NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--American Express (NYSE:AXP) and The National Trust for Historic Preservation, in collaboration with Main Street America, announced today that their annual Partners in Preservation campaign is headed back to Main Street with a focus on sites that celebrate diversity and the fight for equality.
Partners in Preservation is a community-based partnership created in 2006 to engage the public in preserving historic places. To-date, it has committed over $22 million in support of more than 200 historic sites across the country. Drawing on the success of the 2017 program, this year the campaign will award $2 million in grants to historic sites on America’s Main Streets. From the counters of the Greensboro sit-ins to the “Ellis Island of the South” in Miami, each of the 20 sites featured in the campaign played a role in the development of a diverse nation or the struggle for equal rights.
“At American Express, diversity and inclusion are at the heart of our culture,” said Richard Brown, vice president of philanthropy, American Express. “We’re thrilled to unite our long-standing commitment to historic preservation and the Shop Small® movement to celebrate the histories of the diverse communities and cultures that have shaped and continue to enrich our Main Streets.”
“When we tell America’s full history, we shift the conversation about who we are as a country and where we are going,” said Germonique Ulmer, vice president of public affairs, National Trust for Historic Preservation. “Whether it’s the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, the Women’s Building in San Francisco, or the many other diverse places participating in this year’s Partners in Preservation program, they offer us an opportunity both to learn the stories of our collective past and to create spaces for community empowerment for generations to come.”
Beginning today through October 26, the public can vote for their favorite Partners in Preservation: Main Street at VoteYourMainStreet.org, hosted by media partner National Geographic. In addition, the public will also have an opportunity to enter a sweepstakes for a chance to win a trip to our nation’s capital at the close of the campaign, sponsored by National Geographic. Delta Air Lines is also joining as a campaign sponsor for the second year in a row.
The historic sites with the most votes will receive a share of $2 million in preservation funding. Winners will be announced on October 29.
Partners in Preservation: Main Streets seeks to inspire long-term support from local citizens for sites on Main Street. Each local partner is receiving an initial grant of $20,000 to increase public awareness of the importance of these historic places and build grassroots support for their Main Street district.
For more information and to vote daily through October 26, the public is encouraged to visit VoteYourMainStreet.org.
The 20 cities with sites in contention for Partners in Preservation: Main Streets grants include:
Birmingham, AL
Sixteenth
Street Baptist Church
Local
Organization: Sixteenth Street Baptist Church
In 1963, the
Sixteenth Street Baptist Church was the target of the infamous, racially
motivated bombing in which four young girls were killed. It still
functions as a house of worship and gathering space, as well as a
tourist destination. This project will complete the restoration of the
church’s historic windows, cupola and bell towers installed in 1911.
Nogales, AZ
Foxworth-Galbraith
Lumber Co.
Local Organization:
Nogales Community Development Corporation
Built between 1917
and 1920, the Foxworth-Galbraith Lumber Co. building was an anchor
during the town’s economic heyday and represents the history of
U.S./Mexico business and community relationships in Arizona. This
project will restore the building as a multi-purpose incubator and
co-working space to help spur small business entrepreneurship.
Los Angeles, CA
The
Church of the Epiphany
Local
Organization: The Epiphany Conservation Trust
A birthplace of
the Chicano Movement in the 1960s, the Church of the Epiphany was a hub
for the Mexican immigrant community. This project will repair the roof
and rehabilitate the church basement.
San Francisco, CA
The
Women’s Building
Local Organization:
San Francisco Women’s Centers
The Women’s Building became the
first woman-owned and operated community center in 1979. The site now
welcomes 25,000 clients and visitors each year. This project will
retrofit its 108-year old windows so the building can continue to
connect women and their families to social services, arts, wellness and
educational events.
Leadville, CO
The
Tabor Opera House
Local Organization:
City of Leadville
Built in 1879, during an era of tremendous
migration and immigration, the Tabor Opera House stands today as a
reminder of Leadville’s diverse past that parallels the story of
equality. This project will rehabilitate two of the opera house’s
facades, helping it to serve as a mixed-use cultural center for locals
and tourists alike.
Miami, FL
The
Freedom Tower
Local Organization:
Miami Dade College
The Freedom Tower, known as the “Ellis
Island of the South,” provided medical, housing and financial support to
Cuban Refugees from 1962 to 1974. This project will renovate the Cuban
Exile Exhibit and Museum of Art and Design housed in the Freedom Tower.
