Delaware Highlands Conservancy and Eagle Institute Come Together in the Perfect Partnership
On February 10, the Delaware Highlands Conservancy, the region’s foremost organization for the protection of healthy lands and waters, and the Eagle Institute, the Upper Delaware River Watershed’s premier organization for the protection of eagles and the stewardship of their habitat, announced their merger. Going forward, the Eagle Institute will be a Project of the Delaware Highlands Conservancy.

The partnership is a wonderful development for eagle lovers and for all the residents of the Upper Delaware River Region for whom clean waters, healthy lands, and thriving wildlife are vital to quality of life. Since its founding the Eagle Institute, located in the Upper Delaware Scenic and Recreational River, has hosted guided eagle tours and provided education about the eagle and where and how it lives. As a Project of the Delaware Highlands Conservancy, the Eagle Institute will increase its capacity for engaging visitors and residents with our iconic national bird and the beautiful forests and rivers that are home to it.
“I founded the Eagle Institute to support the return of the endangered eagle to the Upper Delaware River region,” states founder and executive director, Lori McKean, “Nearly two decades ago, I dreamed things would turn out just as they have: The eagles are back in the Watershed and thriving, the Eagle Institute is supported and run by incredible volunteers, members, and contributors who are passionately concerned about the protection of our national symbol and its habitat, and we have educated nearly 50,000 people over the years about the critical role this region’s healthy lands and clean water play in the survival of this magnificent bird. We are ready to open the next chapter in our success story.”
Conservancy Executive Director, Sue Currier, is excited about the possibilities: “Coming together with the Eagle Institute means we will be stronger. In these days of doing more with less, leveraging the resources of both
organizations means those resources will go further. We will combine the energy of dedicated members, volunteers, and supporters to protect more eagle habitat than ever before. We will reach more and more people with the message that the eagle thrives when the lands and waters where it lives are healthy and protected.”
“We know what it feels like to watch an eagle fly freely; to see it dive for its food or perch majestically against a winter blue sky” adds Lori McKean, “We all realize that if the eagles are thriving, the lands and waters where they live are healthy for humans, too. Eagles are good for our hearts, our spirits; their healthy habitat is good for our bodies. We need to make sure the eagles and their habitat are protected now and into the future.”
This is a great move for the Conservancy,” affirms Conservancy founder, Barbara Yeaman, “the Eagle Institute’s passion for protecting eagles together with the Conservancy’s passion for protecting the lands and waters where eagles live truly does make the perfect partnership.”
The board and staff of the Conservancy are incredibly enthusiastic about the unlimited potential of this new partnership to protect the eagle and its habitat and to build support for the Conservancy’s conservation mission in the region.
Delaware Highlands Conservancy - Landowner Stories
Bringing Family Values to Land Conservation
When I first met Eva Havas and her daughter Laurel last September, Eva was about to protect her parents’ treasured weekend retreat in Wayne County, PA with a conservation easement. By the end of 2009, Eva had brought that goal to fruition. But the story starts long before that.
In 1996, Eva’s parents Drs. Peter and Frances Havas, contacted Barbara Yeaman, founder of the recently formed Delaware Highlands Conservancy, to ask about protecting the scenic property that they’d purchased thirty years before. But their story goes back farther yet, to Europe during World War II. Political refugees from Austria, Peter and Frances first met at an anti-Nazi demonstration in 1938.
Read more...Upcoming Events
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Sat, Jun. 02, 2012 – 9:00am
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Fri, Aug. 03, 2012 – 7:00pm
Monarch Butterfly Program with Ed Wesely
Sat, Aug. 18, 2012 – 10:00am
Latest News
New Opportunities in New York
On Monday, April 23, the Delaware Highlands Conservancy hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony to formally open our new New York office on 120 Segar Road in Kauneonga Lake, New York.
Read more...Delaware Highlands Conservancy Hosts Successful Conservation Subdivision and Smart Growth Design Workshop
The Delaware Highlands Conservancy, in partnership with Sullivan Renaissance and Sullivan County Catskills, hosted a successful "Conservation Subdivision and Smart Growth Design" land-use training workshop on Monday, April 30th. Attendees received a great deal of interesting and helpful information to use in their planning efforts in their own communities.
Read more...Conservancy Natural Gas Guidelines
Click here for a copy of the Delaware Highlands Conservancy's Natural Gas Guidelines.
Click here to read the Press Release issued by the Conservancy, and for links to some of the local news coverage we received.


