Portsmouth Herald

Lafcadio’s Woods: Fuller family gifts 35 acres to York Land Trust

- Max Sullivan

YORK, Maine — Lafcadio Cortesi was a world-renowned conservati­onist who helped protect forests as far as Canada, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea.

The elders of the Fuller family, his aunts and uncles, felt it was fitting to commemorat­e his unexpected death last year with a donation of 35 acres to the York Land Trust for conservati­on.

“He was a mover and a shaker,” said Martha Fuller Clark, his aunt, a York native and a longtime New Hampshire state senator from Portsmouth. “He was saving forests all over the world.”

Lafcadio’s Woods Preserve is now open on Bartlett Road with a new sign at its trail’s entrance sharing details of the history of Cortesi’s life. The York Land Trust held its grand opening celebratio­n of the woods Oct. 22. Now the oak-pine forest is open with trails for hiking, snowshoein­g, cross-country skiing, nature study, mountain biking, dog walking and hunting.

The Fuller family had already been gifting its property for conservati­on purposes for the last 30 years when Cortesi died suddenly at age 60.

Emily Hawkins, Clark’s sister and Cortesi’s other aunt, said it seemed natural to donate a portion of the family’s conservati­on land to the York Land Trust in his name given his work combatting global deforestat­ion.

“The family could all come together around this idea,” Hawkins said. “That this 35 acres should be preserved in his memory.”

Lafcadio Cortesi: A life dedicated to saving the world’s forests

Cortesi was born in Portsmouth in 1961 and named for the writer Lafcadio Hearn. His obituary states that his name “proved prophetic,” as he would travel the world much like the author.

Cortesi traveled early in life, at age 16 flying alone to Kathmandu and joining a team studying temple monkeys, his obituary states. After college, he raised a family while working in conservati­on in the wider Pacific.

He started living in Indonesia with volunteers in 1985 working on community developmen­t. Two years later, he was joining the network of environmen­talists known as Greenpeace. He led efforts to support local communitie­s in their struggle to end deforestat­ion in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.

His work in the Pacific also included defending fisheries and coral reefs, and he eventually became director of Asia programs at the Rainforest Action Network, according to his obituary. It said he also had an important influence on companies that derived raw materials from Canadian forests.

“He was quite a remarkable man,” Hawkins said. Clark said she knew Cortesi well and would see him when he visited from where he was living in Berkeley, California.

She said it was shocking to learn of his death in March of last year.

“He just died,” she said. “He just laid down one day, one night, went to sleep and didn’t wake up.”

Standing at the entrance of the trail that leads into the forest dedicated to Cortesi, Clark looked at the sign with his picture and a brief descriptio­n of his life’s work.

“Connecting communitie­s through the power of nature was both his livelihood and his calling,” the sign reads. “These woods are a memorial to his hard work and a tribute to his many achievemen­ts around the world.”

Fuller family dedicated to conservati­on

The 35 acres donated to the York Land Trust in Cortesi’s name made up the last of the land the Fullers had set aside for conservati­on. They started with 330 acres that accrued over time going back to 1899 when Owen Aldis bought 64 acres along the York River. He sold 10 acres, and then kept the rest, according to a history provided by Hawkins. He later purchased Rams Head Farm as well, adding up to a total of 130 acres of land.

The swath of land changed hands over the years until it was bought in 1944 by Henry and Marion T. Fuller, who later became Maine legislator and environmen­talist Marion Fuller Brown. From there, the family added land until they reached a total of 330 acres.

Hawkins said her family began doing conservati­on work with their hundreds of acres in the 1990s. When Brown died in 2011, Hawkins, her daughter, said it was her wish that the west side of Bartlett Road be conserved. That led to the Fuller Forest Preserve being establishe­d.

When the family decided the last 35 acres across the street from the Fuller Forest Preserve should go to Cortesi, Clark said it made sense to work with the York Land Trust. Her mother, also Brown, was one of the founders of the trust, she said, so it was “the obvious organizati­on” to go with.

Hawkins said the donation marks the “capstone” for her family’s years of work preserving acres of natural forest for years to come.

“It’s important to me,” Hawkins said. “We have conserved and preserved a 19th-century landscape.”

 ?? MAX SULLIVAN ?? The Fuller family has donated 35 acres to the York Land Trust in honor of the late Lafcadio Cortesi, an accomplish­ed conservati­onist. His aunt Martha Fuller Clark, a retired state senator from Portsmouth, stands by a sign marking the land and commemorat­ing Cortesi.
MAX SULLIVAN The Fuller family has donated 35 acres to the York Land Trust in honor of the late Lafcadio Cortesi, an accomplish­ed conservati­onist. His aunt Martha Fuller Clark, a retired state senator from Portsmouth, stands by a sign marking the land and commemorat­ing Cortesi.

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