Chicago, IL
Bronzeville
Cookin’
Local Organization: 51st
Street Business Association
Bronzeville Cookin’ is located on
Chicago’s South Side, an economic hub during the Great Migration. It is
a developing, unique dining destination and culinary incubator
celebrating African American cuisines, cultures, and communities. This
project will renovate the building’s facade in order to catalyze reuse
of the facility, transform the retail district and continue to help
revitalize the community at large.
Boston, MA
Roslindale
Congregational Church, UCC
Main
Street Organization: Roslindale Village Main Street
The
Roslindale Congregational Church, UCC, located in an extremely diverse
neighborhood of Boston, is historic for its progressive commitment to
equality. The project will build an accessible bathroom and an elevator
to provide better access to those with disabilities.
Baltimore, MD
The
Arch Social Club
Local Organization:
Upton Planning Committee: Pennsylvania Avenue Main Street
Founded
in 1905, the Arch Social Club is one of the oldest, continuously
operating African American men's social clubs in the U.S. This project
will restore the historic marquee and install exterior lighting to help
launch a new arts and entertainment district.
Biddeford, ME
City
Hall Clock Tower
Local Organization:
Heart of Biddeford
In a mill town that drew immigrants from
around the world, the City Hall Clock Tower called mill workers to their
shifts and welcomed a diverse community downtown. This project will
restore the clock and rebuild four faces of decorative work outside the
clock room.
Pontiac, MI
GM
Modern Housing Legacy Homes
Local
Organization: Community Foundation of Greater Rochester/Main Street
Oakland County
From 1919 to 1926, General Motors built 261
affordable houses for Pontiac workers, where generations of diverse
residents lived side by side. This project will renovate and restore the
exteriors of several homes that are currently threatened with demolition.
Butte, MT
Wah
Chong Tai Mercantile and Mai Wah Noodle Parlor
Local Organization: Mainstreet Uptown Butte, Inc.
Constructed
in 1899 and 1909 respectively, the Wah Chong Tai building and Mai Wah
Noodle Parlor, both owned by the Chinn family, were once a mercantile
and eatery for the Chinese immigrants who helped build the City of
Butte. This project will restore the south facade and roof of the
building, which is now maintained by the Mai Wah Society as a museum to
honor and preserve the Chinese heritage in southwestern Montana.
Greensboro, NC
International
Civil Rights Center & Museum
Local
Organization: International Civil Rights Center & Museum
The
International Civil Rights Center & Museum is the site of the 1960
Greensboro sit-ins, where four black college students sat down at a
“whites-only” lunch counter as a form of protest. The project will
include the installation of window shades and corrections to the HVAC
system and hardware to provide a more comfortable environment for the
public and help serve the museum’s commitment to environmental
protection.
New York, NY
Main
Court of the Hispanic Society of America
Local
Organization: The Hispanic Society Museum & Library
The
Hispanic Society Museum & Library was founded in 1904 to establish a
free museum and research library for the study of the arts and cultures
of Spain and Latin America. This project will improve access within the
galleries and overall visitor experience.
Seneca Falls, NY
National
Women’s Hall of Fame
Local
Organization: National Women’s Hall of Fame
Founded in the
birthplace of America Women’s Rights Movement and the location of the
first Women’s Rights Convention in 1848, the National Women’s Hall of
Fame was established to permanently recognize women who make
history. This project will relocate the hall of fame to the 1844 Seneca
Knitting Mill to address the vital need of preserving and disseminating
the stories of successful and important women throughout U.S. history.
Memphis, TN
Clayborn
Temple
Local Organization: Clayborn
Reborn
The site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. joined 1,300
striking sanitation workers in what would be his final march, Clayborn
Temple serves as an iconic symbol of the unification of the civil and
labor rights movements. This project will restore Clayborn’s prominent
bell tower, which has been closed due to unsafe conditions.
San Marcos, TX
Historic
First Baptist Church
Local
Organization: City of San Marcos
Constructed in 1908, the Old
First Baptist Church was once a meeting place for the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People. This project will
support renovation of the historic First Baptist Church, located in the
Dunbar neighborhood.
