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July 31, 2025

Chestertown Spy

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5 News Notes

“Her Helm” Author Kristin Rutkowski to Lead Panel Discussion April 6th at Sultana’s Lawrence Preserve

April 3, 2024 by Sultana Projects

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On Saturday, April 6, the Sultana Education Foundation will host a panel discussion led by author and photographer Kristin Rutkowski, who will discuss her recent book and photography exhibit, “Her Helm.” Rutkowski will be joined by a panel of captains highlighted in “Her Helm,” including Annie Richards, Abigail Robson, Nancy Robson, and the schooner SULTANA’s own Kate Dumhart. Copies of “Her Helm” will be available for purchase and signing at the conclusion of the event.

A portrait photographer, Rutkowski created “Her Helm” to shine a spotlight on the remarkable female boat captains working on Chesapeake Bay. Through her lens, Rutkowski skillfully captures the strength, determination, and grace of these women who navigate the Bay’s waters with expertise while working in a traditionally male-dominated industry.

The “Her Helm” panel discussion begins at 5:00pm at the Harwood Nature Center at Sultana’s Lawrence Wetlands Preserve in Chestertown. There is no parking at the Lawrence Preserve. Guests should park at the public lot at 314 Cannon Street and access the Lawrence Preserve (301 S Mill St) using the Gilchrest Rail Trail, from the rear of the public lot a 4-minute walk. Guests requiring physical accommodations should contact John Mann ([email protected]).

 

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Filed Under: 5 News Notes

Sultana Education Foundation Students Gain Unique Wetlands Access Thanks to New Boardwalk

May 28, 2023 by Sultana Projects

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Prior to the construction of a 400 LF pile-supported timber boardwalk and low-profile timber pond access platforms built by Stevensville’s Dissen & Juhn Company, accessing the Lawrence Wetlands Preserve in Chestertown, Md., an urban nature center owned and operated by the Sultana Education Foundation (SEF), meant sporting boots and gingerly wading through the environmentally sensitive area.

If visitors weren’t comfortable with this “up close and personal” way of exploring or were in a wheelchair or used a walker, it curtailed the potential to truly experience this unique, non-tidal wetlands education resource.

But all that changed thanks to a recently opened pedestrian boardwalk. For the first time visitors can explore parts of the property previously out of reach. “The boardwalk and platforms enable visitors to completely immerse themselves. This location was largely hidden to most people,” says John Mann, Lawrence Wetlands Preserve Manager.

Aerial view of the 400 LF pile-supported timber boardwalk and low-profile timber pond access platforms built by Stevensville’s Dissen & Juhn Company. Photo supplied by Sultana Education Foundation and Dissen & Juhn Company.

The project entailed furnishing and installing a 400’L x 6’ wide ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) timber boardwalk that elevated wetlands enthusiasts a full 3’ off the water. The boardwalk features a full-length timber handrail and several extra-wide viewing areas, or “teaching nodes”, for student groups to observe the diversity of plants and wildlife that inhabit the area including deer, a variety of small mammals, and birds.

The two 32’L x 6’W pond access platforms, which are accessed from the site’s circular trail network, were constructed close to the pond’s surface to enable close-up observation of aquatic plants, and pond creatures such as fish, frogs, turtles, and insects.

The project positioned perfectly in Dissen & Juhn’s wheelhouse. “Over our 50 year history Dissen & Juhn has had the pleasure of working with a variety of communities and organizations to build infrastructure that continues to impact the area,” says Gil Dissen, President of Dissen & Juhn Company. “These types of projects provide an opportunity for us to be good stewards to the environment we work in. The fact that this project is enabling future generations to explore and learn about non-tidal wetlands and swamps and their important roles is particularly gratifying,” Dissen adds.

“There’s always a fine balance when you build infrastructure in nature, but the construction methods Dissen & Juhn used allowed us to offer the outdoor educational experience in the least obtrusive way possible,” he adds.

