Scarborough Land Conservation Trust

Lands - Introduction

Land Trusts acquire property in a variety of ways. They buy it at market value. Someone donates it for zero money. They buy it at a bargain price. They use grants to purchase it. They hold conservation easements, or they only manage it, which limits the type of development on a property, while the landowner retains ownership.

In the beginning, the Scarborough Land Conservation Trust had no set policy for its land acquisition program; however, its mission is clearly stated in the Articles of Agreement of 1975

"The purposes of the corporation are to receive and administer property and funds for the promotion and advancement of conservation, education, science, and..."

"...a specific purpose of the corporation shall be the acquisition of small areas of environmentally sensitive and undeveloped land within the Town of Scarborough, with particular emphasis on shoreland, tidal areas, inland wetlands, and other unique or scenic areas, to be held forever in its natural state for the benefit and enjoyment of the people..."

Until 1995, SLCT’s holdings were minimal. At that time, a generous man named Albert G. Sewell, Jr. donated 35 acres outright. His only request was the wise stewardship of the property that he and his family had taken care of for 60 years. It was an exciting time for the Land Trust, because the woods included two loop trails and a couple of bridges over small streams. It represented the largest contribution to the Land Trust and provided parking and trails for visitors. This set the precedent for future acquisitions. Seeing the benefits of this, SLCT created an informal policy of only accepting lands with endowments for stewardship, locations for parking, and public access. The Land Trust was beginning to define the characteristics of land they wanted to protect.

In a very short period of time, the Scarborough Land Conservation Trust more than doubled its total property. In the fall of 1995 the Land Trust held 35 acres of easements and 69 acres outright. The purchase of the Libby River Farm 120+ acres more than doubled the property owned and/or managed by the SLCT. A list of those lands is found below. SLCT now protects over 1000 acres in Scarborough.

NAME

PROPERTY

DATE

Marion Jordan Road

35 acre scenic donated easement

1986

Marion Jordan Road

2.3 acre easement donated

1988

Kirkwood Road

4 acre ownership donated

1988

Old Colony Subdivision

20.8 acre ownership donated

1990

Windward Subdivision

9 acre ownership on tributary to Nonesuch River donated;
another 9 acres donated

1995
1998

Pintail Point Subdivision

19 acres donated

1996

Albert Sewell Woods

35 acres ownership donated

1996

Libby River Farm

120 acres ownership purchased

1997-current

Eastern Road

Management Agreement

1995-current

Fuller Farm

180 acres ownership purchased

2001

Dunn Estates

20 acres donated

 

Meserve Farm

434 acres ownership purchased

 

Lands - Links

Information on our properites is listed here:

Libby River Farm
   Splash Page
   Resources
   Management
   Public Access
Sewell Woods
   Tree Growth Management Plan

Pictured at the top of the page is the Scarborough marsh at Libby River Farm. The photograph above shows field collection work at Fuller Farm.

 

 

home lands trails resources get involved about

Scarborough Land Conservation Trust
P.O. Box 1237
Scarborough, ME 04070-1237