Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Chancellorsville eyed for subdivision

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Chancellorsville eyed for subdivision

    BY CLINT SCHEMMER / THE FREE LANCE–STAR

    The Silver Cos. is proposing a 249-home subdivision on part of the Chancellorsville battlefield in Spotsylvania County.

    Tonight, the developer plans to hold a community meeting at St. Michael the Archangel High School in Spotsylvania about its project.

    Chancellorsville Investment Co. LLC is applying to rezone 1,152 acres that border Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park on the north side of State Route 3. The Binns Tract is just east of Black Meadow Road, west of Golden Oaks Drive, and south of Flint Hill Court and Hunting Run Reservoir. The land lies between the reservoir and the park.

    It wraps around the national park’s Stonewall Flank Attack parcel on Route 3, which is open to park visitors, and the Wagner Tract, acquired by the Washington-based Civil War Trust in 2009. Wilderness Church, where Jackson’s men first encountered Union troops, is due south.

    The Binns Tract is part of the land across which Confederate Lt. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson and his troops surprised Union forces on the Battle of Chancellorsville’s second day, routing Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker’s unwary 11th Corps and driving it hurriedly to the east.

    Jackson’s troops advanced on both sides of Route 3, with a front that was initially two miles wide. Today, only pieces of the battlefield are preserved by the park.

    During the Confederates’ pursuit, which continued into the evening of May 2, 1863, Jackson was mortally wounded by “friendly fire” from his own troops on a moonlit road between Route 3 and the Bullock Road, well east of the Binns property.

    The southern half of the Binns Tract is “core battlefield” land, or hallowed ground, often the first priority for preservation, according to the Civil War Sites Advisory Commission appointed by Congress to identify the nation’s most significant Civil War sites. Chancellorsville is a Priority I site—the highest designation.

    Chancellorsville Investment Co. is asking to rezone the acreage from rural to planned rural residential to create 249 lots, according to a Jan. 31 letter that Rachel Lowman, the Silver Cos.’ land entitlements administrator, mailed to neighboring landowners.

    Lowman invited those landowners to the community meeting at the church to hear presentation on the development and ask questions.

    Some 44 acres of the property lie within the national park’s congressional designated boundary, land that Congress said ought to be incorporated into it if the National Park Service can acquire the property.

    The Park Service hopes that’s what will happen with the Silver development, said John Hennessy, the park’s chief historian and chief of interpretation.

    “We remain hopeful that the land within the boundary—land in the midst of the area of Jackson’s famous flank attack—will in the end be preserved,” Hennessy said late Friday.

    A Silver Cos. executive did not return Free Lance–Star requests for comment on its project.

    The nonprofit Central Virginia Battlefields Trust, based in Fredericksburg, is trying to save all the land it can in the path of Jackson’s most famed assault, the best-known part of the battle hailed as Robert E. Lee’s greatest victory.

    The nonprofit group has worked for years to preserve land in the Flank Attack area, including directly across Route 3 from the Binns boundary. Its 9-acre Stonewall Brigade Tract, bought in 2012, is the first land on the south side of Plank Road to be preserved from Wilderness Church east to the park’s Chancellorsville Visitor Center.

    “We … understand the significance of the hallowed ground of Jackson’s Flank Attack and what its loss would mean to our community and to our country,” said Mike Stevens, the regional trust’s president. “Its preservation is very important to us and is worth our best efforts to see through to fruition.”

    He indicated that the trust, while cautious, hopes for a win–win deal with the developer.

    “We have always approached proposals such as this with a positive attitude, in a spirit of comity and cooperation, compromise and mutual concern,” Stevens said. “Thus, we stand ready to work as partners with the owners and with others in the local and preservation communities to see to it that everything works out for the best for all concerned.”

    “We have had discussions with the Silver Companies, and are intrigued by the preservation elements we have seen so far,” said Jim Campi, policy director at the Civil War Trust, the nation’s leading battlefield preservation group.

    Spotsylvania Supervisor Timothy J. McLaughlin, whose Chancellor District includes the tract, said he was shown a preliminary plan by Silver and has received emails and phone calls from residents, whom he said have “mixed feelings” about the proposal.

    McLaughlin said he is neutral about the development, as he waits to see what Silver proffers to sweeten its rezoning request.

    “I’d rather get some information first,” he said. “I really don’t know enough about it. I want to hear more from residents and from the Silver Cos.”

    The Binns Tract is not within the area that the county’s land-use plan designates for large-scale residential development.

    Monday’s community meeting will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the gymnasium at St. Michael the Archangel High School, 6301 Campus Drive, off Five Mile Road north of Route 3.

