Winchester Land Trust gets 129 acres

WINCHESTER — The Winchester Land Trust has been willed 129 acres of land by the late Louis Seigman Ehrich Jr.

A longtime Winchester Center resident, Ehrich helped found the Winchester Land Trust and served on the group’s board for nearly two decades. He died at age 93 on Jan. 5, 2010, having moved from Winsted to South Carolina in 2006.

“He was such an amazing supporter and benefactor,� said Shelley Harms, president of the Land Trust. “This donation is really significant for conservation.�

As a board member of the Land Trust and the Park Pond Club, Ehrich made it possible for the Land Trust to protect 4 acres on Park Pond, including 2 acres of Land Trust property and 2 adjoining  acres protected by a conservation restriction. In 2005, he donated 66 acres of his forested land along Preston Road and the Waterbury Turnpike to the Land Trust.

“He didn’t want a lot of recognition,� Harms recalled. “He wouldn’t let us do a press release when he donated the 66 acres, but he so deserved it. He was amazing.�

The new 129-acre bequest is forest land containing a long section of Rugg Brook. It has frontage on Grantville Road, Preston Road and Waterbury Turnpike in Winchester Center. The land links Ehrich’s 66-acre donation with 37-acre Hurlbut Field (purchased by the Land Trust in 2009), creating a protected wilderness corridor totaling 232 acres.

Harms noted that it is important watershed land, protecting the town’s drinking water at Rugg Brook Reservoir.

The Winchester Land Trust was organized in 1988 to serve as a steward of the town’s rural character and natural resources. It is a nonprofit organization and preserves 319 acres of open space through direct ownership or through conservation easements.

Last month, a Winchester Land Trust plan to seek a $500,000 conservation grant to purchase 360 acres of property in town received support from the Winchester Board of Selectmen. Under the plan, the Land Trust would purchase conservation restrictions on two properties near Crystal Lake and another 19 small parcels near Highland Lake. Using the grant money, the Land Trust would pay the town $450,000 for conservation restrictions. After expenses, the town would see a profit of $363,000.

Pending the approval of the Winchester Land Trust’s grant application, the plan requires final approval by residents at a special town meeting.

For information or to support the Winchester Land Trust, send correspondence to Winchester Land Trust, PO Box 10, Winchester Center, CT 06094.

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