| BH-272387-20 | Education Programs: Landmarks of American History and Culture for K-12 Educators | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the Colonial North | 10/1/2020 - 9/30/2022 | $189,384.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2020 | African American History | Landmarks of American History and Culture for K-12 Educators | Education Programs | 189384 | 0 | 189384 | 0 | Two one-week workshops for 72 K-12 educators on the history of slavery in the colonial north.
In recent years, public humanities practitioners have focused on re-evaluating how slavery in America is presented at historic sites, incorporating the point of view of enslaved individuals, and recognizing the longevity of slavery’s existence in America. Still, the narrative of slavery is rooted in the antebellum South, omitting its connection to the legal, economic, and political development of colonial America and the New Nation period. For over 20 years, Historic Hudson Valley has told the story of slavery in colonial America, on site at our historic site Philipsburg Manor and, in 2019, with the interactive documentary People Not Property: Stories of Slavery in the Colonial North. In 2017 and 2019, HHV hosted NEH summer Institutes to explore this topic with K-12 teachers. Now HHV seeks a Landmarks grant for summer 2021. The workshop would be grounded at Philipsburg Manor and extended to nearby historic sites to consider how these locations expand our knowledge of American slavery. |
| BP-50082-08 | Public Programs: Historic Places: Planning | Historic Hudson Valley | Festivals of Sail and Steam: The Hudson-Fulton & Champlain Celebrations of 1909 | 3/1/2008 - 2/28/2009 | $30,000.00 | Kathleen | E. | Johnson | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2008 | American Studies | Historic Places: Planning | Public Programs | 30000 | 0 | 30000 | 0 | No project description available |
| CA-21531-88 | Challenge Programs: Challenge Grants for Museums | Historic Hudson Valley | Challenge Grant | 12/1/1987 - 7/31/1994 | $750,000.00 | Michael | G. | Carew | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1988 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Challenge Grants for Museums | Challenge Programs | 0 | 750000 | 0 | 750000 | To support endowment for new staff positions, training, and publications, and honoraria for humanities consultants. |
| CM-*1066-78 | Challenge Programs: Museum Challenge Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Challenge Grant | 10/1/1977 - 6/30/1982 | $100,000.00 | John | W. | Harbour | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1978 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Museum Challenge Grants | Challenge Programs | 0 | 100000 | 0 | 100000 | No project description available |
| ES-250946-16 | Education Programs: Institutes for K-12 Educators | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the Colonial North | 10/1/2016 - 12/31/2017 | $83,443.00 | Jacqueline | | Simmons | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2016 | African American History | Institutes for K-12 Educators | Education Programs | 83443 | 0 | 83443 | 0 | A one-week institute for twenty-five
schoolteachers on slavery in the colonial North.
"Slavery in the Colonial North: Institutions and Individuals" will offer teachers the opportunity to look deeply into northern colonial enslavement and gain a better understanding of when northern enslavement developed, how it was maintained, where it was contested, what was unique about enslavement in the North, and why it remains relevant. Teachers will examine the legal and economic systems in colonial America and how these systems justified and relied on the existence of slavery. By the end of the seminar, participants will understand that, for economic and social reasons, slavery was as entrenched in the North as in the South. Educators will learn that by including enslavement as part of the story of colonial America, their students will see how the past is connected to their lives in the present day and how they might consider their futures. |
| ES-261739-18 | Education Programs: Institutes for K-12 Educators | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the Colonial North | 10/1/2018 - 12/31/2019 | $109,490.00 | Jacqueline | | Simmons | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2018 | African American History | Institutes for K-12 Educators | Education Programs | 109490 | 0 | 109490 | 0 | A one-week institute for 25 school teachers on slavery in the colonial North.