    Public hearings would be scheduled before the county Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors, after a rezoning request is filed.

    Aerial: http://bit.ly/binnslist

    Drew

    "God knows, as many posts as go up on this site everyday, there's plenty of folks who know how to type. Put those keyboards to work on a real issue that's tied to the history that we love and obsess over so much." F.B.

    "...mow hay, cut wood, prepare great food, drink schwitzel, knit, sew, spin wool, rock out to a good pinch of snuff and somehow still find time to go fly a kite." N.B.

  • #2
    Re: Chancellorsville eyed for subdivision

    Battlefield homes plan draws fire from neighbors
    MORE: Read more Spotsylvania County news

    BY CLINT SCHEMMER / THE FREE LANCE–STAR

    It looks like the hard part of the Silver Cos.’ Chancellorsville development will be mending fences with the neighbors.

    That’s the impression left this week after the firm briefed adjacent landowners on the 250-home subdivision that Silver proposes for the 1,152-acre Binns Tract on a portion of one of Spotsylvania’s Civil War battlefields.

    So far, the greatest criticism of the plan is coming from those homeowners, who have grown accustomed to the quiet, wooded expanse next door and don’t relish seeing 3,000-square-foot, $500,000 homes sprout on part of the property.

    Silver plans to protect the most historically significant part of the tract, which figured in Confederate Lt. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s famous flank attack during the Battle of Chancellorsville in 1863.

    The Fredericksburg development company is willing to sell 44 acres to the National Park Service or a private preservation group, perhaps the Civil War Trust or Central Virginia Battlefields Trust. Those acres, on the tract’s southeastern edge, lie within the congressionally designated boundary of the park, land that U.S. lawmakers want protected.

    Silver would put another 375 acres in the tract’s southern half under conservation easement, preventing its development and preserving a wooded buffer next to battlefield land north of State Route 3—property held by the National Park Service, the Civil War Trust, CVBT and private owners.

    In all, 45 percent to some 50 percent of the tract, not including the Park Service-sought acres, would be preserved in historic areas and stream and perimeter buffers, Chris Hornung, Silver vice president of planning & engineering, said Thursday.

    Because the Park Service is dead-set against the entrance road being built into the Binns Tract from Route 3 near its already congested Elys Ford Road intersection, Silver plans to put that access road a third of a mile to the west, just shy of Black Meadow Road, Hornung said in an interview.

    He acknowledged that the tract’s 44-acre park-boundary pocket is of “tremendous historic significance.” Silver has been negotiating with preservationists since 2007, he said, out of respect for their desire not to see the battlefield fragmented.

    Silver bought the Binns Tract in 2007 for $4.25 million from Gallaudet University in the District of Columbia, which was bequeathed the land by local resident Virginia Binns in memory of her sister, who was deaf, he said.

    Now, with the residential real estate market slowly improving, Silver and its partners—incorporated as Chancellorsville Investment Co. LLC—want to recoup their six years of investment, interest and carrying costs, Hornung said.

    The owner is allowed to build only 10 homes on the tract “by right,” because of a 2002 anti-sprawl rule. The rezoning sought by Silver would allow one lot per 3 acres, but requires 40 percent of the property to be set aside. The homes would have wells and septic fields.

    Hornung anticipates that winning approval of the rezoning request and obtaining permits may take 24 months, with build-out of the subdivision taking eight years.

    First, though, Silver is focused on trying to resolve some of the concerns of the neighbors. Many hundreds of people own lots next to or near the Binns Tract.

    About 90 of those landowners turned out Monday night for the firm’s “community meeting” on its project, and none appeared to be in favor. Dozens raised their hands in a show of opposition.

    After an illustrated presentation by Hornung and several consultants, a sometimes-rowdy dialogue ensued. Residents expressed concerns about the development’s impacts on Route 3 traffic, access to their subdivisions, well water, noise, tree cover, wildlife and pollution from runoff.

    Hornung pledged that Silver’s team would meet, individually if possible, with landowners to try to ease fears about buffers and well water.

    Next week, a traffic engineer employed by Silver will start a field survey to investigate what could be done to address neighbors’ worries about their safe access to Route 3, he said Thursday.

    Hornung said Silver will share many of it planning documents with landowners, perhaps via a website.

    Drew

    "God knows, as many posts as go up on this site everyday, there's plenty of folks who know how to type. Put those keyboards to work on a real issue that's tied to the history that we love and obsess over so much." F.B.

    "...mow hay, cut wood, prepare great food, drink schwitzel, knit, sew, spin wool, rock out to a good pinch of snuff and somehow still find time to go fly a kite." N.B.

    Comment

    Working...
    X