Can you put a price
tag on your heritage?
Take, for example, the case of the Old Barracks. The Colony of New Jersey built five military barracks
in 1758; the one in Trenton was at that time the largest building in town. In 1776, the "Old Trenton Barracks" was captured and occupied by British and Hessian soldiers, after they had chased George
Washington clear out of New Jersey. But on
Christmas night, Washington and 2400 patriots crossed the Delaware (ask your
kids just where was he going, their answers will scare you) and marched through
a winter gale to win a miraculous victory right outside the Old Barracks' front
door. This, together with subsequent
victories at Second Trenton and Princeton, is remembered as the "10 crucial
days" which saved the American Revolution.
From 1777-1783, the Old Barracks served as a military
hospital. In that capacity, it was the
site of perhaps the first successful mass smallpox inoculations in
history. After the war, the building
fell into disrepair. During Trenton's
industrialization, the building became an apartment complex and at one point even
had a road punched through it. But then
a group of patriotic local women stepped in. They bought the building in 1902 and fully
restored it by 1916. Along the way, they
donated it to the State (the Statehouse is right next door), with the legal stipulation
that they would run it and the State would fund its maintenance "forever." Today,
the Old Barracks is a National Historic Landmark and a living history center hosting
over 20,000 school children and other visitors every year.
But now the Old Barracks is facing an entirely different
kind of battle. New Jersey Governor
Chris Christie recently announced severe budget cuts for every historic
landmark in the state, including the complete elimination of state funding for
the Old Barracks. This elimination may
result in the Old Barracks closing its doors for the first time since 1914. (You can see more about the Old Barracks
budget cut at www.youtube.com/user/TheOldBarracks)
So what's the cost of saving the place where the United
States was saved? Less than a half
million dollars. That should be easy to
find, right? But the State claims it doesn't have it. Corporations have their
own troubles. Private donations are hard
to come by. And the budgetary clock is
ticking.
Three days before the Battle of Trenton, Thomas Paine wrote,
"These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine
patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he
that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman." Perhaps there are some who will stand by the
Old Barracks in THIS time of crisis. But
if not, a critical piece of America's heritage will be...history.
You can read previous installments of
the quick Sliver in our online archive.
Just go here: http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs015/1103023679528/archive/1103033975377.html
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