February 28, 2022

Discover the HBCU Cultural Heritage Stewardship Grant Recipients for 2022

On February 28, 2022, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, through its HBCU Cultural Heritage Stewardship Initiative, awarded more than $650,000 in grants to five Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) to fund Cultural Heritage Stewardship Plans. Each of these prestigious schools are stewards of important architecture, historic assets, cultural landscapes, and collections, which represent more than a century of learning, growing, and empowerment for their students, faculty, and alumni.

With this year's grantees, we are advancing this idea of a campus-wide preservation plan—a roadmap for preserving and celebrating the historic and hallowed places important to their institutional legacy. There are 105 HBCUs across the country, and their infrastructure needs are increasingly urgent. These campus-wide plans help keep legacy as an essential part of any future improvement, development, or maintenance.

Florida A&M, Tallahassee, Florida
Sang Bum Park

Florida A&M University
Tallahassee, Florida

Florida A&M, founded in 1887, will develop a campus-wide plan for its 422-acre campus. In recent years, its Black Archives, Architecture Department, and Office of Facilities have developed collaborative rehabilitation projects for historic buildings such as Sunshine Manor, the Carnegie Library, and Gibbs Cottage. The campus-wide plan will enable the university to develop a strategic approach to preserving additional buildings within its historic district.

Rust College, Holly Springs, Mississippi
Timothy W. Willis/Wikimedia Commons

Rust College
Holly Springs, Mississippi

Rust College, founded in 1866, will develop a campus-wide stewardship plan for its historic campus and the adjacent former Mississippi Industrial College campus (1905), which it acquired in 2008. The campus-wide plan will guide the college as it addresses deferred maintenance of historic buildings, such as the Leontyne Price Library and McCoy Hall, as well as how to incorporate Mississippi Industrial College’s remaining buildings into the campus landscape.

Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte, North Carolina
Erna Perkins-Jones

Johnson C. Smith University
Charlotte, North Carolina

Johnson C. Smith University, founded in 1867, will develop a stewardship plan for the Historic Quad, which consists of five historic buildings: Biddle Hall (1883), Carter Hall (1896), the Music Building (1922), Berry Hall (1924), and Myers Hall (1967). The stewardship plan will guide the university in restoring the historic buildings while adapting the spaces for uses that meet the campus community’s needs.

Shaw University, Raleigh, North Carolina
Kevin Sullivan/Shaw University

Shaw University
Raleigh, North Carolina

Shaw University, founded in 1865, will develop a campus-wide plan to support and coordinate ongoing preservation of its 65-acre campus. In recent years, Shaw has undertaken rehabilitation of historic Leonard Hall (1883) and Etsey Hall (1873). The campus-wide plan will enable the university to develop rehabilitation plans for additional historic buildings as well as address the goal of connecting its campus back to downtown Raleigh while removing public access barriers.

Voorhees College, Denmark, South Carolina
Curtiss Sumner

Voorhees College
Denmark, South Carolina

Voorhees College, founded in 1897, will develop a campus-wide plan for its 380-acre campus. The campus plan will enable the college to address deferred maintenance and plan for rehabilitating significant historic buildings such as Menafee Hall (1907) and Massachusetts Hall (1930).

Learn more about the grant recipients from 2021.

The Initiative provides technical assistance, funds new Cultural Heritage Stewardship Plans, and empowers HBCUs with the resources to protect, preserve, and leverage their historic campuses, buildings, and landscapes, ensuring these academic institutions and symbols of African American pride continue to inspire and educate future generations.

The National Trust launched the Initiative in 2020 through the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, in partnership with National Endowment for the Humanities and with leadership support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Ford Foundation, the JPB Foundation, J.M Kaplan Fund, Executive Leadership Council, Chipstone Foundation, Wunsch Americana Foundation, and James Marston Fitch Charitable Foundation.

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The National Trust for Historic Preservation, a privately funded nonprofit organization, works to save America’s historic places. Savingplaces.org

Join us in protecting and restoring places where significant African American history happened.

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