Virginia Museum of History & Culture Announces Recipients of 2024 Commonwealth History Fund Grants

Virginia Museum of History & Culture Announces Recipients of 2024 Commonwealth History Fund Grants

Media Alert
February 22, 2024
Taylor Fuqua, Manager of PR & Marketing; tfuqua@VirginiaHistory.org; 804.342.9661

Richmond, Va. – Fourteen organizations from across the state are recognized as the recipients of the 2024 Commonwealth History Fund grants from the Virginia Museum of History & Culture (VMHC). This year, nearly $400,000 is being awarded to support history preservation and education projects throughout Virginia.

Each year, the VMHC, in partnership with Virginia’s Department of Historic Resources (DHR), awards grants to history organizations and projects throughout the Commonwealth of Virginia. There are several key selection criteria to be considered for a Commonwealth History Fund grant, including the significance of the project or resource, its impact on its community and the Commonwealth, the focus on historically underrepresented topics and communities, the need for funding, and the urgency of the project.

Established in 2021, the Commonwealth History Fund, presented by Dominion Energy, remains one of the largest initiatives of its kind and is expected to award up to $2,000,000 in its first five years. To date, the VMHC has awarded $1.2M to fellow history organizations. Funds can be used for a variety of purposes including preservation, publications, artifact acquisition, research, conservation of artifacts, and educational programming. Eligible recipients include Virginia non-profits, educational institutions, and state- recognized Virginia Indian tribes.

“The Commonwealth History Fund continues to exceed our expectations in supporting a wide range of historic preservation projects and initiatives across the state,” said VMHC President and CEO Jamie Bosket. “We remain thankful for the generous support of Dominion Energy, and we remain committed to reaching more Virginians with this wonderful program to invest in and lift up all Virginia history.”

Recipients of the Commonwealth History Fund have utilized funds to conduct historic preservation work that has not only resulted in the documentation and celebration of local heritage but has also fostered a sense of community pride and identity. Their work has uncovered hidden stories, restored landmark structures, and created educational initiatives that will engage and inspire future generations, making a lasting impact on Virginia communities.

2024 Commonwealth History Fund grant recipients include:

  • Black History Museum & Cultural Center of Virginia (Richmond, Virginia): Preserving Virginia’s Black History- Funding will enable the BHMVA to better preserve their collections through an extensive organization and improvement project at the museum’s artifact storage facility. This timely project will empower the museum to continue the work of cataloging, rehousing, and digitizing its holdings.

     

  • Gloucester Country Parks, Recreation & Tourism- Museum of History (Gloucester, Virginia): Reimagining the Gloucester Museum of History- Funding from the Commonwealth History Fund will provide for the development and installation of dynamic new exhibitions, applying best practices and community engagement, to present a dynamic and engaging museum experience.

     

  • Corporation for Jefferson’s Poplar Forest (Forest, Virginia): 1857 Slave Dwelling Restoration Project- Funding will help to support the restoration of a historic two-story brick structure that housed enslaved and free African Americans at Thomas Jefferson’s Poplar Forest. This will include the structural engineering, architectural documentation, and architectural design plans.

     

  • Historic Germanna (Orange, Virginia): Rediscovering Katina through Indigenous Voices: Siouan Slavery in Early 1700s Virginia- This new project will support Historic Germanna’s efforts to better represent indigenous voices. This effort will result in new Tribal Consultation Guidelines, research led by Monacan Indian Nation citizen Kaleigh Pollak, and new, co-curated public history programming. A new online exhibition will also be created to share the story of Katina, a Siouan-speaking woman, enslaved by Alexander Spotswood.

     

  • Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation (Jamestown, Virginia): Law and Race at Jamestown- The Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation will develop several new programs and initiatives that address Jamestown’s pivotal role in establishing the rule of law and legalized chattel slavery in U.S. society. As part of this project, new onsite and virtual educational resources will be produced and made widely available.

     

  • Preservation Virginia (Richmond, Virginia): History as Greenspace in Downtown Richmond: The Grounds of the John Marshall House- As part of an organization-wide effort to better interpret their historic properties, Preservation Virginia will design, produce, and install new interpretive signage on the grounds of the John Marshall House. This exciting site enhancement will utilize new research, which has revealed more details of the many people who lived and worked on the property.