Slavery in the Colonial North will offer K-12 teachers the opportunity to look deeply into northern colonial enslavement and gain a better understanding of when northern enslavement developed, how it was maintained, where it was contested, what was unique about enslavement in the North, and why it remains relevant. Teachers will examine the legal and economic systems in colonial America and how these systems justified and relied on the existence of slavery. By the end of the institute, participants will understand that, for economic and social reasons, slavery was as entrenched in the North as in the South. Educators will learn that, by including enslavement as part of the story of colonial America, their students will see how the past is connected to their lives in the present day and how they might consider their futures. |
| ES-288135-22 | Education Programs: Institutes for K-12 Educators | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the Colonial North | 10/1/2022 - 9/30/2024 | $134,900.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | Leslie | M. | Harris | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2022 | African American History | Institutes for K-12 Educators | Education Programs | 134900 | 0 | 134900 | 0 |
Historic Hudson Valley (HHV) seeks a Level II grant to support the continuous demand from K-12 educators for resources about slavery in the northern colonies and to deliver the sensitive training they require to bring this challenging curriculum to their classrooms. HHV would host a virtual Institute for 36 K-12 teachers the week of July 16–22, 2023. |
| ES-301374-24 | Education Programs: Institutes for K-12 Educators | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the Colonial North | 10/1/2024 - 12/31/2025 | $119,504.00 | Nicole | | Wallace | Leslie | M. | Harris | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2024 | African American History | Institutes for K-12 Educators | Education Programs | 119504 | 0 | 119504 | 0 | A one-week, residential institute for 30 K-12 teachers on slavery in the colonial North.
Historic Hudson Valley will offer a one-week NEH Institute for K-12 teachers entitled Slavery in the Colonial North. This Institute would host 30 participants for a fully residential program in Westchester County, New York from July 13– 19, 2025. The institute will present slavery as a central element of American economic and political development in the North as well as the South and will equip participants with the tools needed to teach this history to their classes with accuracy and sensitivity. |
| GE-235074-16 | Public Programs: America's Historical and Cultural Organizations: Planning Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Historic Hudson Valley: Washington Irving and the Art of Storytelling | 4/1/2016 - 3/31/2017 | $30,000.00 | Michael | | Lord | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2016 | U.S. History | America's Historical and Cultural Organizations: Planning Grants | Public Programs | 30000 | 0 | 30000 | 0 | Planning for public programs, including support for research, concept design, audience evaluation, and design workshops exploring the stories and life of Washington Irving at his home.
HHV seeks funding for a public programming initiative that will make a meaningful connection between the tales of Washington Irving and the art of American storytelling by transforming the visitor experience at Irving's home Sunnyside. The humanities themes include 1) stories play an essential role in the American experience, 2) through his Hudson River Valley stories, Irving made an essential contribution to the development of regional literature in the United State, and 3) Washington Irving fashioned Sunnyside, his riverfront estate, to embody his creative spirit. The project incorporates public programs, both onsite and online, for a diverse audience including culture-seekers, families, teachers, and students. |
| GI-50074-09 | Public Programs: America's Historical and Cultural Organizations: Implementation Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | American Arcadia: People, Landscape, and Nature at Montgomery Place | 4/1/2009 - 2/28/2013 | $350,000.00 | Peter | S. | Pockriss | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2009 | U.S. History | America's Historical and Cultural Organizations: Implementation Grants | Public Programs | 350000 | 0 | 350000 | 0 | Implementation of a reinterpretation of a historic country estate, using the experiences of residents and workers to illustrate important turning points in American attitudes toward nature and landscape.
