2022 Ohio History Fund Grants Announced March 1

For Immediate Release
March 2, 2022
Contact: Jerry Dannemiller
614.975.0946
[email protected]

Ohio History Fund Grant Recipients Announced on Statehood Day, March 1
Grant Program Funded through Voluntary Donations by Ohioans

(COLUMBUS, OH)— The Ohio History Connection is pleased to announce that it has awarded 18 Ohio History Fund grants to community history organizations, a record setting number. Now in its 10th year, the Ohio History Fund is a competitive matching grants program that is one of six “tax check-off” funds found on Ohio’s income tax return forms. It’s funded entirely through Ohio taxpayers’ voluntary contributions.

“The Ohio History Fund allows us to preserve and share Ohio stories by supporting history projects all over the state,” said Burt Logan, Executive Director & CEO of the Ohio History Connection. “Local history helps us understand where we came from and gives us a sense of identity and place, inspiring pride in our communities.”

The Ohio History Connection awarded $207,100 in grants this year, also a recording breaking number. Since the program started in 2012, the Ohio History Fund has made a total of 110 grants to history and cultural organizations all across the state totaling $1,076,760.

Auglaize County Historical Society, Wapakoneta
$18,864 for “Repairing the Wapakoneta Museum.” The grant will support repairs to the building’s masonry exterior and replace a roof on a rear addition. The museum started life as the First Presbyterian Church in 1862 and is an example of Greek Revival-style architecture, a rare type in west-central Ohio. Acquired by the society in 1997, the building was converted into a museum and protects irreplaceable artifact collections and exhibits of local history. The museum is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation will govern the repair work.

Bowling Green State University-Office of Sponsored Programs and Research, Bowling Green
$16,000 for “Trailblazing Women in Ohio Politics: Public Engagement with a Documentary & Oral History Collection.” “Trailblazing Women in Ohio Politics” is a documentary that tells the story of Democratic and Republican women who broke electoral barriers beginning in the 1960s. With a grant from the History Fund, BGSU will create a website to extend the reach of the production and conduct additional oral history interviews with trailblazing women office holders.

Burchfield Homestead Society, Salem
$3,300 for “Burchfield Homestead Exterior Painting Project” The home of noted artist Charles Burchfield (1893-1967) needs a new coat of paint, as well as fresh caulking around its windows. Burchfield’s imaginative renderings of his modest Salem home, garden, and surrounding areas are featured in many public and private collections. Preserving the house as Burchfield would recognize it is critical to telling his story and understanding his art. The house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation will guide the work.

Chagrin Falls Historical Society, Chagrin Falls
$3,700 for “Digitizing The Exponent (1894-1903), the Newspaper for Chagrin Falls and Vicinity.” Newsprint in fragile and The Exponent is sole primary written source of the early cultural and industrial history of the Chagrin Falls and its neighboring communities. The project will microfilm and digitize 4,160 pages of The Exponent from 1894- 1903 and make them widely accessible to genealogists, other historical organizations, researchers, educators, students, and the public through Ohio Memory. The project will comply with standards set by Ohio Memory and the National Digital Newspaper Program.

Champaign Aviation Museum, Urbana
$2,337 for “Champaign Aviation Museum Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) of WWII Video Display.” As a part of its exhibit about the WASPs of WWII, the museum create a wall-mounted video display to show archival footage about their service and experiences. The footage is yet another way the museum can raise visitors’ awareness of WASP’s contributions to the war effort. Grant funds will support the purchase of a video monitor and associated equipment.

Cincinnati Preservation Association, Cincinnati
$15,000 for “Sites of Black History of Greater Cincinnati: Finding, Celebrating, and Preserving.”  The project will take steps to document sites associated with African American history in Cincinnati. Stories from the Black community and sites associated with it have yet to be documented as thoroughly as others, but are essential to developing a truer understanding of the city’s history. Part of the first phase of a multiphase project, grant funds will support the salary of a qualified historian to conduct research and identify sites.

CityWide Neighborhood Development Corporation, Dayton
$12,750 for “The History of Lakeside Amusement Park.” The project will present the history of Lakeside Amusement Park and its later iteration, a concert venue known as the Palladium, by fabricating and installing five interpretative signs at Lakeside Park. The project is another step in restoring a once thriving amenity back into a park for the enjoyment of West Dayton residents and others looking to learn more about Dayton’s history. Grant funds will support the time of a researcher to write content and pay costs for making and installing the signs.

Darke County Park District, Greenville
$15,860 for “4th Grade Pioneer Day.” The grant will finance the first two years of an annual Pioneer Day field trip to every fourth grader in Darke County, approximately 500 students. Each will experience history–change over time–by completing various simulated early nineteenth century hands-on activities. The program will take place in the setting of Bear’s Mill, a site on the National Register of Historic Places. Activities, led by volunteers supervised by park district staff, will be reinforce content standards for state history in Ohio Department of Education’s 4th grade standards for social studies.

Kent State University, Kent
$16,000 for “Liquid Crystal Oral History Project.” Computer screens, TVs, and digital watches are among thousands of objects using liquid crystal technology today. This project will preserve the experiences of the field’s pioneers by recording oral histories with approximately 20 faculty and alumni of Kent State University’s Liquid Crystal Institute. Audio files and transcripts of interviews will be available on the website of the university’s Special Collections and Archives. Best practices for digital humanities from the American Historical Association and standards in the Federal Agencies Digital Guidelines Initiative will govern the project.

