Community Preservation Grants

Honoring Organizations in Every New England State

Historic New England’s Herbert and Louise Whitney Fund for Community Preservation annually awards Community Preservation Grants to small to mid-sized organizations across New England who save and share the diverse histories of their communities.

We believe partnerships among preservation organizations strengthen our collective efforts and highlight historic preservation as a catalyst for sustainable communities.

Applications for 2026 open on May 1, 2026 and close on June 30, 2026.
Read the program guidelines and apply.

Herbert and Louise Whitney Fund for Community Preservation
The endowment fund that supports the Community Preservation Grants Program is named in honor of Herbert and Louise Whitney to recognize their deep appreciation and love of all things New England, in particular the Bishop family farm in North Woodstock, Connecticut.

2025 Community Preservation Grant Winners

These Organizations Received $1,250 Grants

Connecticut

This grant supported the 2025–26 winter issue of Connecticut Explored, whose readership includes 3,200 subscribers and more than 5,400 newsletter readers. It helped cover writer honoraria as well as material costs for the Sitelines column, which is dedicated to historic preservation. This issue focused on preserving oral histories from marginalized and underrepresented communities.

Maine

The Camden Public Library Fund worked with the Wabanaki Nation to share accurate narratives about their history in the Midcoast region. The library updated its timeline exhibit, which spans several halls of the building and previously began in 1861, to include stories of how Indigenous people summered on the coast, portaged inland in birchbark canoes, and wintered further inland. The revised exhibit honors the presence of the region’s first peoples and addresses what had been an incomplete and exclusionary timeline.

Massachusetts

The Chappaquiddick Tribe of the Wampanoag Indian Nation hosted two in-person and livestreamed events at their office in New Bedford. These free programs were open to the public and focused on sharing tribal culture and traditions. Grant funds supported the creation of both in-person and digital information packets for these interactive workshops.

New Hampshire

In collaboration with students from New England College, the Henniker Historical Society & Museum researched each of the thirteen historic district (elementary) schools that once served the town’s 1,500 residents. The students’ work informed a community publication and formed the basis for an exhibit at the Society’s museum. The grant also supported a narrated community tour visiting each of the thirteen school sites, as well as the development of a storyboard used by a videographer to produce a short documentary on their history and impact.

Rhode Island

Preserve Rhode Island’s Lippitt House Museum expanded its Civics Program for adult English language learners and developed a shareable exhibition video titled Stories of Immigration. The project invited recent immigrants to Rhode Island to reflect on their personal experiences and journeys, alongside interviews with multigenerational Rhode Islanders who shared their family migration histories and their impact today. The video serves as a cornerstone of the museum’s 2026 semiquincentennial programming, celebrating the people who make up America—past and present.

Vermont

The Old Stone House Museum & Historic Village purchased display cases to showcase Native American objects and photographs, placing them within the museum’s existing narratives of military expansion, railroads, and cultural tourism. In collaboration with Indigenous voices, a new exhibit was developed to examine Native American crafts as expressions of survival, adaptation, and memory. The exhibition also addresses the legacies of conquest, the endurance of creativity, and a shared responsibility to tell a more complete and inclusive history.

Past Community Preservation Grant Winners

2024 Community Preservation Grants

2023 Community Preservation Grants

2022 Community Preservation Grants

2021 Community Preservation Grants

2020 Community Preservation Grants

2019 Community Preservation Grants

2018 Community Preservation Grants

2017 Community Preservation Grants

2016 Community Preservation Grants

2015 Community Preservation Grants

2014 Community Preservation Grants

2013 Community Preservation Grants

2012 Community Preservation Grants

2011 Community Preservation Grants

More to Explore

Explore our Everyone’s History series, telling stories from twentieth-century New England.

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Explore Historic New England’s Collections Access database.

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Visit Historic New England’s museum properties.

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