Latest News | What
is the Depot? | What You Can Do |
Discussion Forum SCHUMER LEGISLATION TO HELP FISHKILL REVOLUTIONARY WAR CAMP ACCESS FEDERAL PRESERVATION DOLLARS SET TO CLEAR MAJOR LEGISLATIVE HURDLE Press Release from the Office of U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer, December 15, 2009 Schumer-Introduced Legislation To Make Fishkill Depot Eligible For Preservation Funding To Purchase And Preserve Historic Land Schumer Visited Fishkill Location In June To Announce Legislation To Provide Funding To Preserve Historic Site Bill Will Be Considered By Full Energy and Natural Resources Committee Tomorrow Today, U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer announced that his legislation to make the Supply Depot in Fishkill eligible for federal preservation funds will clear a major legislative hurdle tomorrow when it is considered by the full Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. Schumer’s legislation will expand the existing preservation program that provides funding for communities to purchase and preserve significant historic locations, the American Battlefield Protection Program so it includes the Fishkill Supply Depot. The depot is listed in the 2007 Report to Congress on the Historic Preservation of Revolutionary War and War of 1812 Sites in the U.S., but the program only applies to sites that are listed in the 1993 Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields. The legislation would expand the program to include the depot and authorize $10 million per year of funding specifically for the acquisition of Revolutionary War sites, in addition to the already available $10 million in funding for Civil War Sites. The full Senate Committee on Energy and Natural
Resources will hold a markup of the legislation tomorrow at 10am and will
likely pass the legislation out of committee so the full Senate can vote
on it, potentially by the end of the year or early next year. The bill
has already passed the House of Representatives. This summer, Schumer
invited Mara Farrell, local preservation expert and Fishkill Depot advocate,
to testify before the Senate Subcommittee on National Parks in favor of
the legislation. Recent archeological investigations and ground-penetrating
radar scans have located hundreds of graves, dating back to the 18th century,
and it is anticipated that the number of graves on the site could be more
than 1,000. Much of the Fishkill Supply Depot site has been covered by
development, and there have been further plans for the construction of
a shopping center. Despite its historical significance, little remains of the original structures at the Fishkill Supply Depot today. Much of this significant historic site has been developed into a shopping mall and a gas station. Now, once more, land belonging to the supply depot, which has never been properly assessed by experts in the field of military archaeology, is being seriously threatened by a new round of commercial development. The American Battlefield Protection Program (ABPP) promotes the preservation of significant historic battlefields associated with wars on American soil. The goals of the program are 1) to protect battlefields and sites associated with armed conflicts that influenced the course of our history, 2) to encourage and assist all Americans in planning for the preservation, management, and interpretation of these sites, and 3) to raise awareness of the importance of preserving battlefields and related sites for future generations. The ABPP focuses primarily on land use, cultural resource and site management planning, and public education. Both the Civil War Sites Advisory Commission
Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields and the Report
to Congress on the Historic Preservation of Revolutionary War and War
of 1812 Sites in the U.S. were commissioned by Congress and compiled
by the National Parks Service. # # #
Latest News | What
is the Depot? | What You Can Do |
Discussion Forum |