FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
December 9, 2009
IMLS Press Contacts
202-653-4632
Jeannine Mjoseth, jmjoseth@imls.gov
Mamie Bittner, mbittner@imls.gov
IMLS Announces $9.5 Million in Save America’s Treasures Grants to
Preserve Cultural and Historic Treasures
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The Last Column Photo by Joe Woolhead |
Washington, DC—A memorial to the victims
of the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center, the mementos of Civil
War officers, and a blockhouse from an 18th-century Russian trading fort in
Alaska are among the thousands of historically significant objects that will
be conserved with the 2009 Save America’s Treasures (SAT) grants. The
Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), in collaboration with the
President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH), the National
Park Service (NPS), the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), and the National
Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), awarded $9.5 million in grants to 41
organizations to conserve significant cultural and historic treasures related
to American history and culture.
“Save America's Treasures invests in our nation's irreplaceable
legacy of buildings, documents, collections and artistic works,” said First Lady
Michelle Obama, Honorary Chairman of the PCAH. “These awards empower communities
all over the country to rescue and restore this priceless heritage, and ensure that future
generations continue to learn from the voices, ideas, events and people represented by these
projects.”
“The Institute of Museum and Library Services is proud to support
Save America’s Treasures,” said IMLS Director Anne-Imelda Radice. “These awards
are part of IMLS’s commitment to conservation that includes ongoing grant programs
and Connecting to Collections: A Call to Action, a multiyear initiative to help
improve the state of our nation’s collections.”
IMLS began the Connecting to Collections initiative in response to A Public Trust at Risk: The Heritage Health Index Report on the State of America’s Collections,
a 2005 Heritage Preservation study supported by IMLS, which concluded that:
- 190 million objects need conservation treatment,
- 65 percent of collecting institutions have damaged collections due to
improper storage,
- 80 percent of collecting institutions lack an emergency plan for their
collections and trained staff to carry it out, and
- 40 percent of institutions have no funds allocated in their annual budget
for preservation and conservation.
The evaluation and recommendation of SAT grants is carried out by an interagency
group that blends cross-disciplinary expertise of the federal cultural agencies
(IMLS, NEA, and NEH) and the NPS, which administers the program in collaboration
with PCAH. In addition to reviewing and making recommendations on grant applications,
each agency administers a number of grants. This year, IMLS will administer grants to
six institutions:
1. National September 11 Memorial and Museum, New York
The Last Column, a steel column of the World Trade Center, was transformed into
a living memorial to victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Despite
its apparent solidity, exposure to harsh sunlight and fluctuating humidity has
severely compromised its steel surface and its mantle of ephemera, including writings,
photographs, and votive tributes that were layered onto its surfaces. This project
will conserve the Last Column so that it may be placed safely on permanent exhibition.
($200,000)
2. Civil War Museum of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
The personal records, possessions, and memories of the Union officers who founded this Philadelphia museum in the 19th century constitute one of the finest collections of Civil War documents and artifacts in the country. The grant funds will help to conserve and rehouse items in urgent need of treatment, including manuscripts, photographs, paintings, flags, uniforms, and weapons. ($150,000)
3. Kolmakovsky Redoubt Collection, Fairbanks
This important historic collection contains more than 5,000 artifacts, including
the first building erected at the site. Kolmakovsky Redoubt was the first Russian
fort in the interior of Alaska and was the major trading center on the Kuskokwim
River from its establishment until the purchase of Alaska in 1867. This
project will rehabilitate and preserve the blockhouse and stabilize the archaeological
collections.
($75,000)
4. Denver Museum of Nature & Science Anthropology Collections, Denver
The museum’s 56,000-piece anthropology collection encompasses a rich and
diverse range of objects, photographs, documents, and materials from a portfolio
of George Caitlin to the photographs of Edwin Curtis to Native American
artifacts. Funds will support conservation of collections and objects in
preparation for moving them into a new facility.
($324,385)
5. Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, VT
The Shelburne Museum, founded in 1947, holds a collection of approximately 150,000
works of folk art, fine art, and Americana from the 17th to the 20th centuries, and
is Vermont’s largest cultural attraction. This grant will support the
design and construction of a communications system that will integrate the
museum’s fire, security, and environmental control systems, which is
crucial for the long-term protection of its artifacts.
($600,000)
6. Chapel Car 5 Messenger of Peace, Snoqualmie, WA
The Chapel Car Messenger of Peace, a wooden rail car built in 1898, traveled
the country for 50 years as a mobile church bringing modern evangelism to the
frontier and helping to establish churches in numerous communities. With
grant assistance, deteriorated structural components, windows, siding and roofing,
and other features will be repaired and replaced, restoring the Chapel Car to its 1920
appearance.
($180,000)
Other funded SAT projects highlight this country’s rich
architectural legacy including two rare surviving 17th-century houses
of worship and the works of leading 19th-century and 20th-century
of American architects like David Burnham, Stanford White, and Frank
Lloyd Wright. Rare first-hand accounts of modern dance’s beginnings
are told in photographs at Jacobs Pillow. The ideas and aspirations of post-war
Americans are captured on tape from This I Believe radio program. And
a window on a lost Native American culture is revealed in 18th-century Friendly
Association Papers. These grants will ensure that the nation’s cultural
and historic legacy can be experienced by the next generation of artists, scholars,
students, and citizens.
“Save America’s Treasures represents an
exceptional process that blends the best expertise of our federal cultural
partners and the National Park Service to select and recommend projects of
exceptional value to our nation’s cultural and historic legacy,”
says George Stevens, Co-Chair of PCAH. “With the support of Congress
and the White House, this program exemplifies what the public and private sector
can accomplish together in preserving these pre-eminent symbols of our democracy
and cultural values.”
In its 10-year history, Save America’s Treasures has made
more than 500 competitive grants to address the preservation needs of the structures,
places, documents, artistic works, and artifacts that are deemed most
significant to the nation. To maximize private investment and support for these efforts,
the program’s private partner, Save America’s Treasures at the
National Trust for Historic Preservation, helps organizations secure the required private
match, and provides assistance to SAT grantees and preservation projects all across the
country. In 2009, Save
America’s Treasures received 402 grant applications from eligible organizations.
Two panels of federal experts representing preservation and conservation disciplines
reviewed the applications and made final recommendations to the Secretary of Interior.
For the complete list of 2009 Save America's
Treasures grants, please click here.
Additional information on the Save America’s Treasures program can
be found on the PCAH Web site at www.pcah.gov, the NPS Web site at http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/treasures/.
Media Contacts:
Kimber Craine, PCAH
202-682-5661
kcraine@pcah.gov
David Barna, NPS
202-208-6843
Elizabeth Stark, NEA
202-682-5744
Lindsey Mikal, NEH
202-606-8317
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