Not surprising building the boardwalk required the use of heavy equipment in an environmentally sensitive area. To protect the environmentally sensitive soils and plants, Dissen & Juhn Company constructed a temporary service road of inert ground protection mats. These rigid structures made of engineered plastic keep heavy construction equipment from damaging the ecosystem without imparting contaminants into the soil.

“That was one of the things we were looking for in a contractor,” says Mann. “It was reassuring to go with a firm that has experience in working in critical areas. The project worked out better than we even imagined though. In fact calling the final construction a boardwalk sells it short. The aesthetics and attention to detail are amazing. Dissen & Juhn not only met all our requests, but also exceeded our expectations,” he adds.

For Sultana Education Foundation President and Founder Drew McMullen, it was Dissen & Juhn Company’s creative problem solving skills that made them the best contractor for the project. “Dissen & Juhn did a phenomenal job. The boardwalk and platforms are beautiful and will play a huge role in our ability to get kids and groups to areas we couldn’t take them previously,” says McMullen.

Rock Hall Elementary School third graders explore Pond Ecology 101 from the low-profile timber pond access platform. Photo supplied by Sultana Education Foundation and Dissen & Juhn Company.

“It really took a lot of outside of the box thinking to build what we had envisioned, and they weren’t the least bit intimidated. Dissen & Juhn are not only pros, but also everyone was considerate and very communicative. We couldn’t have hoped for a nicer company to work with,” he adds.

The Sultana Education Foundation team is gearing up for summer programming at their new “living classroom.” The boardwalk and platform construction are part of a larger plan, which includes the construction of the 1,200-square-foot Harwood Nature Center, which is expected to begin this summer. The structure is founded on timber piles installed by Dissen & Juhn.

The Nature Center will feature a multi-purpose space for classroom instruction, lectures, social gatherings, and a variety of other hands-on activities. It will also feature a multi-level, covered outdoor deck with bench seating for outdoor use. The anticipated opening of the Harwood Nature Center is 2024.

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Filed Under: 7 Ed Notes Tagged With: Education, local news

Sultana Inks Partnership with National Park Service’s Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail

May 24, 2023 by Sultana Projects

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The Sultana Education Foundation (SEF) announced that it has entered into a cooperative agreement with the National Park Service and the Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail (Trail) to provide students from Maryland’s Eastern Shore with educational programs that connect them with significant regional events from the War of 1812 and the history of the Chesapeake’s waterways. The scope of work for the partnership includes the development of classroom curriculum materials, teacher professional development programs, paddling programs on the Bay’s tidal tributaries, and excursions to several notable sites along the Trail.

Teachers participating in a Sultana Education Foundation Professional Development Program pull a “seine” net to collect specimens on the Sassafras River.

“This program will be a wonderful opportunity for students to discover the hidden historical treasures in their local towns and waterways,” said Brad Hirsh, who is spearheading the partnership for the Sultana Education Foundation. “Through a series of engaging field experiences, students will gain the skills to investigate the rich history found in their own communities.”

“We are excited for this partnership opportunity on the Eastern Shore with the Sultana Education Foundation,” said Superintendent David H. Moore of the Star-Spangled Banner Trail. “This collaboration will provide immersive experiences and educate students on the local history, heritage, and natural environment as it relates to the national Trail story.”

Planning is underway and programming will take place during the 2023-2024 school year.

Teacher’s participating in a Sultana Education Foundation Professional Development Program paddle the Star Spangled National Historic Trail.

Based in Chestertown and serving the entire Chesapeake region, SEF provides hands-on educational opportunities for more than 14,000 students annually that promote stewardship of the Bay’s historic, cultural, and environmental resources. By helping students of all ages develop an appreciation for the Chesapeake Bay, SEF is working to create a community of individuals who are dedicated to preserving this irreplaceable treasure.

The Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail, established by Congress in 2008, tells the story of the War of 1812 in the Chesapeake Bay region. The trail traces American and British troop movements, introduces visitors to communities affected by the war, and highlights the Chesapeake region’s distinctive landscapes and waterways. It connects historic sites in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia and commemorates the events leading up to the Battle for Baltimore, the aftermath of which inspired the U.S. national anthem.

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Filed Under: 7 Ed Notes Tagged With: Education, local news

Sultana’s In-Person Summer Programs for Children Returns!

March 16, 2021 by Sultana Projects

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Campers pull a seine net in the shallows and capture fish, crabs, and more.

The Sultana Education Foundation is excited to announce registration for its 2021 Summer Programs is now open. This year, Sultana will offer a variety of in-person camps for children ages 6-14, that will either have them exploring local waters and land through a day camp or discovering unique and unknown parts of the bay through an overnight program. Filled with exciting and hands-on activities like, games, fishing, paddling, sailing, crafts, beach combing and more, Sultana’s programs have something to offer to every child.

In compliance with all federal, state and local Covid-19 regulations and guidelines, for 2021 Sultana is offering Bay Discovery Camp for children ages 6-7, along with day and overnight paddling camps for children ages 8-14. These programs do not require any prior knowledge or paddling experience and are led by the Foundation’s experienced and professional staff.

All Summer Programs provide supportive environments that foster an appreciation and love of the outdoors while encouraging campers to make new friends, learn new skills, develop confidence in their own abilities and have fun. Now in its 20th season, Sultana is eager to bring children back outdoors and away from their screens with all the Chesapeake region has to offer! If you or know someone interested in these programs, please visit the Sultana Education Foundation’s webpage, https://sultanaeducation.org/summer-programs/, or contact Liza Brocker at [email protected]. Register today because these spots will fill up quickly!

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Filed Under: 7 Ed Notes Tagged With: Education, local news

Tick, Tick, Tick: Sultana Summer Programs Filling Quickly

January 28, 2015 by Sultana Projects

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Sultana Education Foundation Summer Programs Filling Quickly January 28, 2015 – Chestertown, Maryland: The rush is on to register for the Sultana Education Foundation’s Summer Enrichment Programs. Targeted at students ages 7-17, the Foundation’s Summer Programs include three and five-day voyages on the 1768 schooner SULTANA, five-day kayak adventures on the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail, and four and five-day canoe and kayak dayprograms for younger students. New for 2015, the Foundation is offering a five-day program on the SULTANA for High School students that will see the schooner and her crew voyage south to St. Mary’s College off the Potomac River. The Foundation’s Summer 2015 programs are already 50% full, with several individual trips nearing capacity.

“These are incredible experiences, which is why we have students coming back year after year,” said Sultana’s Paddling Director John Mann. “Whether students sail on SULTANA or join one of our paddling expeditions they are getting a truly once-in-alifetime experience that gives them a chance to see incredible parts of the Chesapeake.”

The Sultana Education Foundation has a long-standing commitment of providing generous financial aid for its Summer Programs. Thanks to support from The Indian Point Foundation and The Allen Malcolm Fund, the Foundation’s Partner School Program offers students from select schools in Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s and Talbot counties tuition discounts of up to 40% for five-day residential programs on the schooner SULTANA and five-day kayak trips.

Details about the Sultana Education Foundation’s Summer Programs, including trip dates, tuition, and Partner School Program information can be found on the Foundation’s website, www.sultanaeducation.org.

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Filed Under: Archives

Sail With Sultana During Tea Party Weekend

May 21, 2014 by Sultana Projects

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Gunston Trip, May 21 - 25, 2012 014Visit the historic port of Chestertown, Maryland this weekend to sail on the schooner SULTANA during the “Chestertown Tea Party Festival.” This annual event commemorates Chestertown’s protest of British Tea Taxes in 1774. As local legend has it, citizens of this colonial port boarded the Brigantine Geddes and dumped its cargo into the Chester River. During the festival the schooner SULTANA will be in port for a host of public sails. Tickets are still available for sails on both Saturday and Sunday of the weekend with each outing capturing a unique facet of the festival.

