From National Trust for Historic Preservation <[email protected]>
Subject Six Historic Sites That Help Make Meaning of Difficult History
Date June 25, 2020 1:51 PM
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Plus, inside the lives of three iconic women.
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RACIAL INJUSTICE, PRESERVATION, AND PLACE: A JUNETEENTH REFLECTION
Done right, historic places can foster real healing, true equity, and a
validation of all Americans and their history. These six sites (four of which
received grants from the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund)
acknowledge human suffering and struggles, help visitors to make meaning of
difficult history, and offer a venue for public discourse about the future and
how we must act in it.

READ MORE
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“Preservation is a path to narrative – who lived here, what happened here, why
is this stone wall here. The questions and the answers they seek continue; for
without preservation how do we know our story? This quest to understand is key
to our humanity.” – Mr. Chuck A.

After an unprecedented start to 2020, we are urgently raising $30,000 to start a
new fiscal year strong and ensure we can preserve America’s historic places in
the months and years to come.

GIVE NOW
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RETRACE THE JOURNEY OF AMERICA’S FIRST FEMALE REPRESENTATIVE OF COLOR
As a politician and lawyer, Patsy Takemoto Mink broke ground both in her state
of Hawaii and across the nation. This guide demonstrates how her visionary
policies catalyzed change for educational advocacy, Asian American
representation, and gender equity across the nation.

EXPLORE
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A NUMBER OF HISTORIC HOTELS OF AMERICA ARE SET TO REOPEN
In March 2020, nearly 150 historic hotels closed their doors in order to curb
the spread of the coronavirus. Now, more than 102 of these hotels have reopened
or are scheduled to reopen by July 4, 2020, with new sanitation guidelines in
place to ensure guest safety. Download the Historic Hotels of America’s new 2020–2021 directory
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information on how each hotel is responding to the coronavirus, please visit
their websites directly.

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EDUCATION SAFE HAVENS: 3 LGBT SITES IN NEW YORK CITY
Humble spaces such as warehouses, community rooms, bars, and cafes have played
critical roles in the history of the LGBT civil rights movement. In New York
City, the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project is documenting this underrepresented
history and working to see that worthy sites receive the formal recognition they
deserve.

LEARN MORE
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WOMEN’S HISTORY, HERE AND NOW: INSIDE THE LIVES OF 3 ICONIC WOMEN
The centennial of women’s suffrage in the U.S. is serving as an impetus for
historic sites to answer this question: “Where are the women?” In this Preservation magazine feature, we've highlighted the lives of three extraordinary
women—Pauli Murray, Harriet Tubman, and Frances Perkins—and the places most
connected with them.

DISCOVER
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© National Trust for Historic Preservation
2600 Virginia Avenue NW, Suite 1100, Washington, DC 20037
202.588.6000 | 800.944.6847 | 202.588.6038 (fax)

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