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Partnerships
The National Park Service, the Nature Conservancy,
and Kansas Park Trust cooperatively manage the Tallgrass Prairie
National Preserve. The majority of the land will still remain under
private ownership, with The Nature Conservancy as the current landowner.
Below is a short statement from each of the three partners explaining
their own individual role in this new partnership.
The National Park Service preserves unimpaired
the natural and cultural resources and values of the National Park
System for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and
future generations. The National Park System comprises 388 areas
covering more than 84 million acres throughout the United States
and its territories.
The Nature Conservancy is a private nonprofit organization
dedicated to preserving the plants, animals, and natural communities
that represent the diversity of life on Earth by protecting the
lands and waters they need to survive. The Conservancy and its million
members have been responsible for the protection of 15 million acres
of ecologically significant land in the United States and an additional
117 million acres worldwide. The majority of Tallgrass Prairie National
Preserve is owned by The Nature Conservancy and operated by the
National Park Service. This arrangement makes the Tallgrass Prairie
National Preserve the only privately owned national park unit in
the country. For more information visit www.nature.org/kansas.
The Kansas Park Trust, through an agreement with the National
Park Service, and its cooperation with The Nature Conservancy, is
dedicated to the mission of enhancing visitor experiences at the
preserve by assisting in private fundraising efforts, encouraging
Congressional support for implementation of preserve management
plans, conducting special public events, and operating an on-site
bookstore and gift shop.
Originally the National Park Trust purchased the 10,894
acre remnant of tallgrass prairie in June 1994 for future management
as a unit of the National Park System. The legislation that created
the preserve states that only 180 acres of the now 10, 861 acre
preserve may ever be owned by the National Park Service (federal
government). The remainder will continue to be privately owned.
This unique partnership is "a model for the nation."
Currently 32.5 acres have been donated to the National
Park Service by the National Park Trust in a Land
Transfer Ceremony held on the front lawn of the ranch house
on September 20, 2002. The 32.5 acres consist of the core buildings
of the Spring Hill Ranch, which includes the main ranch house, barn,
outbuildings, and also the one-room schoolhouse. This is the first
of future land donations to the NPS.

The
National Parks and Conservation Association (NPCA), created to protect
national parklands, founded the National Park Trust (NPT) in 1983.
While NPT maintains a close association with the NPCA, today NPT
is an independent private nonprofit 501 (c) 3 land conservancy.
It is the only conservancy exclusively dedicated to preserving and
protecting America's national parks.
Not all national park lands are preserved and protected.
In fact, more than 2 million acres are privately owned. The National
Park Trust steps in and works with the National Park Service (NPS)
to purchase lands from willing sellers in order to protect the integrity
of our nation's natural, historic, and cultural resources. The NPT
is the only land conservancy dedicated exclusively to preserving
and protecting America's national parks.
The NPT's mission is to assist the NPS to:
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Secure from willing sellers privately held property
within authorized national park boundaries. |
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Secure privately held property adjacent to or
in the immediate vicinity of national park units from willing
sellers. |
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Acquire land to create new national parks. |
To accomplish this, NPT purchases or helps others to purchase land
for eventual sale or donation to the National Park Service. The
NPT also arranges conservation easements and make loans to preservation
organizations such as the Trust for Public Lands, and the Civil
War Trust, seeking to enter into partnerships to protect lands;
and they accept donations of lands associated with the National
Park System
To date, NPT has scrutinized over 100 potential projects. Thus
far, they have protected nearly 20,000 acres of land for the benefit
of future generations of national park visitors. NPT has been and
will continue to be at the very heart of our nation's effort to
preserve, protect, and enhance our national parks. The NPT seeks
to assure the protection of all NPS lands available from willing
sellers for "America's greatest invention", the national
parks.

Park Education
Resource Center/Bookstore
The Park Education Resource Center operated by the Kansas
Park Trust offers books for children and adults, prints, postcards,
educational and hand-crafted gifts, natural objects, and culturally
related items. The bookstore is open year-round from 9:00 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. everyday of the year except Thanksgiving, Christmas, and
New Years Day.
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Park Education Resource Center and Bookstore
Call 620-273-8139 for more information.
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For
more information go to:
www.parktrust.org
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