     

  • Radford Heritage Foundation/Glencoe Mansion, Museum & Gallery (Radford, Virginia): Building a New Life: The African American Experience After Emancipation- As part of restoration and re-interpretation work being done by The Radford Heritage Foundation, accessibility and preservation enhancements will be undertaken to Glencoe Mansion. New interpretation will focus on the story of Reconstruction with focus on those individuals who were "Building a New Life" after the Civil War.

     

  • Norfolk Historical Society (Norfolk, Virginia): Fort Norfolk Civil War Prison Camp Exhibit-With support from the Commonwealth History Fund, Norfolk Historical Society (NHS) will research Fort Norfolk's use as a Civil War prison camp. NHS will identify the prisoners housed, guards stationed, and conditions experienced at the fort during the Civil War.

     

  • Science Museum of Virginia Foundation (Richmond, Virginia): From Union Station to the Science Museum of Virginia: Architectural, Social and Cultural Histories- This extensive research project will help the Science Museum of Virginia to better document and interpret the history of its historic building and campus. Union Station/Broad Street Station was designed by John Russell Pope and was in service from 1919 until 1975.

     

  • Virginia Tech Foundation, Inc. (Blacksburg, Virginia): Tribal Truths Podcast- The Tribal Truths Podcast, produced by Radio IQ WVTF, is a public platform for Indigenous people in Virginia to tell their history, debunk myths and legends with fact, teach tribal heritages, cultures, histories and address current issues through sound and place. Funding will support a second season that will be produced with tribal representatives of the Patawomeck, Upper Mattaponi, Pamunkey, as well as military veterans of all 11 state recognized tribes.

     

  • Here2Hear, LLC (Richmond, Virginia): The Black History Project: Leaning From the Past and Inspiring the Future- Funding will help Here2Hear expand their work in telling inspiring Black history that incorporates Deaf and Hard of Hearing individuals. A new mobile exhibition will be produced as well as new accessible enhancements to the Richmond slave trail.

     

  • Belle Grove Plantation (Middletown, Virginia): The Cost of Motherhood: Interpreting Eleanor Madison Hite’s Life in the Shenandoah Valley and Her Enslaved Nursery Workers-  With help from the Commonwealth History Fund, the largely unknown story of Eleanor “Nelly” Conway Madison Hite, sister of James Madison and wife of Isaac Hite Jr., of Belle Grove (the Madison-Hite Plantation) will be better told. Historical documents will help share insight into Nelly’s role as a mother, wife, sister, daughter, and owner of enslaved people.

     

  • Appomattox Regional Governor’s School for the Arts and Technology (Petersburg, Virginia): Historical Depths- With support from the Commonwealth History Fund, students at Appomattox Regional Governor’s School will gain hands-on public history experience by facilitating oral history and collections management projects to preserve history related to the original Petersburg High School. Recording and digital assents will be made available via a searchable database.

     

  • Orange County Historical Society (Orange, Virginia): Orange County Free Blacks Project, 1734-1865 (Phase I)- This research project will allow the Orange County Historical Society to expand on the names in the extant free Black register (1734-1864) with information from primary and secondary sources.  Missing portions of the Orange County register of free black people have been recently identified which has allowed for the transcription of entries from 1803 to mid-1850.  
     

The VMHC will receive applications for funding for its fourth annual grant cycle Sept. 1-30, 2024. Awards will be announced in early 2025.

More information on The Commonwealth History Fund can be found at VirginiaHistory.org/HistoryFund.

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The Virginia Museum of History & Culture is the only institution dedicated to presenting the entire history of Virginia over time and across regions. Its nationally significant collection of more than 9 million objects, renowned research library, galleries and public programs demonstrate the centrality of Virginia to the narrative of the United States.

The VMHC is owned and operated by the Virginia Historical Society — a private, non-profit organization established in 1831. The historical society is the oldest cultural organization in Virginia and one of the oldest and most distinguished history organizations in the nation.

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