and meeting historic rehabilitation standards. The Farmhouse will be a part of SELT’s Center for People and Nature, SELT’s project that will transform Burley Farms into a working farm, a public hub for outdoor recreation, and a learning center for nature-based education. The renovation of the Farmhouse is expected to begin next year. 

“When completed, the Farmhouse will be transformed from a vacant, deteriorating building to a productive, living building,” said Brian Hart, Executive Director of SELT. “As part of SELT’s larger Center for People and Nature, Burley Farms is projected to have more than 7,100 visitors. Working in partnership with the Epping Historic Society, SELT will highlight and celebrate the wonderful history of the Farmhouse and its historic significance. We are so grateful to LCHIP for their support of this vision.” 

The John Prescott Chase Farmhouse is listed on the New Hampshire Register of Historic Places and represents an 18th century Federal home that was renovated in the Greek Revival during the 19th-century to reflect the growing prosperity of the farm. The property retains many character-defining features from each era. Together with a cluster of nearby historic farm buildings the adjacent protected farm and forest landscape the Farmhouse exemplifies the evolution of agriculture and farms in New Hampshire. 

LCHIP funds will support projects in nine of the state’s ten counties. This grant round was highly competitive, with nearly $8 million in funding requests compared to $4.1 million available for grants.  

LCHIP Board of Directors Chair Amanda Merrill of Durham observed that “With the large number and high quality of applications that where submitted this year, the board had the satisfaction of awarding grants to a variety of wonderful projects– and the regret of being unable to support many others. It is clear to me that the work of LCHIP is more important than ever.” 

Grant recipients are required to raise a minimum of one dollar for each dollar provided by LCHIP.  This year’s awards of $4.1 million will be matched by nearly $18 million that the project proponents will raise from other public and private sources, infusing a total of over $22 million into the state’s economy in direct project activity.    

About SELT  

SELT is a nonprofit land trust with a mission to protect and sustain the significant lands in our communities for clean water, fresh food, outdoor recreation, healthy forests, and wildlife. Since 1980, the Southeast Land Trust has worked in 52 communities of southeastern New Hampshire to conserve more than 22,000 acres of land through conservation agreements and ownerships. SELT is accredited by the Land Trust Accreditation Commission. For more information, visit seltnh.org.  

About New Hampshire’s Land and Community Heritage Investment Program  
The New Hampshire Land and Community Heritage Investment Program is an independent state authority created by the legislature in 2000. LCHIP’s legislative mandate is to ensure the perpetual contribution of natural, cultural and historic resources to the economy, environment, and quality of life in New Hampshire. LCHIP does this by providing matching grants to New Hampshire communities and non-profits to conserve and preserve the state’s most important natural, cultural and historic resources. The program has provided 499 grants which have helped to conserve approximately 294,000 acres of land for food production, water quality, ecological values, timber management and recreation and supported 301 projects to rehabilitate 286 historic structures and sites. Grants have been awarded in all parts of the state and in 176 of New Hampshire’s 234 communities. Fifty million dollars of state money have led to a total project value of more than $289 million. The money for LCHIP grants comes from fees on four documents recorded at the Registry of Deeds in every county of the state.   

For more information about LCHIP, visit LCHIP.org or call (603) 224-4113 

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