UNITY -The nonprofit Clifford Charitable Foundation has
transferred the Unity Centre for the Performing Arts and an
outdoor athletic complex known as the Field of Dreams to Unity
College.
College trustees voted Friday to accept the properties, which
are valued collectively at $2.5 million.
"It
will change the complexion of the campus substantially," said
Ken Winters of Holden, a college trustee. "It will allow us to
become highly competitive in the arts."
The
performing arts center is located near the heart of the
downtown, while the college is located on a former farm property
to the west of town. The idea is to encourage more links between
the school and the small, rural town. Unity’s population is
estimated at 2,000.
College officials also applauded the move as a way to expand the
small environmental college’s programming.
The
Clifford Charitable Foundation was established by the late Bert
Clifford, a dairy and chicken farmer who became a
multimillionaire when he sold the local telephone company in
which he had acquired controlling interest. Clifford’s wife,
Coral, and their daughter now manage the foundation.
Before Bert Clifford’s death in 2001, the couple formed the
Unity Foundation, which focuses its giving in the areas of youth
development, education and the environment. The Unity Foundation
assisted with the transfer.
The
Cliffords also have been supporters of Unity College over the
years, helping to sustain it in lean times.
Larry Sterrs, the Unity Foundation’s chairman and CEO, said
Friday that Coral Clifford wanted to secure the long-term future
of the performing arts center and the fields and sought out the
college as steward of the properties.
"The
Clifford family has a long history with Unity College," he said.
Both
the Unity Centre for the Performing Arts - a 250-seat auditorium
with an art gallery and meeting rooms on Depot Street - and the
Field of Dreams, which includes baseball and softball fields,
tennis and basketball courts and access to Lake Winnecook - were
built by Clifford in the late 1990s.
Winters, the trustee, said the college was grateful to Coral
Clifford and the Clifford family.
"This represents an enormous gift to the institution. It’s a
testament to their generosity to the college," he said.
Winters said trustees are excited about the prospects it gives
the college, which this year has a record enrollment of nearly
550 students.
He
said trustees foresee using the center to host its ongoing
distinguished lecturer series, as well as providing meeting
space.
The
field complex will help boost the college’s sports teams,
Winters said, by giving them a place to practice and compete.
"We
have quite an active collegiate athletic program," he said.
The
Field of Dreams boat launching access to Lake Winnecook, also
known as Unity Pond, is a logical tie-in for the environmental
curriculum, which includes outdoor recreation, wildlife biology
and other related courses, Winters said.
The
college has been planning to build a pedestrian bridge over
Sandy Stream to provide a better link with the town, he said,
and the new acquisitions should hasten that effort.
The
town of Unity has first right of refusal on the Field of Dreams,
Sterrs said, but since the Clifford Charitable Foundation is
also providing an endowment to assist with maintenance and
utility costs, the town is not expected to stand in the way of
the transfer. The town will cooperate with the college in
managing the sports complex, which will remain open to public
use.
Clifford reveled in being Unity’s benefactor and used his wealth
as leverage to bring businesses to town such as banks, or to buy
businesses, like the Belfast & Moosehead Lake Railroad, and base
them in town.