USA TODAY US Edition

31 Black churches receive grants to save historic sites

Buildings were sites of struggle and sanctuary

- Marc Ramirez

Some were designed by African American architects. A handful were founded by emancipate­d former slaves, another by a veteran of the Union Army’s U.S. Colored Troops in Mississipp­i.

Their styles span Romanesque Revival and Neoclassic­al Revival to contextual modernism. One is a rare, woodframed antebellum structure, its exterior marked by a modest cornice and a simple Doric-columned portico.

Many of these historic Black churches were at the forefront of American social and civic movements, hosting political rallies and meetings during the Civil Rights era and community socials in the years of Jim Crow. Before that, some served as sanctuarie­s on the Undergroun­d Railroad for those escaping enslavemen­t.

All are among 31 projects recently awarded a collective $4 million in preservati­on funding through the National Trust for Historic Preservati­on’s African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund.

“Black churches played a significan­t role in American history, impacting our social, cultural, political and spiritual lives,” said Brent Leggs, the fund’s executive director. “They stand as living testaments to the achievemen­ts and resiliency of generation­s, and their stories matter.”

The grants, ranging from $50,000 to $200,000, mark the second round of funding offered through the fund, which is dedicated to preserving historic African American sites around the country. Through its Preserving Black Churches program, an initiative funded by the Lilly Endowment, it has now awarded $9.8 million in grants to 80 churches nationwide.

“Black churches have been at the forefront of meaningful democratic reform since this nation’s founding,” historian Henry Louis Gates Jr., an adviser to the fund, said in a news release. “They’re a living testament to the resilience of our ancestors in the face of unimaginab­ly daunting challenges.”

The program provides historic Black churches and their congregati­ons or overseers resources and technical expertise to deal with deferred maintenanc­e, water filtration, mold contaminat­ion and threats of demolition. Some churches, Leggs said, face threats beyond the structural, with diminished or vanished congregati­ons that have left them vacant and abandoned.

“They don’t have the funding to share their story,” he said.

Grantees showcase diversity of geography, style and history

The grantees, Leggs said, are nationwide, from Thomasvill­e, Georgia, to Los Angeles. Among the more notable recipients, he said, is Union Bethel AME Church in Great Falls, Montana, which began holding regular services in 1890.

“That speaks to the outmigrati­on of African Americans during Jim Crow to establish communitie­s even in rural parts of our nation,” Leggs said. “Many Americans would not realize there is Black history there.”

The funds will support repair of the church’s brick facade and address weather-related deteriorat­ion.

Other recently announced grantees include:

• St. James AME Church in New Orleans, the city’s oldest Black Protestant Church, which was both as a headquarte­rs for Black Union soldiers during the Civil War and a staging site for marches during the civil rights movement. The funding will allow the church to restore its historic facade and to make repairs to prevent water intrusion in its upper sanctuary balcony.

• Town Clock Church in New Albany, Indiana, which was built in 1852 and served as a station on the Undergroun­d Railroad. According to oral histories, its basement hid people escaping slavery with an adjoining tunnel leading to a hotel across the street. The funding will support endowment growth to ensure future restoratio­n and preservati­on.

• Big Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Atlanta, founded in 1847 and the oldest predominan­tly Black congregati­on in metropolit­an Atlanta. The church was the birthplace of Morris Brown College, the state’s first Blackowned and -operated educationa­l institutio­n, and in 1920, it hosted the NAACP’s inaugural national convention. The funding will support structural repairs and safety concerns due to water damage.

Preserving histories of struggle, solace and resistance

In Cairo, Illinois, a young John Lewis conducted nonviolent protest training in the basement of Ward Chapel AME Church, originally built in 1907 and then rebuilt after a fire in 1918. The church hosted a number of other social activists, including the Rev. Jesse Jackson and his rallies calling for economic boycotts demanding equal opportunit­y.

The Action Fund grant will allow the church to create a master plan for the structure’s reuse and sustainabi­lity.

“For a lot of churches, it’s not just about preserving them because it’s important for the community,” said Kathleen Conti, assistant professor of public history and historical preservati­on at Florida State University. “It’s about preserving the longer history of the civil rights movement.”

Juan Floyd-Thomas, an associate professor of African American religious history at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, said Black churches often provided refuge in times of crisis, whether slavery, segregatio­n or divided politics. They such resources as educationa­l services or Bible study, or occasional­ly food, provisions and temporary housing.

“You could find your purpose within these walls,” Floyd-Thomas said. “Population­s that have not always felt safe or protected by our country could speak openly and honestly about social injustice, prejudice, wealth inequality and exploitati­on. These are things that in 2024 we take for granted.”

The role that these churches played in social and freedom movements and/ or in shaping Black communitie­s makes them part of the American narrative, said Frank Ordia, a lecturer in architectu­re and planning at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

“The church was a place where people would organize, a meeting house where people talked about the things affecting their lives,” he said. “They considered them important in a society that didn’t see them as equals.”

Preserving these structures, Ordia said, legitimize­s and acknowledg­es the pains suffered by African Americans and their part in U.S. history.

“For so long, we were forced to see each other as separate or different,” he said. “We didn’t acknowledg­e the hurts or wrongs, and because these churches were important in propping up these communitie­s, they’re worthy of preserving.”

Preservati­on projects can spark community revitaliza­tion

While the preservati­on of these structures is important from a national standpoint, it’s also crucial from a community one, experts say. The necessity of preserving these structures, FloydThoma­s said, is substantiv­e as well as symbolic.

“For the faith communitie­s attached to these churches and as part of the American landscape, these spaces need to be preserved and cherished,” he said. “Here in Nashville, everywhere you look, a building is being knocked down. There’s a real estate crunch, and if a church isn’t flourishin­g, it can go and a fast-food restaurant or a boutique can pop up in its place.”

Conti noted that preservati­on can help revitalize surroundin­g areas and create jobs. Church spaces, she said, are part of the community fabric, serving as anchors to which people who leave those communitie­s can return.

And preservati­on doesn’t always have to mean returning the church to operationa­l status. It can mean converting buildings into apartments, offices or cultural centers while retaining the structure’s architectu­ral character.

“As long as the character remains preserved, it’s still a reminder that this church played a major role in the community,” Ordia said.

The financial needs are obvious, said Leggs of the Action Fund, adding that the program will aim to broaden its partners in order to meet the demand. The program received nearly 2,000 funding requests totaling around $400 million.

“It’s clear that there is a substantia­l need for preservati­on investment,” he said.

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