1985: Patrick Noonan founds The Conservation Fund as the first environmental nonprofit dedicated to both environmental preservation and economic development.
We complete our first project: 1,245 acres in Vermont’s Lake Champlain region.
1987: Our Revolving Fund launches. Every dollar invested in the Revolving Fund goes directly to
protecting land, over and over. By recycling these dollars, we have saved lands valued at more than
$4.7 billion.
We start the Freshwater Institute, known for sustainable fish farming.
1990
: Our Civil War Battlefield Campaign begins, ultimately protecting more than 10,000 acres at
83 battlefields.
1991: Our Resourceful Communities Program emerges to preserve North Carolina’s rural landscape,
lift people out of poverty and celebrate the state’s unique culture. R
CP has trained more than
5,000 community leaders and created over 300 jobs.
1993
: Our Land Trust Loan Program launches, providing key financing to local land trusts. So far, we’ve provided 152 loans in 30 states protecting nearly 100,000 acres.
1995:
We protect 210,000 acres of critical habitat in Alaska’s Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge, marking 1 million acres saved!
1997:
We protect a site along Maryland’s Antietam Creek that witnessed one of the Civil War’s bloodiest battles, marking the end of General Robert E. Lee’s invasion of the North and moving President Lincoln to issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation.
1998: Our Conservation Leadership Network begins bringing together diverse professionals
to forge conservation solutions. We have reached more than 5,000 participants across the country
1999
: We protect 296,000 acres in New York, Vermont and New Hampshire—America’s biggest multistate forest conservation deal.
2001: Larry Selzer becomes president and CEO of The Conservation Fund.
Our Natural Capital Investment Fund launches to provide financing for rural businesses that use natural resources sustainably. NCIF has invested more than $5 million in portfolio companies, leveraging $30 million in additional financing and creating more than 350 jobs in economically stressed communities.
2005: 5 million acres protected!
We complete America’s biggest conservation project—851,000 acres on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon.
Our Go Zero program launches to help people and businesses offset climate change by planting trees.
Go Zero has now planted more than 1 million trees across the United States.
With a team of partners, we protect 327,000 acres of working forestland in Maine, connecting
more than 1 million acres of contiguous wilderness.
2007: Our National Forum on Children and Nature launches to reconnect kids with the outdoors. Today, our commitment continues with our support of Outdoor Nation.
2008: We complete a decade-long effort to protect nearly 13,000 acres of wetlands on the Alaska Peninsula that cover more than 100 miles of Pacific Ocean coastline and over 200 miles of fish streams and rivers that teem with five species of Pacific salmon.
Our Pineywoods Mitigation Bank—at 22,000 acres, one of the nation’s largest—launches in East Texas to restore native bottomland hardwood forest and provide a wildlife corridor.
2009: Our Land Trust Loan Program helps protect a critical stretch of shoreline in the Saugatuck
Harbor Natural Area on Lake Michigan—saving wetlands, dunelands and safe havens for
migratory birds and other threatened species.
2010: The Fund turns 25, with nearly 7 million acres protected in all 50 states.