South
Mountain Partnership
Projects and Programs
Click on the links to the right or below to learn more
about ongoing projects that multiple partners are involved
in.
South Mountain Partnership Strategic Plan

A 2011-2015 Strategic Plan document is available on the Resources page.
Featured Project ~ Tales of Preservation
Look across the eastern half of South Mountain and you
will find a landscape of incredible beauty. Pastoral,
working lands dotted with orchards, and forests abutting
one of the largest contiguous publicly owned forests near
the DC-Baltimore metro area. The lands surrounding
Gettysburg have some of the highest growth pressures in
Pennsylvania, yet there are landowners dotting the
landscape that choose to preserve their property. Read
about those who are choosing to preserve the landscape in
the Tales of Preservation, created by the Land Conservancy of Adams
County and funded through the South Mountain
Mini-Grant program.
The
landowners in this booklet have decided to preserve their
properties and have thus created a legacy for future
generations. The vehicle for preservation is called a
conservation easement, or preservation agreement. An
easement is an agreement between the landowner and land
conservancy which limits certain uses on all or a portion
of a property, while keeping the property in the
landowners’ownership and control.
The vision of the Land Conservancy of Adams County is to
protect the diverse and distinctive natural resources of
Adams County – from the summits of South Mountain to the
cool clear native trout waters of the Narrows, from the
rich rolling hills of the Fruit Belt to the pitch
pine-scrub of the Big Flat Barren, from the
amphibian-filled seeps and wetlands of Marsh Creek to the
bird-breeding southern grasslands, from the richly
cultivated croplands of the east with their interspersed
woodland tracts harboring whitetail deer, from the scenic
mid-nineteenth century agricultural landscapes of the East
Berlin area to the green foal-filled pastures of the
Hanover Shoe Farms, from the prized vistas of High Rock
and Little Round Top to the boulder-strewn hillside at
Devil’s Den.
This is a South Mountain Mini-Grant project. This project
was financed in part by a grant from the Community
Conservation Partnerships Program, Environmental
Stewardship Fund, under the administration of the
Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau
of Recreation and Conservation.
Tales of Preservation
Booklet