Last updated: Sat Feb 04 08:15:24 +0000 2012

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Quote of the Day

“The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment. Pennsylvania's public natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people.”
— Pennsylvania Constitution (Article I, Section 27)
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A Gift to the Community

"If the land is sold, it cannot be retrieved. It is gone."

The Potter Farm has been in my immediate family since 1792 when Fergus Potter received a warrant for approximately 300 acres. Today the farm is comprised of 198 acres– fifty acres woodlot and one hundred twenty acres tillable. Since the farm has always been owned by a Potter, it is more than a “two-century farm.” The farm buildings as well as the farmhouse are in original condition. That is, they have not been added to or expanded since they were built in the mid 1800s. The house is unique in that it was one of the first plank, tilt-up frame houses.

My wife, Elizabeth, and I have lived on the farm for more than thirteen years. It’s the only home that our immediate family really knows. We have been missionaries and pastors in many places so the homes our children knew growing up were only temporary. To be able to place the property in a conservation easement makes it possible for us to keep the property in the family. It is the only way that we can continue to maintain the integrity of the farm, the land and the buildings.

That is not the only reason why the land has been donated for an agricultural easement. The water sources on the farm include many springs, including two that are distant tributaries to the Chesapeake watershed.

We highly recommend pursuing conservation possibilities. If the land is sold, it cannot be retrieved. It is gone. However, with help, the land can be preserved and farmed in perpetuity. That’s a gift to the family and a gift to the community. The process is slow, but rewarding. Mr. Norm Lathbury, of the Centre County Agricultural Land Preservation Board, was encouraging every step of the way.

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by Taylor Potter


Centre County Agricultural Land Preservation Board


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The people of the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association envision a prosperous Pennsylvania, where communities know that their treasured green places will endure. We envision a Commonwealth where the lands that guarantee our water quality are safeguarded; where every child can safely play at a nearby park; where our productive farmland and forests are protected, securing our food and timber supply; and where wild places are preserved for wildlife and people.

Thank you to the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources for supporting the Association’s conservation efforts.

© 2012 Pennsylvania Land Trust Association