Funding is sought to reinterpret a significant property owned by Historic Hudson Valley (HHV). Using as a focusing device the experiences of four women who shaped this country estate during its 200-year history, the new interpretation will illustrate important turning points in American attitudes toward nature and landscape. As it forges a more integrated, effective way for house museums to interpret the built and natural environments, HHV will strive to help visitors understand how American points of view about landscape and nature have changed over time and why those shifts matter. Project formats include an interpretive tour of the nearly 400-acre site; web-based programs and blog; and publications. The story of Montgomery Place reflects many of the ideas and values that have shaped America's land and people. The project addresses how cultural attitudes toward the natural world determine human actions, and how these actions in turn affect people's environments. |
| GM-*1140-79 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Sunnyside Orientation Slide Show Sequence | 11/1/1979 - 10/31/1980 | $7,710.00 | Nancy | | Campbell | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1979 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 7710 | 0 | 7710 | 0 | To produce two slide-tape orientation programs for historic Sunnyside, home of Washington Irving. |
| GM-*1528-78 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Implementation Phase-Permenent Interp.& Orientation Exhiti- tion for Philopsburg Manor | 11/1/1978 - 11/30/1979 | $147,660.00 | Joseph | T. | Butler | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1978 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 147660 | 0 | 147660 | 0 | No project description available |
| GM-11095-77 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Planning Phase--Permanent Interpretive and Orientation Exhibition for Philipsburg Manor, Upper Mills | 7/1/1977 - 12/31/1977 | $9,600.00 | Joseph | T. | Butler | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1977 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 9600 | 0 | 9600 | 0 | No project description available |
| GM-11383-78 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Independent Study Program for the Training of Historical Agency Personnel | 1/1/1978 - 12/31/1978 | $5,500.00 | Renee | | Friedman | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1977 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 5500 | 0 | 5500 | 0 |
To develop a series of correspondence courses in the skills of interpretation that would enable historical organization staff members to improve their job skills and therefore their services to the public without the necessity of leaving their jobs for extended periods of academic training. |
| GM-21867-84 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Interpretation Plan for Van Cortlandt Manor (Planning) | 1/1/1984 - 6/30/1984 | $15,000.00 | Renee | | Friedman | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1983 | History, General | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 15000 | 0 | 15000 | 0 | To support planning for the interpretation of Van Cortlandt Manor during the period, 1790-1810, when the Van Cortlandt family's contribution to the political and social forces shaping the nation were greatest. |
| GM-25241-94 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Under the North Star: Slavery and Emancipation in the North, 1630-1865 | 7/1/1994 - 6/30/1995 | $50,445.00 | Henry | | Joyce | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1994 | U.S. History | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 50445 | 0 | 50445 | 0 | To support planning for a collaborative traveling exhibition, a catalog, and public programs on slavery and emancipation in the North from 1630 to 1865. |
| GM-25757-97 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Reinterpretation of Philipsburg Manor | 9/1/1997 - 8/31/1998 | $40,587.00 | Jennifer | | Anderson-Lawrence | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1997 | U.S. History | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 40587 | 0 | 40000 | 0 | To support planning for the reinterpretation of Philipsburg Manor with emphasison enslaved African Americans, with public programs, interpreters, concerts, museum theater, foodways, demonstrations, and education programs. |
| GM-26135-00 | Public Programs: Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Historic Hudson Valley | Reinterpretation of Philipsburg Manor | 7/1/2000 - 8/31/2003 | $300,008.00 | Kathleen | E. | Johnson | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2000 | U.S. History | Humanities Projects in Museums and Historical Organizations | Public Programs | 300008 | 0 | 300008 | 0 | Implementation of new interpretive tours of an 18th-century mill site, emphasizing the experience of enslaved African Americans who worked there. |
| MD-226669-15 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Discovery Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the North Website | 1/1/2015 - 12/31/2015 | $30,000.00 | Ross | W. | Higgins | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2014 | African American Studies | Digital Projects for the Public: Discovery Grants | Public Programs | 30000 | 0 | 30000 | 0 | Development of a website that explores northern slavery through individual stories that illustrate how enslaved people endured and resisted the institution of slavery.
