Metcalf House, Lewes (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

24 buildings share $140K in Del. Preservation Fund grants

Ken MammarellaCulture, Headlines

Metcalf House, Lewes (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Metcalf House, Lewes (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Two dozen historic structures – 15 houses, four churches, three commercial buildings, a school and a lighthouse – have received grants from the Delaware Preservation Fund.

Several are open to the public as museums, including Rockwood Park and Mansion, Barratt’s Chapel, the Lydia B. Cannon Museum and the Parson Thorne Mansion.

The grants totaled $140,000 – a bigger pot than usual over the fund’s 22-year history – thanks to a $100,000 contribution from the Delaware Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs.

The grants ranged from $2,450 to $10,000. The Delaware Preservation Fund is a subsidiary of Preservation Delaware.

Even small grants like that can make a large and timely impact. The Buttonwood Mansion in New Castle, for instance, received $10,000 to replace its leaky roof. “The mansion was seriously threatened,” said Michael Emmons Jr., a program manager and a staffer of the Center for Historic Architecture and Design at the University of Delaware. “The grant allowed the owners to replace the roof immediately and bought it some critical time for full preservation work to be planned and executed.”

While the Delaware Preservation Fund has historically supported bricks-and-mortar projects, it has begun considering applications for preservation planning project. “Often times, an engineering assessment or a nomination to the National Register of Historic Places is a crucial first step toward saving a historic building,” said Cate Morrisey, also a center staff member.

The fund received 30 qualified applications for the 2023 grant program.

The fund just opened applications for the 2024 cycle, and they’re due Feb. 1 at the Preservation Delaware webpage for the fund.

2023 Delaware Preservation Fund grants

St. John the Baptist Church, Newark (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

St. John the Baptist Church, Newark (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

New Castle County

1005 N. Broom St., Wilmington, $5,000

1110 N. Broom St., Wilmington, $5,000

816 N. Van Buren Stl. Wilmington, $4,050

Archmere Academy (“The Patio”), Claymont, $10,000

Buttonwood Mansion, New Castle (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Buttonwood Mansion, New Castle (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Buttonwood Mansion, New Castle, $10,000

Church of the Holy City, Wilmington, $4,000

Dairy Palace, near New Castle, $10,000

Polk House, Odessa, $5,000

Rockwood (wash house), near Wilmington, $2,450

St. John the Baptist Church, Newark, $5,000

Parson Thorne Mansion, Milford (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Parson Thorne Mansion, Milford (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Kent County

Barratt’s Chapel, Frederica, $4,000

Parson Thorne Mansion, Milford, $6,300

Smyrna Sporting Goods, Smyrna (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Smyrna Sporting Goods, Smyrna (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Smyrna Sporting Goods, Smyrna, $10,000

Harbor of Refuge Breakwater Lighthouse, Lewes (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Harbor of Refuge Breakwater Lighthouse, Lewes (Courtesy of the Delaware Preservation Fund)

Sussex County

514 Railroad Ave., Lewes, $5,000

Cannonball House, Lewes, $6,500

Captain William Russell House, Milton, $5,000

Georgetown Icehouse, Georgetown, $6,500

Harbor of Refuge Breakwater Lighthouse, Lewes, $5,000

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Hitchens House, Laurel, $5,000

Lydia B. Cannon Museum, Milton, $6,250

Magee Farms, Selbyville, $5,000

Metcalf House, Lewes, $5,000

Prospect AME Church, Georgetown, $4,950

Rosemont, Laurel, $10,000

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