Subject: WWII Marine, Annie Snyder helped preserve battlefield

Sunday, July 28, 2002 - 12:00 a.m. Pacific

Annie Snyder helped preserve battlefield
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By Dennis McLellan
Los Angeles Times


Annie Snyder, the Virginia farmer and World War II Marine Corps veteran who led major campaigns against the Marriott Corp., the Walt Disney Co. and other developers in her decades-long battle to preserve land near the Manassas Civil War battlefield, has died. She was 80.

Mrs. Snyder, who had diabetes and heart problems, died July 19 of pneumonia at Prince William Hospital in Manassas, Va.

A conservative Republican, Snyder began leading political crusades in Prince William County not long after she and her airline-pilot husband, Pete, moved to their 180-acre farm near Gainesville after World War II.

The farm, on which Snyder raised strawberries and Black Angus cattle, lies just east of Manassas Battlefield National Park, where Union and Confederate troops clashed in two major Civil War battles. (The Battles of Manassas were known to Northerners as the Battles of Bull Run.)

The first of what Mrs. Snyder called her many "battles of Manassas" to preserve the historic ground began in the 1950s when she successfully fought federal highway engineers who wanted to build an interstate through the middle of the battlefield about 30 miles west of Washington, D.C.

In the 1970s, she led a campaign that forced Marriott to abandon its proposal to build a Great America theme park on nearby land.

In the mid-1990s, she and other preservationists — most prominently the National Trust for Historic Places and historians David McCullough and Shelby Foote — worked to thwart Walt Disney plans to build an American-history theme park, housing, shops and hotels on 3,000 acres about four miles from the battlefield. In surrendering, Disney executives acknowledged that the national debate over the $650 million project damaged the company's image.

But the battle that made her an internationally known preservationist came in 1988 when the developer of a "campus-like" 540-acre residential-retail-office complex dropped a bombshell two years after receiving approval by announcing that the centerpiece of the project would be a 1.2 million-square-foot mall.

The site was Stuart's Hill, the ridge where Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee directed his troops to victory at the Second Battle of Manassas in 1862.

Preservationists were aghast.

"Another piece of America's heritage is about to be taken away from us forever," Mrs. Snyder said at the time.

The media jumped on the story, their cameras capturing bulldozers and chain saws as construction crews worked around the clock on the site.

Leading the charge, Mrs. Snyder launched the Save the Battlefield Coalition, which grew to more than 120 history and preservation groups. They gathered more than 80,000 petition signatures and won the backing of several congressional leaders.

Jody Powell, a descendant of nine Manassas veterans and the one-time press secretary for President Carter, joined up as a tactician and spokesman.

During a congressional hearing, Powell made an impassioned speech in which he referred to that "blood-soaked piece of Virginia countryside" where "history is palpable." As he spoke, the network news cameras focused on Mrs. Snyder sitting next to him, tears streaming down her face.

In the end, Congress approved spending $120 million to buy the land and President Reagan signed the legislation, which saved the site from development.

Born Elizabeth Anne Delp in Pittsburgh, Mrs. Snyder was the daughter of a prosperous attorney. She entered Allegheny College at 16 and graduated with a degree in English and history at 19. She was attending law school at the University of Pittsburgh in 1943 when she dropped out to join the Marines, the last branch of the military to accept women.

One of the Marine Corps' first female officers, Mrs. Snyder was one of five women Marines to serve as models for the "Mollie Marine" statue, the nation's first monument to women in uniform. Dedicated Nov. 10, 1943, the statue stands on Canal Street in New Orleans, where Mrs. Snyder first worked as a recruiter before traveling around the nation seeking female recruits.

Mrs. Snyder was working in the quartermaster's office at Quantico Marine Corps Base in Virginia when she met the Marine Corps pilot who would become her husband.

After the war, Mrs. Snyder and her husband moved to their farm, where she raised six children and ran the farm and cattle operation while her husband flew for the airlines. In her spare time, she became Prince William County's most prominent civic activist.

The upstairs study in her home was filled with cabinets and cardboard boxes from her many fights to stop proposed road improvements, bond issues and developments. She also was an early fighter for civil rights and for better schools.

Mrs. Snyder is survived by her husband of 57 years; six children, six grandchildren and a great-grandchild.


Copyright © 2002 The Seattle Times Company

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