翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Robinson in Ruins
・ Robinson Independent School District
・ Robinson Jeffers
・ Robinson Karibien
・ Robinson Lake
・ Robinson Lake (Nevada)
・ Robinson Lifestyle Center
・ Robinson list
・ Robinson McIlvaine
・ Robinson Memorial Hospital
・ Robinson Merchán
・ Robinson Mill
・ Robinson Mill, California
・ Robinson Mine
・ Robinson Mitchell
Robinson Nature Center
・ Robinson Newspapers
・ Robinson Njeru Githae
・ Robinson O. Everett
・ Robinson Observatory
・ Robinson Open
・ Robinson oscillator
・ Robinson Pass
・ Robinson Peak
・ Robinson Peter Sutherland
・ Robinson Plantation House
・ Robinson Popovites
・ Robinson Prize
・ Robinson projection
・ Robinson R22


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Robinson Nature Center : ウィキペディア英語版
Robinson Nature Center

The James and Anne Robinson Nature Center is a park and nature center operated by the Howard County, Maryland Department of Natural Resources.
==History==
The Nature Center was built on 18.3 of 22 acres〔 of a 31-acre parcel that had been split from the Simpsonville Mill property by William and Rebecca Simpson and sold to Sophia Stern in 1891; subsequent sales were to Isaac Goldstein and Louis Abram in 1894, Eli Goldstein and family (Russian immigrants) in 1897, David and Agnes Johnson in 1902, Charles and Alice Baldwin in 1911, John Clifford and Martha Wall in 1914 (then 23.75 acres), and Harry and Rachel Saumenig in 1921. The property was purchased by James and Anne Robinson in 1957; it is adjacent to the modern Middle Patuxent Environmental Area and the core properties on Cedar Lane that were assembled to start the Rouse development of Columbia, Maryland. After decades of offers to sell the property for dense development, Anne Robinson approached the county in 2002 about passing the land to them for operation of a nature center. The purchase was settled on February 18, 2005, with funding from $1.7 million in county development excise taxes and $300,000 of Program Open Space money. The Robinson Foundation, which Anne and her accountant created in 2003 to hold the property, returned $1 million of the proceeds of the sale as a contribution toward construction of the facility. The Robinson's mid-to-late 19th century frame house adjacent to the Simpsonville Mill, in which Anne had lived until 2004, was immediately demolished. Anne Robinson died days later at age 89; her husband James had died in 1977. (In 2014, the Robinson Estate also sold a 640-acre farm in Goldsboro, Maryland for $2.25 million that had been placed into agricultural preservation.)
In 2009, capital project funding of $1,010,000 was transferred from Meadowbrook Park, $250,000 from Rockburn Branch Park, $600,000 from Western Regional Park, $300,000 from Patapsco Female Institute, $600,000 from Cedar Lane School, $320,000 from Cedar Lane Athletic Improvements and Park Headquarters to build Robinson Nature Center. A total of $962,000 was budgeted for onsite road construction.
The center had its groundbreaking in 2009, although Robinson family members expressed concern about the project's growth to an $18 million facility. One of the center's features is its proximity to the historic Simpsonville Mill site, which was subdivided for a housing development in 2013. The Nature Center, built by Forrester Construction Co and KCI Technologies, opened on September 10, 2011.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Robinson Nature Center」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.