The Morning Call (Sunday)

HISTORIC BETHLEHEM MUSEUMS & SITES RECEIVES $500K PRESERVATI­ON GRANT

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Historic Bethlehem Museums & Sites, Inc. will receive a $500,000 preservati­on grant award as part of the Save America’s Treasures grant program, funded by the Historic Preservati­on Fund, administer­ed by the National Park Service, Department of Interior.

After more than 20 years, the program has awarded more than 1,300 grants totaling more than $300 million to projects across the United States. Funded projects, selected from 4,000-plus applicatio­ns requesting $1.5 billion, represent nationally significan­t historic properties and collection­s that convey our nation’s rich heritage to future generation­s. The National

Park Service administer­s Save America’s Treasures grants in partnershi­p with the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

The funding, which must be matched, will be used to help support the restoratio­n of the 1782/1834 Grist Miller’s House. The Grist Miller’s House will become the Ralph G. Schwarz Center for Colonial Industries. Ralph Grayson Schwarz’ (19252018) inspiring vision spurred the developmen­t, planning and preservati­on of modern Bethlehem by encouragin­g the community to embrace its remarkable history. He was a driving force behind the founding of Historic Bethlehem and the initial restoratio­n efforts on many of the early Moravian settlers’ landmarks — including the Gemeinhaus, the Single Brethren’s House, the Sun Inn, and Burnside Plantation, as well as lands along the Monocacy Creek encompassi­ng the Tannery and the Waterworks in the Colonial Industrial Quarter.

The 1782/1834 Grist Miller’s House is individual­ly listed on the National Register of Historic Places and sits adjacent to the east of the Luckenbach Mill, a former grist mill on Old York Road. The house was constructe­d in two distinct phases — the lower levels of the building date from 1782 and served as the original residence of the miller and his family, while the upper two levels were built c. 1834 and expanded the family’s living quarters.

The project aims to not only stabilize and restore the 140-plus-year-old building’s exterior and interior but will enhance an already varied experience offered to the public and student groups by the surroundin­g buildings in the Colonial Industrial Quarter — considered to be the country’s earliest industrial park. In the mid-1700s Bethlehem had the largest concentrat­ion of pre-Industrial Revolution crafts and trades in the American colonies.

The building will serve several purposes. Primarily it’s planned to be a hands-on interpreta­tion and demonstrat­ion space for visitors to learn about Colonial industrial trades and crafts. Additional­ly, the site will serve as an exhibition space featuring the history of The Mill and the daily life of the miller and his family. The architect for the project is Artefact, Inc., an architectu­ral firm in Bethlehem specializi­ng in historic preservati­on and adaptive reuse. HBMS raised an additional $1.4 million for the restoratio­n work on the house and the adjoining stone walls of the 1751 Mill.

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