1st Quarter - February
Olathe Parks and Recreation Foundation/Olathe Memorial Cemetery
Interpretive Kiosks: $5,000.00
Olathe, KS - Johnson County
Grant funds defrayed the cost of acquiring eight
interpretive kiosks for installation in historical areas of the cemetery, which has a rich history of the pre- and
post-Civil War conflict. More than 300 Union and Confederate soldiers are buried in the cemetery, most in the Civil War circle (established
in 1865).
Douglas County Heritage Conservation Council
Populating Douglas County: Pressures of Migration and Politics: $5,000.00
Lawrence, Eudora, Lecompton, & Clinton Lake, KS - Douglas County
This
collaborative project resulted in the creation of a traveling
exhibit and a minimum of four public programs. Douglas County, Eudora Historical Society, Lecompton Historical Society, Douglas
County Historical Society, and Clinton Lake Historical Society presented public programs focused on
migration and politics, and the impact on past and current culture in
Douglas County. Humanities Scholar, Cindy Higgins, moderated
discussions sponsored by Humanities Kansas.
Friends of Fort Scott National Historic Site, Inc.
Native Neighbors Program: $5,000.00
Fort Scott, KS - Bourbon County
This
program, a continuation of the two Native Neighbors programs in Ottawa, Kansas, highlighted many of the regional American Indian tribes,
indigenous and relocated, which at one time or another called western
Missouri and eastern Kansas their home. Their histories were told
through dance, storytelling, folkways demonstrations, and more.
Jesse James Birthplace and Museum
Paper Conservation Project: $1,440.00
Kearney, MO - Clay County
The project enhancer the visitor experience at the museum, showcasing two of Reverend James’ documents: his license to preach and diploma from Georgetown College. The conservation of these two documents will provide a better understanding of how Reverend James helped shape the frontier on the western edge of Missouri prior to the Civil War.
Johnson County Museum
Permanent Interpretive Signage Panels: $5,000.00
Overland Park, KS - Johnson County
The grant funded, in part, permanent interpretive panels, and included costs for graphic design, fabrication, and image reproduction rights for a project along a 10.1 mile stretch of trail in Overland Park, Kansas. The panels survey the history of Johnson County by examining derivation of various street names that intersect the trail as well as other points of interest.
Lawrence Public Library/Lawrence Public Library Foundation
"Hike through History on the Burroughs Creek Trail": $4,525.00
Lawrence, KS - Douglas County
Lawrence Public Library received partial funding to cover design and fabrication costs for a traveling exhibit that examines key points of historical interest along the Burroughs Creek Trail and Linear Park, a 1.7 mile concrete-paved path running 11th Street to 23rd Street in East Lawrence along a former rail line. Lawrence - Douglas County, KS
Marla Quilts, Inc. (African-American Quilt Museum & Textile Academy Program)
Elements of the Kansas Underground Railroad Program: $5,000.00
Lawrence, KS - Douglas County
Middle school aged children created small
quilts using hand-dyed fabric as part of the Beyond the Book program.
Marais des Cygnes Society (Poplar Heights Farm)
Poplar Heights Living History Farm: Permanent Fiber Arts Exhibit: $5,000.00
Butler, MO - Bates County
This fiber arts exhibit provides visitors a hands-on experience with
different forms of fiber production by taking raw materials and turning
them into useful and decorative products.
St. Joseph Museums, Inc.
Professional Framing in Museum Quality Materials of Photographs: $1,500.00
St. Joseph, MO - Buchanan County
The
museum acquired 15 printed Black
Dignity images from the Mary Ellen Everhard collection at the Amon
Carter Museum and had them professionally framed in museum-quality
materials for exhibition in the Black Archives Museum.
Douglas County Historical Society (Watkins Museum of History)
Civil Rights Interactive Exhibit Kiosk: $5,000.00
Lawrence, KS - Douglas County
The museum created an electronic, interactive display chronicling
civil-rights issues in Lawrence in recent history. Through photographs, reproduced documents, archival footage.
2nd Quarter - May
Black Archives of Mid-America
BAMA Cultural Heritage Trail: Walking Tour Brochure: $5,000.00
Kansas City, MO - Jackson County
The archives created a Cultural Heritage
Trail walking tour brochure that pinpoints historic sites of both
regional and national significance in the historic 18th & Vine
District of Kansas City, Missouri.
Franklin County Historical Society, Inc. (Old Depot Museum)
"Ritual and Reality: Secret Societies in Franklin County": $3,500.00
Ottawa, KS - Franklin County
The historical society purchased exhibit furniture made available by Traub Design Associates to ready the museum for the exhibit, “Ritual and Reality: Secret Societies in Franklin County.”
Friends of the Kaw
Enslaved by Freedom: Lecture series: $4,090.00
Lawrence, KS - Douglas County
Friends of the
Kaw supported "Enslaved by Freedom", a lecture series accompanied by
books and a digital program focused on the lives of lesser-known men
and/or women born into slavery but now free from human ownership.
Great Overland Station
The Kaw: A Prairie River Shapes a State: $5,000.00
Topeka, KS - Shawnee County
The museum created an exhibit called “The Kaw: A Prairie River Shapes
a State.”
Kansas City Public Library
"The Pendergast Era: Kansas City in the Jazz Age and Great Depression, 1918-1941" (website): $5,000.00
Kansas City, MO - Jackson County
The library developed an award-winning interpretive website, with educational content
about the Pendergast Era. The website was created in conjunction with a symposium on the same topic, and a (book) compilation of the papers presented at the symposium also won awards.
Kansas State Historical Society (Kansas Museum of History)
Lecture Series: $4,903.00
Topeka, KS - Shawnee County
The historical society produced a yearlong program of lectures, which
presented information about Kansas history, and touched on Freedom's Frontier themes.
