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Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program Celebrated in Beaufort County
The Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program (FRPP) received special attention in
Beaufort, SC, at a special ceremony at the Penn Center on November 8, 2003. The
Penn Center is one of the nation's most historically significant
African-American educational and cultural institutions. It was established early
in the Civil War, before emancipation. The purpose was to educate the freed
slaves on the sea islands around Port Royal Sound that had been occupied by the
Union on November 7th, 1861. Since then, the Penn Center has worked on many
community-based projects, such as bringing public water to the islands, helping
farmers to buy and market co-operatives and advocating better housing and health
care for low-income people.
The center received USDA funding to protect 195 forested acres from development.
NRCS State Conservationist Walter W. Douglas spoke at the ceremony, which was
attended by nearly 10,000 spectators. He explained the significance of the
easement to the residents and officials attending the event. “This is a
voluntary program that helps farmers and ranchers keep their land in agriculture
by providing matching funds to places like the Penn Center with existing
farmland,” he explained.
The Penn Center has agreed not to convert the 195 acres covered under the
easement to non-agricultural uses. In addition, a conservation plan will be
developed for the farm at the Penn Center that will protect soil and water
resources. Most importantly, the easement is permanent, which means that the
acreage will forever be protected.
What is so remarkable about the Penn Center is that the landscape is virtually
unchanged since the island was occupied in 1861. In a time of rapid industrial
growth and expansion, South Carolina’s farmland is quickly disappearing. The
farm being protected here is also located in one of the most rapidly developing
counties in the nation, due to nearby Hilton Head Island and Beaufort. Today,
the Penn Center agricultural acreage is used for teaching modern methods of
economical land use for local landowners in the areas of cropland, pastureland,
and forest products.
During his presentation, Douglas thanked the partnership that helped make the
project become a reality. “Because of the strong conservation ethic of the local
Beaufort County Council, and the staff here at the Penn Center, prime farmland
will be permanently protected for generations to come.”
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