Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Milwaukee church to receive grant

Mount Carmel qualifies for preservati­on funds

- Tamia Fowlkes

Milwaukee’s Mount Carmel Missionary Baptist Church is one of 31 historical­ly Black churches selected as a recipient of a Preserving Black Churches grant by the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund.

The $4 million investment seeks to maintain the cultural history of Black churches across the United States by equipping them with funding to address urgent and ongoing threats to facility preservati­on. Each church will receive $50,000 to $200,000.

“We created the Preserving Black Churches program to ensure the historic Black church’s legacy is told and secured. That these cultural assets can continue to foster community resilience and drive meaningful change in our society,” said Brent Leggs, executive director of the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund in a press statement.

Mount Carmel Missionary Baptist Church, located at 1717 W. Meinecke Ave., broke ground on its sanctuary in 1973. Built with the architectu­ral guidance of Alonzo Robinson Jr., Wisconsin’s first registered Black architect, church leaders sought to establish a welcoming space for Milwaukee residents to embark on their faith journey.

For five decades, the church has welcomed Milwaukee parishione­rs for weekly services, bible study and holiday celebratio­ns while serving as a beacon of light for Milwaukeea­ns by providing local residents with community and prayer.

Mount Carmel Missionary Baptist Church is led by Rev. Dr. Hugh Davis Jr. who has served as pastor for over 30 years.

Recognizin­g Black churches’ role as a sacred community landmarks and areas of refuge for poor and vulnerable population­s, the Preserving Black Churches initiative has offered funds to address deferred maintenanc­e, water filtration, mold contaminat­ion and other resources since 2022. Since its establishm­ent, the fund has provided

Mount Carmel Missionary Baptist Church has welcomed Milwaukee parishione­rs for five decades.

more than $9.8 churches.

“Black churches have been at the forefront of meaningful democratic reform since this nation’s

million

in grants

to 80 Black founding. They’re a living testament to the resilience of our ancestors in the face of unimaginab­ly daunting challenges,” said Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., historian and advisor to the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund. “The heart of our spiritual world is the Black church. These places of worship, these sacred cultural centers, must exist for future generation­s to understand who we were as a people.”

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