Historic Hudson Valley's website project will address the history of slavery in the colonial North, with a special focus on individuality and resistance. It is an outgrowth of our NEH-funded reinterpretation of Philipsburg Manor, HHV’s National Historic Landmark in Sleepy Hollow, NY, where we have been presenting the history of northern colonial slavery--and, later, incorporating themes of individuality and resistance--for years. HHV is determined to bring this personalized history online and engage with the public in new, exciting ways. Through Discovery, HHV will: 1) Convene a select group of humanities scholars, museum professionals, education advisors, and digital media experts; 2) Identify, update, and prioritize our humanities content involving northern colonial enslavement and resistance; 3) Determine how content will be structured and presented online to engage a 21st-century audience; and 4) Create a design document that details the fundamental aspects of the website. |
| MD-263929-19 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Discovery Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Cuffee’s Trial: A Digital Graphic Novel | 1/1/2019 - 12/31/2019 | $30,000.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2018 | African American History | Digital Projects for the Public: Discovery Grants | Public Programs | 30000 | 0 | 30000 | 0 | Development
of an interactive digital graphic work of non-fiction examining the 1741 New
York Conspiracy through the trial of Cuffee, an enslaved man.
Historic Hudson Valley (HHV) requests discovery funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to fund the exploratory stages of the creation of a digital graphic novel provisionally titled Cuffee’s Trial. This product will depict the trial, and the historical circumstances surrounding the trial, of Cuffee, an enslaved man accused of conspiracy to commit insurrection in colonial New York. Cuffee, who was among the first of 37 men and women to be tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for what would come to be known as the New York Conspiracy, had a direct connection to Philipsburg Manor, HHV’s National Historic Landmark in Sleepy Hollow, New York. Cuffee’s Trial represents both HHV’s deep expertise in relaying the history of slavery in the north and our commitment to sharing this knowledge extensively through dynamic digital storytelling. The completed digital graphic novel will become part of our constellation of Slavery in the Colonial North digital products. |
| MD-296310-24 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Discovery Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Seen and Heard: Women's Stories of Enslavement and Resistance at Van Cortlandt Manor | 2/1/2024 - 1/31/2026 | $29,700.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2023 | U.S. History | Digital Projects for the Public: Discovery Grants | Public Programs | 29700 | 0 | 29680 | 0 | Development of an immersive, digital experience examining the story of five enslaved women at Van Cortlandt estate and their quest for freedom.
Historic Hudson Valley (HHV) seeks funding to support the exploratory stages of an immersive digital multimedia project that invites visitors into a specific place and time – New York’s Van Cortlandt Manor during the Revolutionary War – and introduces them to Bridget and Jin, two enslaved women who planned to use the chaos of wartime as an opportunity to self-liberate to British lines. Their story, which is grounded in primary documents from HHV’s archives, will serve as the jumping-off point for an exploration of domestic enslavement and resistance at Van Cortlandt Manor from the American Revolution through gradual emancipation acts to the legal abolition of slavery in New York in 1827, using the interior spaces of the manor as its design framework. Through the individual stories of enslaved women, HHV will call attention to the drawn-out process of gradual emancipation in the North and contribute to a greater public understanding of the complicated history of slavery in America. |
| MN-253265-17 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Production Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | People as Property: Stories of Northern Colonial Enslavement | 1/1/2017 - 12/31/2018 | $400,000.00 | Ross | W. | Higgins | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2016 | African American History | Digital Projects for the Public: Production Grants | Public Programs | 400000 | 0 | 400000 | 0 | Production of a website exploring slavery in the colonial North with a focus on the individual stories of enslaved people at Philipsburg Manor, an eighteenth-century historic plantation site.
Historic Hudson Valley (HHV) requests NEH support for the production of a website titled People as Property: Stories of Northern Colonial Enslavement. The site will shed light on the often overlooked history of slavery in the colonial North with a special focus on individual stories as a means to personalize the past. This project is an outgrowth of the NEH-funded reinterpretation of Philipsburg Manor, HHV’s National Historic Landmark in Sleepy Hollow, NY. Probate inventories, runaway slave ads, legal and court documents, slave narratives, and other primary sources related to northern slaveholdings serve as entry points for exploring the human dimensions of slavery. Philipsburg Manor stands as the primary case study augmented by content from several noteworthy historic sites, libraries, academic institutions, and historical societies in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. |
| MN-284737-22 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Production Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Kofi's Trial: A Digital Graphic History | 3/1/2022 - 8/31/2024 | $399,058.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2021 | African American History | Digital Projects for the Public: Production Grants | Public Programs | 399058 | 0 | 399058 | 0 | Production of an interactive graphic history examining the trial of Kofi, the enslaved accused leader of the 1741 New York Conspiracy.
