Search Criteria

 






Key Word Search by:









Organization Type


State or Jurisdiction


Congressional District





help

Division or Office
help

Grants to:


2019


2022


  • Special Searches




    Product Type


    Media Coverage Type








 


Search Results

Grant program: Historic Places: Implementation
Date range: 2019-2022

Permalink for this Search

1
Page size:
 3 items in 1 pages
Award Number Grant ProgramAward RecipientProject TitleAward PeriodApproved Award Total
1
Page size:
 3 items in 1 pages
BR-264610-19Public Programs: Historic Places: ImplementationUniversity of South CarolinaFree and Equal: The Promise of Reconstruction in America4/1/2019 - 5/31/2022$280,000.00Spencer Platt   University of South CarolinaColumbiaSC29208-0001USA2019Public HistoryHistoric Places: ImplementationPublic Programs28000002800000

Implementation of a tour through Beaufort County, South Carolina, exploring the story of Reconstruction using a mobile app, website, and information kiosk.

A public history project that informs, interprets, and facilitates the understanding of reconstruction history in Beaufort, South Carolina as well as nationally.

BR-271425-20Public Programs: Historic Places: ImplementationOld Sturbridge, Inc.Foundations of Interpretation9/1/2020 - 12/31/2023$250,000.00Rhys Simmons   Old Sturbridge, Inc.SturbridgeMA01566-1138USA2020Public HistoryHistoric Places: ImplementationPublic Programs25000002500000

Implementation of a new interpretive plan at Old Sturbridge Village expanding tours to reflect the diversity of early New England.

Foundations of Interpretation aims to address key components of Old Sturbridge Village’s new Interpretation and Education Plan as part of a broader, museum-wide commitment to relevancy and visitor engagement. The plan outlines the initiatives that Old Sturbridge Village will undertake to create more impactful visitor experiences, connect with a broader audience, and better reflect the diversity of New England both past and present. The $500,000 being requested from NEH for Foundations of Interpretation will support an expanded staff training program, updated interpretive guides for all staffed exhibits, the development of purposeful learning and social-emotional targets, and improved interpretive signage, as well as a two-year Position in the Public Humanities.

BR-285415-22Public Programs: Historic Places: ImplementationLower East Side Tenement Museum, Inc.The Joseph and Rachel Moore Tenement Home5/1/2022 - 4/30/2024$400,000.00David Favaloro   Lower East Side Tenement Museum, Inc.New YorkNY10002-3102USA2022U.S. HistoryHistoric Places: ImplementationPublic Programs40000004000000

Implementation of a sixty-minute guided tour and interactive media exploring the lives of African Americans and Irish immigrants in nineteenth-century New York City.

The Tenement Museum seeks a $400,000 Public Humanities Projects implementation grant to complete permanent exhibit fabrication and tour development for the “Joseph and Rachel Moore Tenement Home.” The new permanent exhibit takes the form of a recreated apartment in the Museum’s 97 Orchard Street tenement. Today a National Historic Landmark, the building was home to nearly 7,000 people from 15 different nations between 1863 and 1935. Now the Museum will recreate the tenement home of Joseph and Rachel Moore, a Black family who lived in Lower Manhattan during the 1860s. The exhibit will trace Joseph’s history from his free Black community of Belvidere, New Jersey, through his family's migration to New York City for economic opportunity, and the community they built in their neighborhoods and workplaces. It will also employ interactive digital storytelling to examine the era’s Black press, contextualizing both the Moores’ story and the Museum’s research.