2022 African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund Grant Recipients
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/2022-African-American-Cultural-Heritage-Action-Fund-Grant-Recipients/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
On July 19, 2022, the National Trust for Historic Preservation awarded $3 million in grants to 33 sites and organizations through its African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund.The grants will fuel the protection and preservation of historic sites representing African American history, across four categories: building capital, increasing organizational capacity, project planning and development, and programming and education. These often-overlooked places hold aspects of history that must be protected—and used to draw inspiration and wisdom for the benefit of all Americans.
2022 African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund Grant Recipients | National Trust for Historic Preservation (savingplaces.org)
On July 19, 2022, the National Trust for Historic Preservation awarded $3 million in grants to 33 sites and organizations through its African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund.The grants will fuel the protection and preservation of historic sites representing African American history, across four categories: building capital, increasing organizational capacity, project planning and development, and programming and education. These often-overlooked places hold aspects of history that must be protected—and used to draw inspiration and wisdom for the benefit of all Americans.
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/23/arts/design/praise-houses-geechee-gullah.html/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
The Gullah Geechee fight to preserve the tiny structures, a cradle of the Black church, before they're erased by sprawl, climate change and fading memories.
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/African-American-Burial-Grounds-Preservation-Program-Created-in-Omnibus-Bill/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
The Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA) thanks the bipartisan group of lawmakers who secured inclusion of the African American Burial Grounds Preservation Act in the omnibus appropriations bill. This bill is expected to be signed into law by President Biden at the end of this week. Five years in the making, the effort in Congress was led by Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT), Rep. Alma Adams (D-NC), Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), and the late Rep. Donald McEachin (D-VA).
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Developers-Found-Graves-in-the-Virginia-Woods-Authorities-Then-Helped-Erase-the-Historic-Black-Cemetery/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
Nobody working to bring a $346 million Microsoft project to rural Virginia expected to find graves in the woods. But in a cluster of yucca plants and cedar that needed to be cleared, surveyors happened upon a cemetery. The largest of the stones bore the name Stephen Moseley, "died December 3, 1930," in a layer of cracking plaster. Another stone, in near perfect condition and engraved with a branch on the top, belonged to Stephen's toddler son, Fred, who died in 1906.