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Showing 233 results for savings ...
Charles Robinson
Creating Cuyahoga Valley National Park: 50 Moments That Tell the Story
- Type: Article

In honor of our 50th anniversary year in 2025, Cuyahoga Valley National Park is highlighting 50 key events that help define who and what we are. They showcase the many partners that have come together to preserve open space, create opportunities for recreation, clean up pollution, restore habitats, and save historic resources.
Old South Meeting House
- Type: Place

In the days leading to the American Revolution, citizens gathered here to challenge British policies, protesting the Boston Massacre and the tea tax. Here, at an overflow meeting on December 16, 1773, the Boston Tea Party began. Saved from destruction in 1876, in the first successful historic preservation effort in New England, the building is now an active meeting place, a haven for free speech, and a museum exhibit, “Voices of Protest.”
To Seed or Not to Seed: A 2024 Update on Summit Restoration in Acadia
- Type: Person

John Small freed himself, his wife Susan, and their infant son Phillip during a dangerous escape aboard the Confederate steamer, Planter. As the ship’s engineer, John was instrumental in the success of the mission in which he and pilot Robert Smalls brought a total of sixteen men, women and children out of slavery and into freedom.
Maritime Museum
Helen Katherine Priest
Oral History Interview with Karen A. Hiller
Saving Mori Point
Historic Garden at Grand Portage
- Type: Place

The Grand Portage historic kitchen garden is located inside the palisade behind the kitchen. The North West Company operated its post here from 1778 to 1803. Many vegetable varieties grown in the garden now date back to the 1700s and early 1800s. Vegetable varieties from 200 years ago and earlier are still available today because Native American and early settler families saved seeds from their harvests to plant in the following year. The seeds saved were handed down.
Everyone can benefit from updated lighting in national parks, study finds.
- Type: Article
National Park Service scientists and other researchers recently concluded an enlightening study on outdoor lighting practices in Grand Teton National Park. Turns out, humans aren’t so picky when it comes to lighting. What does this mean for parks? Switching outdoor lighting practices could help park visitors and wildlife, while also saving energy and costs.
- Type: Article

For nearly 20 years, Vince Leggett led the fight to save Elktonia Beach from development through the Blacks of the Chesapeake Foundation. As Joel Dunn reflects, working alongside Vince and their partners to preserve this historic site was one of his proudest achievements. Vince’s passion for the cause was unwavering, and Joel feels honored to have stood by his side in this monumental effort.
Lyddie: Chapter 02 - Kindly Friends
- Type: Article
As Lyddie and Charlie are preparing to leave the farm, they decide to sell their young calf. They hope to eventually save enough money to clear the family’s debt and return home.