By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News staff
"King Phillip's" (Metacom) Seat |
BRISTOL — The third annual Land Trust Days kicked off earlier
this month at one of Rhode Island's most scenic places. It's also one with a
dark past.
Mount Hope Farm offers 127 acres of magnificent
landscapes and sweeping views of Mount Hope Bay. The former farm and playground
for wealthy industrialists is a key landmark in the bloody takeover of Native
American lands by English colonists. It also was home to slave owners.
The historic centerpiece of the site is King Philip’s Seat, a
large rocky outcrop with a natural throne-like formation. Wampanoag leader
Metacom, called King Philip by the colonists, held court at the sacred ground.
Metacom was the central figure in the violent King Philip’s War that saw
conflict across southern New England, as European colonists eventually wrested
control of land from Native Americans.
Metacom was killed Aug. 12, 1676, during a conflict near the
farm. He was beheaded and drawn and quartered, his head displayed on a pike in
Plymouth Colony for 20 years.
Today, Mount Hope Farm is the site of a bed and breakfast, a
farmers market, managed hay fields and a popular spot for wedding receptions —
all of which raise money to maintain the land and buildings.
The acquisition of the land by the Mount Hope Trust in 1999
exemplifies one of the many ways in which land trusts attain land. Land trusts
typically don't manage large pools of money, but must raise funds when suitable
properties are offered for purchase. Some properties are donated. Larger
properties often require funds for an outright purchase or to protect the land
from development. A land trust, managed by a volunteer board, raises money on
an ongoing basis to manage, or steward, its properties.
In order to raise $3.3 million to buy Mount Hope Farm, funds
were raised through a $400,000 grant from the state Department of Environmental
Management (DEM), direct donations, a loan from a local church and a local
voter-approved $1.5 million bond.
Many of Rhode Island’s 45 land trusts were created in the early
1970s to protect the state’s rapid loss of open space, shoreline and farmland
to development. Today, 57 square miles of land are managed by land trusts.
“These are the places that form the future of Rhode Island,”
said Rupert Friday, director of the Rhode Island Land
Trust Council, during the Aug. 8 kickoff at Mount Hope Farm.
Land Trust Days was started in 2011 to connect the
public with these protected spaces and land trust volunteers. Fifty-one events,
including nature walks, scavenger hunts, kayak trips and cookouts, will be held
statewide through Sept. 28.