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The Carver Birthplace Association to receive $70,000 grant

(Diamond, MO) – The Carver Birthplace Association, a friend’s group and cooperating association of George Washington Carver National Monument, Diamond, MO, received notification from the National Trust for Historic Preservation that the nonprofit group will receive $70,000 in funding from the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund.

The funding will support rehabilitation of the interior of the 1872 Neosho Colored School located in Neosho, Missouri, the exterior of which has been nearly fully rehabilitated. George Washington Carver and scores of other formerly enslaved youths received their first taste of formal education there; thus, the school is a rare surviving example of a Reconstruction-era African American school.

DR. CARVER
Dr. George Washington Carver

“We are grateful to the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund for their support of the Carver Birthplace Association and our dedication to preserving this historic structure which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Continuing to build upon and promote the legacy of George Washington Carver, the 1872 Neosho Colored School is symbolic of ‘the golden door of freedom’ Carver experienced in Newton County, Missouri, as well as ‘the golden door of freedom’ promoted through his extraordinary life’s work at Tuskegee Institute,” said Lana Henry, President of the Carver Birthplace Association.

Brent Leggs the executive director of the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund and senior vice president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation also commented on the grant saying, “The Action Fund’s investment in and celebration of 40 historic African American places illustrates our belief that historic preservation plays an important role in American society.”

The Carver Birthplace Association is one of 40 sites to receive a total of $3.8 million in grant funding to advance ongoing preservation activities for historic places such as sites, museums, and landscapes that represent African American cultural heritage. With more than $91 million in funding, the Action Fund is the largest U.S. resource dedicated to the preservation of African American historic places. Since 2017, the Action Fund has received an unprecedented total of 5,638 funding proposals requesting $655 million, and since 2018, the Action Fund has supported 242 grantee projects through its investment of $20M. You can learn more about this program and this year’s grant recipients at their website.

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