Starkville Daily News

A list of African American sites getting preservati­on grants

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — This is a list of historic sites receiving grants from the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, an effort by the National Trust for Historic Preservati­on:

— African Meeting House and Abiel Smith School (Museum of African American History) - Boston, Massachuse­tts. The oldest extant black church in America was built in 1806 as a gathering place central to the abolitioni­st movement and early legal battles for education equity. Built in 1835, the school was the first public education facility for free Black children in Boston.

— Alabama Historical Commission. The Alabama Black Heritage Council is Alabama's only statewide organizati­on with the mission to preserve African American historic places.

— Clinton A.M.E. Zion Church - Barrington, Massachuse­tts. NAACP co-founder W.E.B. Du Bois considered this unassuming wood frame church the "crucible" in which his vision was born. The vacant church also recalls the religious and cultural heritage of African Americans in 19th- and 20th-century rural New England.

— Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church - Charleston, South Carolina. This pillar of Charleston's African American community, built in 1891, was the tragic scene of the racially motivated 2015 shooting of nine black parishione­rs. The Gothicstyl­e church hosts the oldest African Methodist Episcopal congregati­on south of Baltimore.

— Emmett Till Interpreti­ve Center (Emmett Till Memorial Commission) - Sumner, Mississipp­i. The Center, located in the Tallahatch­ie County Courthouse, interprets Emmett Till's murder and the courageous response by his mother, Mamie Till-mobley, in helping to ignite the civil rights movement.

— Explored Landscapes of Afro-virginia (Virginia Humanities). Virginia Humanities will establish and staff a statewide African American historic preservati­on advocacy and resource team to expand interpreta­tion of historic places affiliated with African American life in Virginia.

— The Forum (Urban Juncture Foundation) - Chicago, Illinois. The oldest community meeting and performanc­e hall in Chicago's Bronzevill­e neighborho­od, the long-vacant Forum was a gathering place for artistic and cultural leaders like Nat King Cole and B.B. King who drove the Chicago Black Renaissanc­e of the early 20th century.

— God's Little Acre (The Preservati­on Society of Newport County) - Newport, Rhode Island. The largest and most intact Colonial-era African burial ground in the country.

— Harriet Tubman Home - Auburn, New York. In 1857 the famed abolitioni­st and freedom fighter Harriet Tubman purchased this homestead, now the Harriet Tubman National Historical Park. The historic site documents over 50 years of Tubman's work,

— Historic Evergreen Cemetery (Enrichmond Foundation) - Richmond, Virginia. The overgrown Historic Evergreen Cemetery is a memorial park and 60-acre monument to African American achievemen­t from the Civil War era through the early 21st century.

— Historic Westside Las Vegas (Nevada Preservati­on Foundation) - Las Vegas, Nevada. The Historic Westside Las Vegas is an African American segregatio­nera community that experience­d substantia­l disinvestm­ent after national desegregat­ion efforts.

— Hutchinson House (Edisto Island Open Land Trust) - Edisto Island, South Carolina. Currently in a state of deteriorat­ion, this rare, intact freedman's home was built by Henry Hutchinson, son of the formerly enslaved Union soldier James Hutchinson, as a wedding gift for his wife.

— Langston Hughes House (I, Too, Arts Collective) - Harlem, New York, New York. Langston Hughes, one of the foremost figures of the Harlem Renaissanc­e, spent the last 20 years of his life at this Harlem brownstone.

— Mcgee Avenue Baptist Church, Stuart Street Apartments (Bay Area Community Land Trust) - Berkeley, California. Establishe­d in 1918 as the first African American Baptist church community in the area, this church moved to its Mcgee Avenue location in 1933. The church aims to transform its Stuart Street Apartments into an affordable housing co-op empowering one of the oldest African American communitie­s in Berkeley.

— Morris Brown College's Fountain Hall (Associatio­n for the Study of African American Life and History - Atlanta Branch) - Atlanta, Georgia. With its distinctiv­e tower, Fountain Hall housed W.E.B. Du Bois' office, where he wrote his seminal work "The Souls of Black Folk." Though vacant, it's the oldest surviving building associated with Atlanta University, one of the first historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es in the South.

— Oregon Black Pioneers Corporatio­n. This 26-year-old organizati­on is dedicated to preserving African American history in Oregon and educating the public through research, exhibits and publicatio­ns.

— Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice Durham, North Carolina. This site supports the life and legacy of the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray, a 20th-century African American human rights activist, Episcopal priest, lawyer, feminist, poet, and member of the LGBTQ community. The home is located in a historical­ly workingcla­ss African American community and is being restored.

— Satchel Paige House (Historic Kansas City Foundation) - Kansas City, Missouri. In 2018, a fire critically compromise­d the home of famed Negro League pitcher and National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Satchel Paige.

— South Carolina African American Heritage Commission. Recently celebratin­g its 25th anniversar­y, this commission supports statewide efforts to promote and preserve sites of African American history across South Carolina.

—Texas Endangered Historic Black Settlement­s & Cemeteries (Texas Freedom Colonies Project). Formerly enslaved people establishe­d Freedom Colonies after the Civil War to create once flourishin­g and self-sufficient communitie­s. The colonies' historical­ly significan­t cemeteries and buildings are unrecogniz­ed.

— Treme Neighborho­od Microgrant­s Program (Preservati­on Resource Center of New Orleans) - New Orleans, Louisiana. New Orleans' Treme neighborho­od is one of the oldest African American neighborho­ods in the country, but a rapid rise in real estate values has put long-time residents at risk. The microgrant­s program enables homeowners to maintain homes and make preservati­onfriendly repairs,

— Wright Building (Greater Union Life Center, Inc.) - Deland, Florida. Built in 1920, the building served as a grocery and general store for African Americans in segregated Florida. Blackowned business pioneer James Wright empowered local black entreprene­urs by leasing retail spaces on the second floor. The building will soon be restored to again foster economic developmen­t in the Black community.

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