News and Events

April 2022 Faraway Farm Tour

April 2022

Starting our Far Away Farm tour at Ferry Hill, looking over the Potomac River at Shepherdstown.

Battle of Shepherdstown overview at the Cement Mill Kilns.

Our tour guide and board member Kevin Pawlak led the discussion and hike.

A view of the Osbourn House and Barn at Far Away Farms.

We are thrilled to be able to legally enter this property after so many years of fighting to protect this land from development.

Farm tour in the battlefield

March 19, 2022: Dr. Mike Nickerson, SBPA President, hosts a farm tour in the battlefield for a Beginner Farming class from the Jefferson Country Agriculture Extension Service.

Emily Morrow (right side of photo), Agriculture and Natural Resources Agent, Jefferson County WVU Extension Service, listens as Dr. Nickerson (yellow hat) shows hothouse gardening of spring salad greens and a beef cattle operation. The tour of the Nickerson’s Blue Mountain Meadow Farm was one of 3 farms visited that day by the class. Photo: Rosemary Nickerson

Dr. Nickerson discussed the role of agriculture and conservation easements in preserving historic sites such as the Battle of Shepherdstown, where the farm is located.

Blue Mountain Meadow Farm produces organic vegetables and practices rotational grazing of beef cattle with 100% photovoltaic electric power generation.

Just a week after installation of 2 owl nesting boxes on trees in the battlefield, this barred owl welcomed us home one recent evening. A ‘Birds in the Battlefield’ project success!

Touring the Faraway Farm

On Friday, March 18, 2022, SBPA President Dr. Mike Nickerson toured the Faraway Farm property in the historic core of the Battle of Shepherdstown. After a meeting at the town’s Sweet Shop bakery, current farm owner Mike Boltz welcomed the group that included Kathy Robertson and Tom Moore of the American Battlefield Trust; Elizabeth Wheeler, Director of the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board and SBPA Vice-President Steve Alemar. Not shown is Martin Burke of the Jefferson County Historic Landmarks Commission who attended the meeting but not the farm tour.

The ABT recently signed a contract with Mr. Boltz to purchase the farm and a fund-raising campaign is planned by the SBPA this summer.

Nesting Boxes for Owls

December 2021.

Installation of a Barred Owl nesting box in the woods above the cement mill and River Road by Dr. Mike Nickerson.

Thanks to Bob Nickerson for the box construction and donation.

 

December 2021.

Less than a week after putting up the owl boxes, a Barred Owl sits on the sign for Blue Mountain Meadow Farm, Drs. Mike and Rosemary Nickerson, owners. Located in the core area of the battlefield on Stonehouse Lane off Trough Road.

Wildlife Habitat Certification

January 2021.

Wildlife Habitat Certification was obtained from the Audubon Society for the riverside park and cement mill property along the Potomac River.

Dr. Mike Nickerson, SBPA member, worked with Wil Hershberger, Naturalist, and Katelyn Walters, Land Manager of the Potomac Valley Audubon Society to document the site’s habitat characteristics, birds and native plants.

Birds in the Battlefield Program

Press Release

February 20, 2020

A new project, Birds in the Battlefield, is underway in 2020 to improve bird habitat in preserved areas of the Battle of Shepherdstown, located along River and Trough Roads on the Potomac River below Shepherdstown. The Battle of Shepherdstown occurred on September 19 – 20, 1862 immediately following the Battle of Antietam with Union forces crossing the Potomac River in pursuit of a retreating Confederate army hindered by massive numbers of wounded. The battle spanned the Potomac River with intense artillery and rifle fire at Packhorse Ford, the Cement Mill, the C&O Canal and heights in Maryland, extending up Trough Road onto Engle-Mohler Road.

Since 2010, the Jefferson County Historic Landmarks Commission (JCHLC) and assisted by the Shepherdstown Battlefield Preservation Association (SBPA) have succeeded in preserving 56 acres astride ½ miles of the Potomac River. The site includes the ruins of the historic Cement Mill and rugged cliffs above the river where brutal fighting occurred during the battle, as well as the ‘Trough’ (stream) juncture with the Potomac, riverside brush and downed trees, and upland forested areas. These areas represent valuable habitat for birds as well as native plants (birds and botany) that can be developed in conjunction with highlighting the historic significance of the site.

The project was initiated by Dr. Mike Nickerson, member of both the SBPA and the Potomac Valley Audubon Society (PVAS) and will be managed by the JCHLC, SBPA and PVAS. Members of the SBPA sponsored an initial walk-through of the battlefield by Dr. Nickerson, KC Walters PVAS Land and Conservation Manager, and Wil Hershberger, local bird expert. The evaluators were highly impressed with the habitat potential of the site including large dead trees suitable for several woodpecker species, the cement mill ruins for wrens, cavities in large riverside trees for wood ducks, and cliff ledges and seams for owls and bats. Mr. Hershberger was enthusiastic about the potential of rare plants in the cliffs, largely untouched for 150 years- adding a valuable botany component to the project’s efforts.

An initial property evaluation conducted in early 2020 described prioritized options for wildlife habitat enhancement and recommended the Battlefield property be enrolled in the Audubon Society’s Wildlife Habitat Program. Properties participating in this program provide sufficient food, water, and shelter to sustain wildlife. Once enrolled, the JCHLC and SBPA will be given sign to display. The evaluation will be reviewed by the JCHLC and interested volunteers. Volunteers willing to contribute to these efforts are encouraged to contact the JCHLC, SBPA or the PVAS. Priority action items such as birdhouse construction will be planned and distributed to volunteers before spring so be ready! Landowners in the area who wish to learn more about PVAS’s Habitat Stewardship Programs, including the Wildlife Habitat Program, can contact the PVAS to schedule a property evaluation.