Lakeside Heritage Society, Lakeside
$2,157 for “Lakeside Heritage Society Archives Rehousing Project.” This compact project will arrange, rehouse and describe three historically significant collections in the society’s archives: local newspapers, a 35mm slide collection, and local plat maps and blueprints. Photographs from the application show that the projects is needed and that society’s new archives building in an optimal place to keep the rehoused collections. The society’s professionally-trained staff archivist will supervise volunteers, who will organize the collections and create publicly accessible finding aids.

Licking County Foundation, Newark
$19,000 for “Restoring the 1915 Wall and Ceiling Murals in Louis Sullivan Building of Newark: Substrate Repair.” The Foundation is restoring Newark’s “Home Building Association” building, the sixth of eight Midwest “jewel box” banks that influential architect Louis Sullivan (1856-1924) designed late in his career. The restoration of the building has been a multiyear effort, with the restoration of the exterior celebrated in 2020. Attention is now focused on the interior. The History Fund grant will offset the cost of plaster substrate repair essential to the conservation of the 1914-15 hand-stenciled murals on the first floor’s wall and ceilings, the defining historic feature. The building is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and, as they have from the beginning of the restoration, the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation will guide the work.

Mac-A-Cheek Foundation for the Humanities, West Liberty
$4,000 for “Strengthening Visitor and Member Engagement.” The Foundation operates the site Piatt Castle Mac-A-Cheek and management is transitioning from the Piatt Family to a new executive director and board. To help them make good decisions, they need good data. Grant funds will support the work of a coordinator to set up new data gathering and management systems and equipment, and partially support board training in fundraising. Under the direction of an experienced consultant, the board will begin to integrate the site’s membership, marketing, and public programming functions to strengthen member and visitor engagement.

Marion County Federation of Women’s Clubs, Inc., Marion
$6,250 for “Marion Women’s Club Home Interior Plaster and Painting Restoration.” The project will repair interior plaster and paint ceilings on the home’s second and third floors, making overall progress towards preserving the structure’s historic character. Once completed, the work will enable the Club to showcase the work of women to reform the community throughout its history, as well as open more space for the other organizations and initiatives the organization hosts. The home is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and restoration efforts will be governed by the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation.

Miamisburg Historical Society, Miamisburg
$5,316 for “Humidity Control, Archival Storage, and Preservation of Artifact Collection.” The project’s goal is to improve environmental conditions in the Miamisburg History Center archive storage room and exhibit galleries, and to rehouse in archival-quality containers objects from the 17,000 item collection not already well stored. Experienced members of the society’s all-volunteer staff who moved the society’s collection into its new History Center in 2019 will lead the work.

National Aviation Hall of Fame, Dayton
$16,000 for “Discovering Flight: Learning with the NAHF Phase II.” The project will fund in part the production of a film that will engage visitors in learning about the Hall’s honoree’s contributions to American aviation history. The film is a part of a larger effort to revise the organization’s exhibits. The grant will support the pay costs associated with making the film.

Overfield Tavern Museum, Troy
$20,000 for “Overfield Tavern Museum Phase 2B Repairs.” As the title suggests, work funded by the grant is part of larger effort to preserve the tavern, built in 1808. This project will install replacement wood siding over damaged areas. The project will also repair trim around windows and doors and repaint the tavern in historically accurate colors. The site is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and the work will meet the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties. The museum’s director, a professionally trained and experienced historic preservationist and archaeologist, will oversee the project.

Playhouse Square Foundation, Cleveland
$16,000 for “Playhouse Square Archives Digitization Project.” As a part of Playhouse Square’s centennial in 2021-2022, the organization will establish a dedicated archives to preserve its history and make it available to researchers and the public. The foundation will collaborate with the experienced staff of Cleveland Public Library and others to inventory, index, catalog, and digitize select items from Playhouse Square’s archives. Members of the History Fund review panel noted that this project, successfully executed, will set an example for other arts institutions to assiduously preserve the materials of their histories.

Zoar Community Association, Zoar
$14,500 for “Town Hall Redevelopment Project.” The Town Hall Museum is the sole exhibit area for the ZCA’s collections of Zoar and Ohio & Erie Canal artifacts and photographs. The building is also the location of association’s archives. The first phase of the Town Hall Redevelopment Project, supported by the grant, will include the installation of a “Best of Zoar” exhibit. The exhibit will create a streamlined introduction to Zoar for visitors and serve as the impetus for further efforts to reorganize and reinterpret the association’s collections. The Standards & Excellence Program of American Association for State & Local History will guide the work.

###

Ohio History Fund
The Ohio History Fund creates grants to help support local history and preservation-related projects in communities throughout Ohio. It’s funded by Ohio taxpayers that select “Ohio History Fund” as a donation fund on their state tax returns. For just the average donation of $11-12, you can help repair a roof on a historic home, expand a popular history tour at a local museum, preserve the stories of Ohio veterans, and provide public access to rare museum collections.  For more information about the History Fund grant program, visit ohiohistory.org/historyfund or contact our State Historic Preservation Office at [email protected].

Ohio History Connection
The Ohio History Connection, formerly the Ohio Historical Society, is a statewide history organization with the mission to spark discovery of Ohio’s stories. As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization chartered in 1885, the Ohio History Connection carries out history services for Ohio and its citizens focused on preserving and sharing the state’s history. This includes housing the state historic preservation office, the official state archives, local history office and managing more than 50 historic sites and museums across Ohio.

###

Posted March 2, 2022

Subscribe to Our Blogs