Salt Lake City, UT
New
Hope Community Center
Local
Organization: Earth Community Garden & Food Pantry
With
construction starting in the late 1800s, and completed in 1902, the New
Hope Community Center was a former historic church and later the
headquarters and studio for the hit TV series “Touched by an Angel.”
This project will adapt the historic church into a full-time community
center, including a business incubator, public kitchen and community
garden.
Danville, VA
Union
Street, Danville, VA
Local
Organization: Downtown Danville Association DBA River District
Association
From the early 1900s through the Civil Rights
Movement and beyond, Union Street was first a thriving tobacco warehouse
district, and then a mecca for black businesses and entrepreneurship.
This project will restore two storefronts to foster continued
entrepreneurship and create space for celebrating the area’s civil
rights history.
Kent, WA
Historic
Morrill Bank
Local Organization: Kent
Downtown Partnership
The Morrill Bank Building is a
112-year-old historic landmark in downtown Kent, which once featured a
tall entry, arched window and clinker brick. This project will restore
the building to its 1924 appearance.
About Partners in Preservation
Partners
in Preservation is a program in which American Express, in partnership
with the National Trust for Historic Preservation, awards preservation
grants to historic places across the country.
Through this partnership, American Express and the National Trust for Historic Preservation seek to increase the public's awareness of the importance of historic preservation in the United States and to preserve America's historic and cultural places. The program also hopes to inspire long-term support from local citizens for the historic places at the heart of their communities.
About American Express
American
Express is a globally integrated payments company, providing customers
with access to products, insights and experiences that enrich lives and
build business success. Learn more at americanexpress.com
and connect with us on facebook.com/americanexpress,
instagram.com/americanexpress,
linkedin.com/company/american-express,
twitter.com/americanexpress,
and youtube.com/americanexpress.
Key links to products, services and corporate responsibility information: charge and credit cards, business credit cards, travel services, gift cards, prepaid cards, merchant services, Accertify, InAuth, corporate card, business travel, and corporate responsibility.
About the National Trust for Historic
Preservation
The National Trust for Historic
Preservation, a privately funded nonprofit organization, works to save
America’s historic places: www.savingplaces.org.
About Main Street America
Main
Street America has been helping revitalize older and historic commercial
districts for more than 35 years. Today it is a network of more than
1,600 neighborhoods and communities, rural and urban, who share both a
commitment to place and to building stronger communities through
preservation-based economic development. Main Street America is a
program of the nonprofit National Main Street Center, Inc., a subsidiary
of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. www.mainstreet.org
About National Geographic Partners LLC
National Geographic Partners LLC (NGP), a joint venture
between National Geographic and 21st Century Fox, is committed to
bringing the world premium science, adventure and exploration content
across an unrivaled portfolio of media assets. NGP combines the global
National Geographic television channels (National Geographic Channel,
Nat Geo WILD, Nat Geo MUNDO, Nat Geo PEOPLE) with National Geographic’s
media and consumer-oriented assets, including National Geographic
magazines; National Geographic studios; related digital and social media
platforms; books; maps; children’s media; and ancillary activities that
include travel, global experiences and events, archival sales, licensing
and e-commerce businesses. Furthering knowledge and understanding of our
world has been the core purpose of National Geographic for 130 years,
and now we are committed to going deeper, pushing boundaries, going
further for our consumers … and reaching millions of people around the
world in 172 countries and 43 languages every month as we do it. NGP
returns 27 percent of our proceeds to the nonprofit National Geographic
Society to fund work in the areas of science, exploration, conservation
and education. For more information visit natgeotv.com
or nationalgeographic.com/, or find us on Facebook,
Twitter,
Instagram,
YouTube,
LinkedIn
and Pinterest.
About Shop Small®
Shop Small®
is a nationwide movement to support small, independent businesses and
call attention to the valuable and distinct contributions they make to
their communities and the economy. Shop Small celebrates small
businesses ranging from retail stores and restaurants to fitness studios
and salons, and everything in between. The Shop Small movement was
spurred by the widespread participation in Small Business Saturday®, a
day founded in 2010 by American Express. This national holiday shopping
tradition is dedicated to celebrating small businesses and driving more
customers through their doors on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.
November 24, 2018 marks the ninth annual Small Business Saturday,
proudly backed by American Express. Learn more and connect with us on ShopSmall.com, instagram.com/shopsmall, facebook.com/SmallBusinessSaturday.