National Park Service awards $3.27 million to help preserve America’s civil rights history

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National Park Service awards $3.27 million to help preserve America’s civil rights history

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service on April 28. It is reproduced in full below.

WASHINGTON - Ten historic sites associated with the preservation of civil rights history in America will receive a combined $3.27 million in National Park Service History of Equal Rights Grants. These competitive grants support physical preservation work and preservation planning activities, including historic building repair and rehabilitation, architectural planning, and land surveys.

“The History of Equal Rights Grant program helps preserve sites where communities came together to advance civil rights," said NPS Director Chuck Sams. “These funds support our State, Tribal, and local governments and nonprofit partners in telling a more complete story of the road to equal rights for all Americans."

This years’ grants will support the preservation of sites like the LeMoyne House in Washington County, Pennsylvania, center of Dr. LeMoyne’s activity with the Abolition Movement and the Underground Railroad, and Cincinnati’s Potter’s Field, the city’s former indigent burial ground from 1852 to 1981.

History of Equal Rights Award Recipients

State

City

Project

Grantee

Award

Alabama

Birmingham

Preservation and Repair of St Paul United Methodist Church

St. Paul United Methodist Church

$500,000

Alabama

Tuscaloosa

Exterior Rehabilitation of Winsborough Hall

Stillman College

$500,000

Kansas

Kansas City

Physical Preservation of the Vernon School

Vernon Multipurpose Center, Inc.

$185,680

New Jersey

East Orange

Preservation Planning for Hurricane Ida Repairs

Alpha Lodge No. 116 F&AM, A NJ Nonprofit Corporation

$16,235

New York

Farmington

Restoration of 1816 Farmington Quaker Meetinghouse

1816 Farmington Quaker Meetinghouse Museum

$483,727

North Carolina

Red Springs

Flora Macdonald Campus Mortar and Window Preservation

Flora Macdonald Educational Foundation

$500,000

Ohio

Cincinnati

Preservation Planning of Cincinnati Potter's Field

Price Hill Will

$34,694

Ohio

Cleveland

Rehabilitation of the Eleanor B. Rainey Memorial Institute

Cliquepoint Data Foundation

$500,000

Ohio

Wilberforce

Exterior Rehabilitation of Tawawa Chimney Corner

The Bishop Reverdy C. & Emma S. Ransom Foundation, Inc.

$478,414

Pennsylvania

Washington

Exterior Preservation of the LeMoyne House

Washington County Historical Society, Inc.

$75,000

Total

$3,273,750

Congress appropriated funding for the History of Equal Rights Grant Program in FY2021 through the Historic Preservation Fund (HPF). The HPF uses revenue from federal oil and gas leases on the Outer Continental Shelf, assisting with a broad range of preservation projects without expending tax dollars, with the intent to mitigate the loss of a nonrenewable resource to benefit the preservation of other irreplaceable resources.

Established in 1977, the HPF is authorized at $150 million per year through 2023 and has provided more than $2 billion in historic preservation grants to states, Tribes, local governments, and nonprofit organizations. Administered by the NPS, HPF funds may be appropriated by Congress to support a variety of historic preservation projects to help preserve the nation’s cultural resources.

For more information about NPS historic preservation programs and grants, please visit nps.gov/stlpg/

www.nps.gov

About the National Park Service. More than 20,000 National Park Service employees care for America's 423 national parks and work with communities across the nation to help preserve local history and create close-to-home recreational opportunities. Learn more at www.nps.gov, and on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

Tags: historic preservation historic preservation grants historic preservation fund tribal civil rights women lgbtq labor history

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service

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