Virginia Battlefield Stewardship Fund Is Named
For Deborah Whittier Fitts

(September 2009 Civil War News)

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MIDDLEBURG, VA. — The Land Trust of Virginia Board of Directors has created a new fund, the Deborah Whittier Fitts Battlefield Stewardship Fund, as a means of recognizing and providing financial support for landowners interested in protecting properties where Civil War battles took place.

Grants from the fund will be used to offset some of the expenses that landowners incur associated with putting battlefield acreage into easement.

The Land Trust of Virginia (LTV) holds easements on 25 Civil War battlefield properties covering more than 1,500 acres, including 912 acres of the Battle of Upperville, 517 acres of the Battle of Unison, 70 acres of the Battle of Aldie and 33 acres of the Battle of Middleburg.

The board anticipates that LTV will pursue and accept even more easements on Civil War sites as the Deborah Whittier Fitts Battlefield Preservation Fund becomes more widely known.

A long-time professional journalist who reported for both the Loudoun Times Mirror and the Civil War News, Fitts was considered by many to be the nation’s leading journalist covering Civil War preservation issues. She died July 17, 2008, at age 63.

For almost 20 years she wrote about the struggle to protect Virginia’s hallowed Civil War landscape. She covered many major Civil War preservation battles that made national headlines, including the proposed Disney theme park near Manassas and the successful preservation of Brandy Station.

LTV Board member Childs Burden, a close friend and colleague of Fitts, said: “She has played an equally important role in preserving our Commonwealth’s heritage. Deborah devoted much of her life’s work to writing and educating others about Manassas, Chantilly, Unison, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Brandy Station, Aldie, Middleburg, Upperville, The Wilderness, and Spotsylvania Court House, Mount Zion Church, and many other Civil War sites threatened by development.”

Last year, the Civil War Preservation Trust (CWPT) honored Fitts with its posthumous “Lifetime Achievement Award,” bestowed for journalistic excellence in educating her readers about the fragile status of our nation’s sacred battlefields.

The CWPT Board of Trustees also voted in June 2009 to make a $30,000 grant to inaugurate the Deborah Whittier Fitts Battlefield Stewardship Fund. Another $15,000 has already been pledged, bringing the total fund to $45,000.

Jim Campi, spokesman for CWPT, said, “I speak for everyone on the CWPT staff when I say she has left a lasting legacy of education and preservation for which we are extremely grateful.”

Campi said, “Through her work at the Civil War News, Deborah spread her love of history and her passion for preservation to an army’s worth of readers across the country. Through her admiring readers, Deborah’s impact will continue to be felt for many years to come. Now, with the Deborah Whittier Fitts Battlefield Stewardship Fund, her work will live on through the preserved land she helped to save.”

For information about the stewardship fund, contact LTV Executive Director Don Owen at donlandtrustva@earthlink.net or board member Childs Burden at CBurden338@aol.com.