SULTANA’s two-hour public sails are a great way to sail the Chester River onboard a traditional schooner. Passengers are encouraged to help raise the sails, steer using SULTANA’s seven-foot long tiller, and explore the authentically reproduced crew’s quarters below-decks.

Beginning on Saturday, the schooner will depart from the town dock at 10:00am, returning to port at the perfect time for passengers to get up close and personal for the popular reenactment of the storming of the Geddes and the tossing of the tea into the river. Saturday afternoon’s sail at 4:30 offers festivalgoers a great end to a full day, returning to the dock to a quiet and relaxed Chestertown.

On Sunday, the Festival is reinvented with the popular Tea Party Raft Race and vendors in Wilmer Park. Schooner SULTANA will sail at 11:00am and 2:00pm, with the afternoon sail offering a unique view of the hilarity of the raft race.

Advance reservations are recommended for all sails and can be completed online or by contacting the Sultana Education Foundation office at 410-778-5954. Online registration is available until Midnight of the preceding day of the program. If available, tickets may be purchased at the dock before the sail. For more information or reservations, please visit www.sultanaeducation.org.

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Filed Under: Archives

Sultana Creates Programming for Caroline County Elementary Schools

April 21, 2014 by Sultana Projects

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The fourth grade of Caroline County, more than 400 students in all, are visiting Chestertown this April to learn about the Chesapeake Bay while sailing aboard the schooner SULTANA. These students represent the fourth grade classes from all five Elementary Schools in the county, including Denton Elementary, Federalsburg Elementary, Greensboro Elementary, Preston Elementary, and Ridgely Elementary.

This is the 13th year the Sultana Education Foundation has worked with Caroline County’s fourth grade students, making it one of the Foundation’s longest standing partnerships. Amazingly, some of the first group of Caroline students who sailed on SULTANA back in 2002 will begin graduating from college this spring. “It has been great to see these students as they become adults,” said Sultana Education Foundation Vice President Chris Cerino. “The Sultana experience sticks with them and it is clear that we have influenced a generation of kids to be stewards of the environment and students of history.”

In addition to their under-sail program on the schooner SULTANA, and walking tours of Chestertown’s Historic District, the Caroline County students will participate in a follow-up experience this May planting trees at Tuckahoe and Martinak State Parks. Over the past ten years this component of Caroline County’s Sultana program has led to thousands of new trees. Funded in part by the Chesapeake Bay Trust, Caroline County’s Sultana programs are helping to ensure that knowledge and care of the Chesapeake Watershed are an enduring part of the curriculum for the entire county.

RidgleyMap

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Filed Under: Education

Press Release: Sultana Education Foundation Purchases Chestertown Property for Education Center

March 3, 2014 by Sultana Projects

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SEF_022814_200scrossThe Sultana Education Foundation has completed the purchase of a property in Chestertown as the site for a new 9,000 square-foot Education Center. The establishment of Sultana’s Education Center is part of a five-year initiative by the Foundation to double the number of K-12 students it serves and expand its programs for the public.

Located at the corner of Cannon and Cross streets, formerly the site of Kent Printing, Inc., the property features an existing 1859 building and an adjoining open lot. The Foundation is working with the architectural firm of Castro Arts to finalize designs for a new building to be built on the open lot and joined with the existing 19th century structure. The completed complex will include a lecture hall, wet-lab, multi-purpose classrooms, and a dedicated project shop for hands-on instruction and activities.

SEF_022814_edcenter2Sultana’s Education center is being designed as a LEED Platinum facility, the highest certification for environmental sustainability awarded by the U.S. Green Building Council. When complete, the Center will be one of only a handful LEED Platinum buildings in the United States located in a National Landmark Historic District.

