MIDDLETOWN, CT - The Rockfall Foundation recently received a
matching grant of
$10,700 to support exterior maintenance of the historic, 18th
century deKoven House Community Center located at 27 Washington Street,
Middletown. The grant was awarded by the 1772 Foundation in cooperation with
the Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation and will allow for painting,
wood repair, and chimney repointing.
Bequeathed
to the Foundation by the organization’s founder, Clarence S. Wadsworth, the
deKoven House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the
Captain Benjamin Williams House. The brick Georgian mansion was built between
1791 and 1797 and is just yards from the banks of the Connecticut River. Previously
renovated with architectural work by Jeffrey Dale Bianco, AIA, the current
exterior project is part of a long-range plan to care for the building.
“One of the Rockfall Foundation’s main responsibilities
is stewardship of the deKoven House,” said Robin Andreoli, the Foundation’s
executive director. “In addition to the Foundation, its offices are occupied by
several groups whose missions are concerned with natural resource education,
research, and conservation in the Lower Connecticut River Valley.”
Since
1942, the Rockfall Foundation has provided subsidized, low-cost office space in
the deKoven House to a variety of nonprofit environmental and educational
organizations. Current resident organizations include the Middlesex Land Trust,
Connecticut River Conservancy, Connecticut River Coastal Conservation District,
Mattabeseck Audubon Society, Connecticut Land Conservation Council, Artists for
World Peace, Connecticut Center for Spiritual Living, and the Connecticut
Association of Conservation and Inland Wetlands Commission. Two meeting rooms are also available to community
groups for use and host more than 150 gatherings per year.
The
Rockfall Foundation is a private, non-profit foundation that supports
environmental education, conservation programs and planning initiatives in the
Lower Connecticut River Valley. Established in 1935, it is one of Connecticut’s
oldest environmental organizations. The Foundation annually awards
environmental grants to other non-profits and sponsors education programs and
symposia.
For
additional information, please call 860-347-0340 or visit
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