DHR Announces Availability of Virginia Battlefield Preservation Grants for Fiscal Year 2022 Copy

Published March 27, 2023
 | Updated March 8, 2023
Mask Group 25

Looking along the barrel of a Civil War-era cannon.

DHR is now accepting applications from organizations that seek to protect battlefield lands with the support of grants from the Virginia Battlefield Preservation Fund, which the agency administers.

The grants can be applied to protecting acreage affiliated with battles during the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the Civil War by either fee simple land purchases or protective easement purchases. DHR urges qualified organizations to apply for the grants. The deadline for applications is close of business on July 16, 2021.

DHR awards the grants on a competitive basis, and the agency typically receives applications requesting more in grants than the VBPF can fulfill. DHR disperses the awards through an evaluation process that examines each battlefield’s significance as determined by two reports Congress commissioned, the “Report on the Nation’s Civil War Battlefields,” as amended, and the “Report to Congress on the Historic Preservation of Revolutionary War and War of 1812 Sites in the United States,” as amended.

Other factors DHR considers in evaluating the funding requests include the proximity of each parcel to other protected lands, the threat of loss due to encroaching development, and the potential for education, recreation, research, or heritage tourism.

The receipt of a state battlefield grant to support the purchase of targeted acreage requires that an easement on the land be donated to DHR’s Virginia Board of Historic Resources. The easement, which restricts or forbids development of the land by a property owner, protects the battlefield lands in perpetuity.

The grant application and a VBPF grant program manual are available for downloading. A VBPF 2021 Scoring Sheet also shows what criteria is considered when evaluating grants. For more information, applicants should contact DHR’s David Edwards at (540) 868-7030.

Last year, DHR disbursed $1 million in grant awards from the Virginia Battlefield Preservation Fund toward the preservation of more than 610 acres of battlefield lands including a site affiliated with the Revolutionary War. (Read a press release announcing those grants.)

In 2010, the General Assembly established a permanent Civil War Site Preservation Fund to assist in the preservation of battlefield lands increasingly prone to development. In 2015, the GA expanded the fund—renamed the Virginia Battlefield Preservation Fund—to cover battlefields also associated with the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812.

Civil War heritage tourism plays a large role in Virginia’s economy. A 2015 economic impact study requested by the Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission showed that the 150th anniversary of the Civil War brought more than 3.7 million people and $290 million to Virginia, where roughly a third of all the war’s major battles were fought.

In addition to supporting heritage tourism, the preservation of battlefield lands also serves many conservation and recreational goals. Preserved battlefield acreage protects wetlands, timberlands, wildlife habitats, and farm lands still in use. Many of the open-space sites offer places for recreation near to growing urban areas.

State Grant Awards of $1 Million will Help to Protect Lands Affiliated with Battles of the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, and Civil War

DHR BLOGS
A drawing by Conan Paige of his family home, the Paige-Pollard House.

Heirloom Home: The Paige-Pollard House in King William County

A headstone at Union Street Cemeteries in Hampton, Virginia

Grave Matters: The African American Cemetery & Graves Fund

Update: 2024 General Assembly Session

Image slides

Meet the New Division of Resource Information & Registers

Longs Chapel as it appears today due to the stewardship of the Longs Chapel Preservation Society.

Virginia Landmarks: A Showcase of Successful Historic Preservation Projects

Shenvalee Golf Resort

Shenvalee Golf Resort Brings Golfers and Families to Shenandoah County for Almost a Century

POINT OF CONTACT

Stephanie Williams
Department of Historic Resources
Stephanie.Williams@dhr.virginia.gov
123-123-1234

Related Press Releases

8 New State Historical Highway Markers Approved

9 Preservation Projects Set to Receive Funding from Virginia BIPOC Fund Grant Program

March 2024 new VLR listings

10 Historic Sites Added to the Virginia Landmarks Register