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History Walk at Stella Niagara Preserve

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Mon, Sep 18th 2017 05:25 pm
On Thursday, Sept. 21, the Western New York Land Conservancy will host a special history walk at the Stella Niagara Preserve in Lewiston. The hike will take place at 5:30 p.m. and will be led by Karen Noonan, a member of the Town of Porter Historical Society and the Youngstown Heritage Tours and Tourism Committee. Noonan is also the co-author of "From the Mouth of the Lower Niagara River: Stories of Four Historic Communities."
Tickets cost $25 and can be purchased at Eventbrite.com (search keywords "Stella Niagara Preserve"). All proceeds will support the work of the Western New York Land Conservancy.
The Stella Niagara Preserve was permanently protected two years ago when the Land Conservancy purchased the property from the Sisters of St. Francis. The property is located on the Niagara County Historic Trail and is part of the Niagara Falls National Heritage Area.
The preserve was an important canoe-landing site for the region's Haudenosaunee, who used the Niagara River for transport, trade and fishing. Stella is the very spot where the British landed in 1813 to capture Fort Niagara. There are still "witness trees" on the property that are old enough to have seen the British come ashore. The small chapel along the river was in the national spotlight in 1955 when it miraculously survived an ice jam and flood that destroyed many other properties along the river. The property is also home to several sgraffito-style murals by Józef Sławiński, a renowned Polish artist.
For more information, contact the Land Conservancy at [email protected] or 716-687-1225.
The Western New York Land Conservancy is a regional, not-for-profit land trust that permanently protects land with significant conservation value in Western New York for future generations. The Land Conservancy envisions a future in which open spaces, working lands, wildlife habitat and scenic beauty are cherished and protected as part of the landscape and character of Western New York. The Land Conservancy is accredited by the Land Trust Accreditation Commission and is one of 1,700 land trusts nationwide, including 90 in New York. Land trusts have protected 40 million acres over the last 20 years. For more information on upcoming events, volunteer opportunities, or the mission of the Western New York Land Conservancy, call 716-687-1225 or visit www.wnylc.org.

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