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Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society Receives
National Endowment for the Humanities Grant
On June 23, 2004 the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH) announced that the Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial
Society had been awarded a grant to preserve and stabilize it's
collection. The Society was also named a We the People project, a
special recognition byt the NEH for model projects that will preserve
resources that are critical to the study, teaching, and understanding
of American history and culture.
The Society plans to use the grant money to purchase and install
shelving in their artifact room where many of the original artifacts
are stored. Read more below in an article by the National Endowment for
the Humanities.
ELEVEN PRESERVATION PROJECTS IN SEVEN STATES AWARDED
$4.5 MILLION TO SUPPORT STABILIZATION OF HUMANITIES COLLECTIONS
Five earn recognition as We the People projects
WASHINGTON (June 23, 2004)--The National Endowment for the Humanities
(NEH) today announced that cultural institutions in seven states will
receive $4.5 million for 11 projects to preserve and stabilize
humanities collections. Five of these have been named We the People
projects, a special recognition by the NEH for model projects that will
preserve resources that are critical to the study, teaching, and
understanding of American history and culture.
"Over the past 14 years, NEH has awarded more than $45 million to
stabilize collections representing more than 33 million archaeological,
ethnographic, and historical objects important for research, education,
and public programming in the humanities," said NEH Chairman Bruce
Cole.
Stabilization grants help museums, libraries, archives, and historical
organizations preserve their humanities collections through support for
improved housing and storage, environmental conditions, security,
lighting, and fire protection, which remain the most effective
preservation measures institutions can employ to ensure the longevity
of their cultural collections.
The five institutions awarded NEH grants and recognized as We the
People awards are the Connecticut Historical Society, the Harriet
Beecher Stowe Center, and the Mark Twain House, all in Hartford; the
New York State Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Sites for the
Olana historic site in Waterford; and the Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial
Society, Inc., in De Smet, S.D.
Several projects have received offers of federal matching funds
totaling $375,000; institutions receiving such offers must generate
equivalent support from individual, foundation, or corporate donors.
Other cultural institutions receiving stabilization grants from NEH
include the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco; the Florence Griswold
Museum in Old Lyme, Conn.; Northeast Historic Film in Bucksport, Maine;
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Museum of Modern Art, New York;
and the University of Texas, Austin.
The Endowment's We the People initiative was announced by President
Bush in a Rose Garden Ceremony in September 2002.
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