The Trust for Public Land and the City Park Improvement Association joined forces to restore and enhance the fifty acre Big Lake area, near the entrance of New Orleans' City Park.
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In October 2011, the Cuyahoga Valley National Park—the tenth most visited in the United States—grew by 233 acres thanks to the efforts of The Trust for Public Land, the National Park Service and Blossom Music Center.
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One of Georgia's premiere stopping spots for migratory ducks and other waterfowl, the refuge is also home to bald eagles, black bears, and alligators. And as a planned link in Macon's Ocmulgee Heritage Greenway, the refuge will increasingly welcome human visitors.
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For over 80 years, the Fenn family owned more than 1,100 acres spanning 3.5 miles of shoreline along Branch Lake, the singular source of drinking water for Ellsworth, eastern Maine's largest coastal city.
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Purchased in a TPL-assisted transaction by the National Park Service, the school was developed as an interpretive center on the struggle for civil rights.
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TPL led the effort to transform a 27-acre industrial site located in St. Paul's East Side into a park and nature sanctuary in honor of late Congressman Bruce Vento.
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TPL helped establish the Brushwood Community Forest in the Upper Connecticut River Valley, connecting the Fairlee and Bradford Municipal Forests and offering opportunities for sustainable timber harvesting, recreation, and providing significant wildlife habitat and watershed protection.
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We helped protect this 325-acre property is the centerpiece of the Mashpee National Wildlife Refuge on Waquoit Bay.
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TPL purchased Long Island in Minnesota's Burntside Lake, at the headwaters of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and across from Listening Point, which inspired conservation writer Sigurd Olson.
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In April 2010, following a year-long fundraising campaign, TPL protected Cahuenga Peak, the 138 acres behind the world famous Hollywood Sign.
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