Historic Hudson Valley requests a grant to produce an interactive digital graphic history titled Kofi’s Trial. At this critical moment in history, when people are hungry for accurate, historical resources to help them understand the national conversation about racial inequality, Kofi’s Trial will be a powerful tool to tell the difficult, complex history of slavery in the colonial North. Kofi’s Trial will focus on the 1741 insurrection plot that became known as the New York Conspiracy. Users will be able to walk the streets that Kofi traveled, meet people in his community, see the injustices Kofi and others faced, consider the options the enslaved had for resistance and survival, and hear the actual courtroom testimony. They will have the resources to grapple with conflicting ideas of slavery and agency in colonial America, and to understand the uneasy relationship between justice and resistance. |
| MP-50016-06 | Public Programs: Museums Planning | Historic Hudson Valley | American Arcadia: People, Landscape, and Nature at Montgomery Place | 5/1/2006 - 4/30/2007 | $40,000.00 | Margaret | | Vetare | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2006 | Museum Studies or Historical Preservation | Museums Planning | Public Programs | 40000 | 0 | 40000 | 0 | Planning to develop a reinterpretation of Montgomery Place, a National Historic Landmark in the Hudson Valley, exploring the changing relationships among people, landscape, and nature.
Historic Hudson Valley proposes a reinterpretation of Montgomery Place, a National Historic Landmark in Annandale, NY, that focuses on the changing relationship between people, landscape, and nature over time. Consulting scholars will help develop themes such as the function of the arts in conveying cultural attitudes toward the land, the role of wilderness in the American consciousness, and the influence of women in shaping the landscape. Scholars will advise on integrating the estate’s extensive landscape into the visitor experience. By interpreting the actions of a variety of individuals who populated the estate between 1800 and 1950, we will bring a historical perspective to the conversation on humanity and nature in America. |
| MT-234084-16 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Prototyping Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Slavery in the North Website Project | 1/1/2016 - 12/31/2016 | $100,000.00 | Ross | W. | Higgins | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2015 | Public History | Digital Projects for the Public: Prototyping Grants | Public Programs | 100000 | 0 | 100000 | 0 | The prototyping phase of a website on the exploration of the history of slavery in the north during the colonial period.
Historic Hudson Valley is requesting $100,000 to develop a prototype that demonstrates the humanities ideas, digital technology, and public outreach for an online interactive documentary tentatively titled Slavery in the North. The website will shed light on the history of slavery in the colonial North, with a focus on individual stories as a means to personalize the past. Continuing our successful collaboration with design firm C&G Partners and evaluation firm ExposeYourMuseum, HHV will use the Prototyping grant to: 1) Consult with humanities scholars, museum professionals, education advisors, and multi-media storytellers; 2) Compile and expand upon content relating to all northern colonies; 3) Refine the website structure and user experience; 4) Develop scripts and digitize selected assets; 5) Develop a website prototype; 6) Test and evaluate the user experience; and 7) Finalize the website design and technical specifications for Production. |
| MT-268897-20 | Public Programs: Digital Projects for the Public: Prototyping Grants | Historic Hudson Valley | Cuffee's Trial: A Digital Graphic History | 3/1/2020 - 2/28/2022 | $100,000.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2019 | U.S. History | Digital Projects for the Public: Prototyping Grants | Public Programs | 100000 | 0 | 100000 | 0 | Prototyping
of an interactive digital history on the New York Conspiracy trials (1741), in
which both enslaved people and poor white New Yorkers stood accused of plotting
to burn the city and murder its white inhabitants.
