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Saturday, November 16, 2024

LINCOLN UNIVERSITY: Lincoln University receives $500,000 grant for campus preservation

Grant

Lincoln University issued the following announcement.

Lincoln University has received a $500,000 grant from the National Park Service through the African-American Civil Rights Grant Program. Lincoln University will use the funds to renovate Amos House, which will then serve as a Heritage Center that contains historic memorabilia related to the founding of the institution.

Amos House, which is located near the corner of Baltimore Pike and Ashmun Avenue, will be renovated with $500,000 from the National Park Service’s African-American Civil Rights Grant Program. After renovations, Amos House will serve as a Heritage Center that houses historic memorabilia related to the founding of the institution.

“Lincoln University remains committed to preserving the legacy of our campus and its infrastructure by investing in historic preservation and telling our story,” said Dr. Brenda A. Allen, president of Lincoln University. “The Heritage Center is another way we honor the past while looking forward to the future. The Heritage Center will preserve the institution’s distinction as an intellectual and cultural resource for this region and beyond.” 

The grant includes funds for architectural work on the windows, doors, woodwork, and plasterwork; heating and ventilation upgrades; preparation of the National Register nomination form, and structural repairs such as replacing the roof and making it handicap accessible.

Amos House: Ties to the Civil Rights Movement

The grant will provide a complete renovation and structural rehabilitation to Amos House, the historic edifice began in 1870 as a private residence of the Amos family and located within the proposed Lincoln University Historic District. The house serves as an important historical marker of the aspirations for freedom and equality shared by African Americans locally and nationwide. The Amos family and other locals helped to build the first degree-granting institution of higher learning for African Americans, which became known for the contributions made by many prominent alumni to the Civil Rights Movement in America.

Most importantly, the Amos House was the residence of Charles V. Hamilton in the 1960s. It was in this residence that Charles V. Hamilton and Stokely Carmichael, also known as Kwame Ture, wrote the text “Black Power: The Politics of Liberation.”

The house is located on what is part of Lincoln’s campus today, however, historically the land was part of the community named Hinsonville, also known as Lincoln University Village. Hinsonville’s residents and members of the Amos family helped to build and support the University.

Heritage Center

The renovated Amos House will serve as a Heritage Center, housing historic memorabilia related to the founding of the institution, its role in the Underground Railroad before Emancipation, and its identity as a gathering place for students, faculty, and friends engaged in the struggle for civil rights. The Heritage Center will promote the preservation and continued study of the proposed Lincoln University’s rich cultural heritage and legacy.

The grant is part of a broader effort by the University to carry out the University’s 2018 strategic plan, “Reimagining the Legacy: Learn. Liberate. Lead.”, which called for strategically aligning resources to support institutional priories, including infrastructure projects that support the vision.

The NPS awarded 44 grants across 17 states to help preserve and highlight stories related to the African American struggle for equality in the 20th century.

Lincoln’s project is the only grant awarded in Pennsylvania to receive the funding which was appropriated by Congress in 2018 through the Historic Preservation Fund (HPF). To learn more about the grant and awardees, click on NPS.

Partially funded by the African American Civil Rights program of the Historic Preservation Fund, National Park Service, Department of the Interior. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.

Original source can be found here.

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