Sacred Places Autumn/Winter 2018-2019 | Page 13

and more modern space. It was discovered that the land under the church was contaminated by an adjacent, defunct gas power plant, posing serious health risks that were not readily addressed. Being forced to move only endeared the congregation to the old building even more, and in its new home the congregation refused to forget its original home. For years Mason brought groups of members, clergy and CME bishops to visit the site and pray together—on be- half of the congregation and its historic home. By 2015, Augusta was increasingly committed to stewarding its historic places, exemplified by the work of the Augusta Canal Na- tional Heritage Area (NHA). Like other NHAs across the country, the Augusta group encourages the preservation of a collection of National Park Service, National Historic Landmark, and other re- lated historic sites and landscapes, which form a network of institu- tions that work cooperatively with shared purpose and thematic unity. Thus, when Atlanta Light Gas Co., a regional utility com- pany, bought the church and intended to raze it to pursue environ- mental remediation, Augusta Canal NHA and Rev. Mason took ac- tion. Many other African American historic sites had been lost in Augusta, and they were determined not to lose Mother Trinity. Staff from the Augusta Canal NHA—Dayton Sherrouse and Rebecca Rogers—initiated a “Save Mother Trinity” campaign to capture the attention of local media and civic leaders across the city. Next, the Augusta Canal NHA took advantage of an opportu- nity offered through the National Heritage Areas Development Partnership, supported by funding from the National Park Service, that makes Partners’ services available to encourage preservation of sacred places. Local leaders hoped that Partners’ community en- gagement work and asset-mapping program could develop practical plans for saving this landmark building and reusing it as a commu- nity asset. (continued on page 14) Mother Trinity on the move National Heritage Area Work Mother Trinity CME’s salvation was encouraged by a unique collaboration between Partners and the National Heritage Area Development Partnership with support from the National Park Service. Since 2014, Partners’ services have been supported by a series of grants that have helped National Heritage Areas preserve important but challenged historic sacred places. In the case of Baltimore, Partners worked with the NHA to lead a town hall for con- gregations and artists, but most of the other pro- jects have included community asset-mapping and design charrette work. (Charrettes are community- based design events that convene a team of archi- tects and designers to develop initial architectural concepts and visual documents that illustrate the potential for reuse and restoration.) Other projects have included: • The Blue Church, Wheeling, WV with the Wheeling NHA • St. John’s Episcopal Church, Tuscumbia, AL with the Muscle Shoals NHA • Clinton Church AME in Great Barrington, MA with the Upper Housatonic NHA • Historic Ely Stake Tabernacle in Ely, NV with the Great Basin NHA Upcoming projects underway include: • First Presbyterian Church in Springfield, IL with Lincoln NHA • St. Thomas Indian Mission in Yuma, AZ with Yuma Crossing NHA These NHA-Partners collaborations have led to remarkable successes in preserving historic sacred places as community assets. In Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Partners worked with a local advo- cacy nonprofit, Clinton Church Restoration (CCR), to build on earlier community planning work for the future of Clinton AME, a church with strong connec- tions to W.E.B. DuBois and the local NAACP Chapter. Following the NHA-Partners project, CCR was able to win $100,000 in Community Preservation Act funding from the town of Great Barrington, and a highly competitive award of $389,000 from the Na- tional Park Service’s African American Civil Rights Program. In rural Ely, Nevada, the community has been able to reorganize its efforts around a strong vision and new plan for the reuse of the former Ely Stake Tabernacle as a center for arts and culture; this project will tap into the many visitors who come annually to the scenic Great Basin National Park. SACRED PLACES • AUTUMN/WINTER 2018-19 13