Lecompton Historical Society
Artifact Records Updating: $5,000.00
Lecompton, KS - Douglas County
The historical society updated artifact records by
inventorying, photographing, applying or reapplying identification
numbers, collecting additional data on the artifacts, and entering it on
PastPerfect software. The grant funds allowed the historical society to hire a student from the University of Kansas
Museum Studies program to assist with the project.
Lowell Milken Center for Unsung Heroes
Exhibit Expansion: $1,500.00
Fort Scott, KS - Bourbon County
The center expanded its exhibits to incorporate more local unsung heroes throughout history.
City of Osceola, Missouri
Interpretive Panels: $5,000.00
Osceola, MO - St. Clair County
Twelve interpretive panels were installed along the
walking trail from Benton Street to an RV Park, ending at the
historic Osceola Square.
Shawnee County Historical Society
Heritage Area Programming: $4,298.00
Topeka, KS - Shawnee County
The historical society provided six weeks of heritage education programming for elementary and middle
school-age youth. History camp met at the Cox Communications
Heritage Education Center on the grounds of the Historic Ritchie House.
The program, “Ethnic Communities of Shawnee County, A Melting Pot of
History, Culture, and Traditions”, emphasized different ethnic
groups in Kansas.
3rd Quarter - August
Monnett Battle of Westport Fund Wayside Markers:
$4,550.00 Kansas City, MO - Jackson County
Three permanent
wayside markers were installed, describing successive battles at the site on 22
and 23 October 1864, and the overall context of these events during the
Battle of Westport.
Topeka Center for Peace and Justice
Justice Circles: $5,000.00
Topeka, KS - Shawnee County
Approximately 30 middle school
teachers were introduced to the value of Justice Circles in building
community in schools, teaching children to value diversity, and to
respect multiple perspectives. The teachers attended a training
designed to help them develop Justice Circles in every middle school in the county. In historical context, these circles
developed from Native American culture in Kansas, creating
communities that celebrated freedom, while setting appropriate limits on
the individual’s behavior.
Haskell Indian Nations University Cultural Center and Museum
Experience Haskell: Native Lawrence—Sharing Our Past, Building Our Future: $5,000.00
Lawrence, KS - Douglas County
Haskell
Indian Nations University has been part of the Lawrence,
Kansas, landscape since 1884. This event highlighted common ties that connect and draw people
closer, through promoting student activities, tribal histories,
educational achievement, and the nexus of traditional and contemporary
themes in lives and cultures.
Kansas City Museum
Interpretive Signage Project: $5.000.00
Kansas City, MO - Jackson County
The museum used the grant funds to cover some of the costs related to the development of a
permanent interpretative signage project along a 3.2 mile stretch of the
Indian Creek Trail in Kansas City, MO that will survey the history of
Jackson County by examining the derivation of the various street names
that intersect the trail as well as other points of interest.
Old Trails Regional Tourism Partnership
Brochure: $3,056.00
Lexington, MO - Lafayette County
Old Trails
Regional Tourism Partnership developed banner displays with
supporting brochure materials to answer the question regarding the Old
Trails Region, “What Trails?” Materials share the
story of the Osage Trace (trail), Santa Fe and Lewis and Clark Trails
and the Mormon experiences in the Old Trails Region.
Wornall Majors House Museums
Brokering the Border Exhibit: $4,500.00
Kansas City, MO - Jackson County
The museums developed
"Brokering the Border", an exhibition which provides an overview of
emancipation in Missouri, with particular focus on western Missouri. The
exhibit explores the impact of the long Civil War on the
Kansas/Missouri border on enslaved Missourians and how the unique
convergence of factors in the region facilitated emancipation.
Wyandotte High School
School Partnership and Bus Tours: $5,000.00
Kansas City, KS - Wyandotte County
Wyandotte High
School and Shawnee Mission East high schools furthered the established partnership that includes fall author visits,
bus tours, writing showcase, Freedom Corps, all discussing the history
of racial politics in Kansas City and its schools and how these issues
affect us today.
4th Quarter - November
The Curators of the University of Missouri
Traveling Exhibit: $5,060.00
Kansas City, MO - Jackson County
Curators fabricated a traveling exhibit on the region's suprisingly pivotal role in the rise of America's gay rights movement.
Jackson County Historical Society
Paneled Exhibit: $1,300.00
Independence, MO - Jackson County
The historical society developed a temporary, paneled exhibit that
explores the migration of German immigrants to Missouri in the 19th
century and the lasting effects the migration had on Missouri culture.
Johnson County Museum Foundation
Exhibition Costs: $5,000.00
Overland Park, KS - Johnson County
The museum moved to a new location. Grant funds supported direct costs associated with a section of an exhibit in the new building that examines the Border War and Civil War period (1855-1865). The exhibition, "ecoming Johnson County", provides
museum visitors with a survey of Johnson County history and
development from 1825-2000 and is expected to be a long-term exhibition
with a 15-year useful life.
Lawrence Public Library
Signage Panels: $5,000.00
Lawrence, KS - Douglas County
Lawrence
Public Library designed and fabricated a
series of nine, permanent outdoor interpretive signage panels that
examine key points of historical interest along the Burroughs Creek
Trail and Linear Park, a 1.7 mile concrete-paved path running 11th
street to 23rd street in East Lawrence along a former rail line.
Shawnee County Historical Society/Ritchie House
Interpreting the Ritchie House: $3,562.61
Topeka, KS - Shawnee County
The historical society acquired recommendations for improvement in how
they are interpreting the story, presenting the Ritchie House and
grounds, and to improve the education program hands-on experience for
students.