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"The
Next Ten Years"
An Amendment to the Cultural Heritage and Land
Management Plan
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In
1790 Samuel Slater began production at the first water powered
cotton-textile factory on the Blackstone River in what is today
the City of Pawtucket. After almost two centuries of obscurity,
the story of the Birth of the American Industrial Revolution,
of America's "hardest working river" that powered
that revolution, and the communities of the Blackstone Valley
where the revolution took root and spread across the nation,
is being told. |
Spurred by local
recognition of the story's importance, and the value of preserving
and interpreting the Valley's historic and natural resources, Congress
created the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor as
an ambitious experiment in 1986. Ten years later, the experiment
was declared a success when Congress voted to extend the life of
the Corridor and its governing Commission for a second 10 years
and expand the Corridor from 20 to 24 communities.
"The Next Ten Years" is a supplement to the Commission's
Cultural Heritage and Land Management Plan: it reaffirms basic goals
and commitments of the last 10 years and calls attention to important
work which remains undone.
10
Year plan Executive Summary
(PDF: 65KB / 2 pages)
10
Year plan background
(PDF: 129KB / 6 pages)
The
Next 10 Years
(PDF: 123KB / 6 pages)
Experiencing
the Heritage Corridor
(PDF: 179KB / 10 pages)
Strategic
Development
(PDF: 128KB / 9pages)
Appendix
A / Historic & Environmental Compliance
(PDF: 18KB / 1 page)
Appendix
B / Natural Resources Inventory and Assessment
(PDF: 40KB / 5 pages)
Appendix
C / Public Comments from the New Communities' Welcome Workshops
(PDF: 32KB / 5pages)

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