Historic Hudson Valley (HHV) requests funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to develop a prototype of a digital graphic history provisionally titled Cuffee’s Trial. This product will depict the trial of Cuffee, an enslaved man accused of conspiracy to commit arson and insurrection in colonial New York. Cuffee, who was among the first of 37 men and women to be tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for what became known as the New York Conspiracy, was the property of Adolph Philipse, the proprietor of Philipsburg Manor, a provisioning plantation that HHV now maintains as a National Historic Landmark in Sleepy Hollow, New York. Cuffee’s Trial represents both HHV’s deep expertise in relaying the history of northern colonial slavery, and our commitment to sharing this knowledge extensively through dynamic digital storytelling. The digital graphic history will become part of our constellation of “Slavery in the Colonial North” digital products. |
| PH-20548-92 | Preservation and Access: National Heritage Preservation Projects | Historic Hudson Valley | Documentation and Computerization of the Historic Hudson Valley Collections | 1/1/1992 - 6/30/1996 | $50,000.00 | Kathleen | E. | Johnson | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1991 | U.S. History | National Heritage Preservation Projects | Preservation and Access | 50000 | 0 | 50000 | 0 | To support documentation and computerization of the historic Hudson Valley collections. |
| RP-*1911-80 | Research: Scholarly Publications | Historic Hudson Valley | THE VAN CORTLANDT FAMILY PAPERS, VOLUME IV, Edited by Jacob Judd | 9/1/1980 - 5/31/1981 | $2,000.00 | Saverio | | Procario | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1980 | History, General | Scholarly Publications | Research | 2000 | 0 | 2000 | 0 | To support publication of "The Van Cortlandt Family Papers, Volume IV: Correspondence of the Van Cortlandt Family of Cortlandt Manor, 1814-1848," part of a series of family correspondence and business papers from 1748-1848 of particular interest to New York State historians. |
| RP-10045-78 | Research: Scholarly Publications | Historic Hudson Valley | Van Cortlandt Family Papers: Volume III, Edited by Jacob Judd | 3/1/1978 - 11/30/1978 | $3,500.00 | Saverio | | Procario | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 1978 | Interdisciplinary Studies, General | Scholarly Publications | Research | 3500 | 0 | 3500 | 0 |
To bring out the 3rd and last vol. in a 3-vol. series of edited papers of the Van Cortlandt Family. These papers consist of letters and a memoir. |
| ZPP-284212-22 | Agency-wide Projects: ARP-Organizations (Public-related) | Historic Hudson Valley | Invisible Women: Telling the Untold Stories at New York's Philipsburg and Van Cortlandt Manors | 1/1/2022 - 6/30/2023 | $367,643.00 | Elizabeth | L. | Bradley | | | | Historic Hudson Valley | Tarrytown | NY | 10591-1203 | USA | 2021 | African American History | ARP-Organizations (Public-related) | Agency-wide Projects | 367643 | 0 | 367643 | 0 | The creation of a digital programs for children about the experiences of enslaved and free women in colonial and post-Revolutionary America, focused on the properties of Historic Hudson Valley; retention of six jobs, creation of one new position, and restoration of 20 part-time positions.
HHV requests a grant to hire and train staff and interpreters who will create and sustain a live, digital school program about the experiences of enslaved and free women in colonial and post-Revolutionary America. These virtual field trips, designed with meaningful input from educator and student evaluators, build on the success of our award-winning NEH-funded documentary People Not Property: Stories of Slavery in the Colonial North. Invisible Women seeks to flip the traditional narrative, one based on documents that marginalize the presence of mothers, wives, and daughters, not to mention skilled female laborers and entrepreneurs. It would provide opportunities to amplify voices that are rarely heard and showcase contrasting experiences that offer a profound and complicated portrait of a nation in progress. The grant would allow HHV to address the pandemic-driven demand for online engagement in the humanities and sustain HHV as a critical educational resource. |