Sultana plans to complete the design for its Education Center this spring, place the project out to bid over the summer, and begin construction as early as the fourth quarter of 2014. Construction will be contingent upon the Foundation securing an additional $1 million in funding. To date the Foundation has raised $1.5 million to support the purchase of the property and to fund an operational endowment for the completed Education Center. Sultana intends to have the Center complete and operating in the first half of 2016.

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Filed Under: Education

Sultana’s Partner School Program Reduces Summer Program Tuition by 40% for Eastern Shore Students

February 19, 2014 by Sultana Projects

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SEF_021814_SultanaThanks to generous support from the Indian Point Foundation and The Allen Malcolm Fund, the Sultana Education Foundation has almost $10,000 in scholarship funds available through its Partner School Program for students participating in its 2014 Summer Programs. The Foundation provides a variety of Summer Programs for children ages 7-16, including trips on the schooner SULTANA, and paddling trips on the Chesapeake Bay. Sultana’s Partner School Program provides an automatic 40% tuition discount on the Foundation’s five-day residential programs to students who attend designated schools in Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s, and Talbot Counties. Limited scholarships beyond Sultana’s Partner School discount are available on a case-by-case basis.

Sultana Education Foundation’s Partner School Program was created to ensure that the Eastern Shore students Sultana works with during the school year have an opportunity to continue learning about the Chesapeake over the summer. The Partner School Program discounts the cost of week-long trips on the schooner SULTANA from $750 to $450 and the cost of week-long kayak trips from $450 to $285.

Space and funding for the Partner School Program is limited, and funding is awarded on a first-come first-served basis. Summer Program and Partner School information can be obtained at www.sultanaeducation.org or by contacting Liza Brocker at 410-778-5954 / [email protected].

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Filed Under: Education

Sultana Projects Launches New Summer Programming

March 5, 2013 by Sultana Projects

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Sultana3Sultana Projects, Inc. is pleased to announce that its summer programming for children and young adults now includes a day camp version of its popular Kayak Program. Offered for children ages 9-12, the new program is designed for kids looking to explore the great outdoors. Sultana Projects’ other summer programming includes residential camping on the Schooner Sultana for ages 11-14, residential Kayak Trips for ages 11-14, and non-residential Canoeing Day Camps for ages 7-11.

Much like the Canoe Camps, each day of Kayak Camp begins at Wilmer Park in Chestertown, Maryland, where participants meet the staff to look at maps to determine where that day’s paddle will take place. Campers then board a 15-passenger van towing a mobile kayak rig and travel to a put-in site on a local waterway. Once underway, students spend most of the day learning basic paddling skills, exploring creeks and marshes, pulling seine nets to sample marine life, beachcombing, and swimming. Afternoons are spent fishing with a hook and line, catching critters with hand nets, taking nature hikes, and visiting local country stores to enjoy popsicles. Kayak Camp helps to instill confidence in children who will come away from the week with a complete understanding of basic kayaking skills.

Sultana 2“We’ve had such success with our Summer Programs, that each year we’re left with a sizable waiting list of students.  This year we’re introducing Kayak Camp to help us meet that demand, as well as offer a kind of “in-between” option for those who wanted more independence, but weren’t quite ready for an overnight experience,” said John Mann, Sultana Projects’ Director of Educational Programs.  “Kayaks allow our students to gain confidence while learning to operate his/her own vessel.  We’ll utilize locations in both Kent and Queen Anne’s counties (different from our Canoe Camp sites) that are ideal for paddling, fishing, and swimming.  Through Kayak Camp we will significantly increase the number of young people that join us to enjoy and experience the Chesapeake Bay.”

Currently the Kayak Program has three terms available, July 15-19, August 5-9, and August 12-16. Spaces are limited to 10 campers per week and fill up very quickly. Registration forms and information are available by visiting www.sultanaprojects.org or calling 410.778.5954.

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Filed Under: Archives

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