2012 Annual Report - North Carolina Humanities Council
Transcription
2012 Annual Report - North Carolina Humanities Council
2 0 1 2 : Th e ye ar in Discretionary Grant re v i e w WAKE $500 to the NC Dept. of Cultural Resources, Raleigh Connecting to Collections after Hurricane Irene $500 The 2012 Annual Report to the People Planning Grants Buncombe $700 to Flood Gallery Fine Arts Center, Asheville Architecting the Iranian Revolution — Paradox, Propaganda, and Persuasion $2,610 Grants The North Carolina Humanities Council awarded one discretionary grant, four planning grants, twelve mini-grants, and sixteen large grants to cultural and educational organizations to conduct humanities programs in 2012. Funded groups matched the Humanities Council grants with in-kind and cash contributions. (In-kind amounts as reported or estimated are listed below each project title throughout “2012: The Year in Review.”) The projects supported during this grant period are integral to the Humanities Council’s commitment to advocate lifelong learning and facilitate the exploration and celebration of the Main many voices and stories of North Carolina’s cultures and heritage. These programs, as sites where open discourse resides, contributed to the cross-fertilization of ideas and understanding vital to encouraging our citizens’ sense of self-worth and practice of public engagement. A wide range of formats included conferences and panel discussions that placed the public in contact with the most current historical and literary scholarship; exhibitions, documentation, and visual and archival testament to the state’s diverse cultural heritage; and performances and film presentations. In retrospect, the projects provided opportunities for deep personal and collective reflection on the human experience. Main Wake $693 to State Capitol Foundation, Inc., Raleigh State Capitol and Mansion Oral History Project$7,800 Watauga $750 to Blowing Rock Art and History Museum, Blowing Rock “Photography as Art and History” Exhibition$858 St Buncombe $1,200 to Buncombe County Library, Asheville Race, Truth, and Fiction in Thomas Wolfe’s “The Child by Tiger”$2,285 Carteret $1,200 to North Carolina Maritime History Council, Beaufort America’s Second War for Independence: The Naval War 0f 1812$2,851 Davie $800 to Davie County Public Library, Mocksville Elliot Engel — The History and Mystery of Wine$2,539 Forsyth $1,200 to Reynolda House Museum, Winston-Salem Romare Bearden: A Black Odyssey$3,320 Guilford $1,200 to Elsewhere Collaborative, Greensboro Xsegregated$3,400 $1,200 to Summit Rotary Foundation, Greensboro Feed Festival$9,131 Halifax $1,200 to Roanoke River Regional Collaborative, Roanoke Rapids Cultural Arts Festival$1,700 Nash $1,200 to Nash Arts Center, Nashville Support for Theatrical Presentation and Panel Discussion of You Wouldn’t Expect$1,740 Orange $1,200 to The Paul Green Foundation, Chapel Hill Paul Green Festival $21,108 Transylvania $1,127 to Transylvania Heritage Coalition, Inc, Brevard Perseverence, Strength and Faith: The African American Experience in Transylvania County$4,737 Wake $500 to Department of Cultural Resources, Raleigh Connecting to Collections $500 Large Grants BUNCOMBE $5,152 to James Agee Film Project, Charlottesville (VA), Asheville Common Ground: People, Place and Food in the American South, the production of a documentary film which examines food origins and culture of the South. $7,135 $7,000 to Mountain Area Information Network, Asheville Asheville Wordfest, a multicultural poetry festival featuring poets and citizenjournalists from varied cultural backgrounds gathered to explore the theme of home. $19,800 $9,400 to North Carolina Folklife Institute, Durham Blazing the African American Music Trail, a project that provided digital training for members of eight eastern North Carolina counties in support of the African American Music Trail, a heritage tourism initiative. $47,000 Grant Multiple Grants Literature and Medicine Road Scholars Teachers Institute Multiple Road Scholars Let’s Talk About It Winter/Spring 2013 Mini-Grants Durham $1,200 to North Carolina Rastafari Union, Durham Parallel Trajectories of the Civil (Human) Rights Movement and The Rastafari Movement$1,807 Durham $9,916 to Durham Library Foundation, Durham Bull City Soul Revival, a collaboration of musicians and scholars showcased the history of soul music in Durham. $12,590 St Multiple Let’s Talk About It Yadkin $738 to Friends of East Bend Public Library, East Bend Earl Norman Collection Returns Home$738 Main St $3,500 to The Apprend Foundation, Durham Making the Union Tavern Mobile and More Meaningful, the development of a mobile tour of the Thomas Day furniture exhibition at the historic Union Tavern, home and shop of the acclaimed free African American cabinetmaker. $5,000 Gaston $5,402 to Gaston College, Dallas Celebrando America Latina, a speaker and film discussion series covering the Latin American experience in North Carolina and beyond with a special emphasis on culture and labor. $14,560 Guilford $9,540 to Touring Theatre of North Carolina, Greensboro Look Back the Maytime Days: From the Pages of Fred Chappell, a stage production of author Fred Chappell’s family stories in Western North Carolina. $23,735 $5,000 to University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro Past the Pipes: Stories of the Terra Cotta Community, a permanent exhibition that examines the African-American history and people of the Pomona Terra Cotta Company community five miles from downtown Greensboro. $6,986 Mecklenburg $3,800 to Central Piedmont Community College, Charlotte Fight for Education Equality: A First-Hand Account, an interactive panel discussion that transported participants to the events of the mid-twentieth-century school integration movement. $10,691 $2,299 to University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte Without Sanctuary: A Conference on Lynching and the American South, with the Without Sanctuary exhibit at the Levine Museum of the New South, scholars and the public explored questions about American and southern culture, racial and ethnic violence. $2,299 North Carolina Stories M ain St Museum on Main Street NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 23 Grants continued Orange $6,560 to WUNC FM 91.5, Chapel Hill WUNC Pop-Up Music Club, pilot radio productions using a new format that captures live music and musicians in their cultural and historical context. $7,167 Person $10,000 to Hidden Voices, Cedar Grove None of the Above: Power, Priviledge and the School to Prison Pipeline, a collaboration examining the intersection of race, poverty, education, and incarceration. $195,225 Surry $5,000 to Mount Airy Museum of Regional History, Mount Airy Geocaching for History, a project that utilized GPS technology to provide a new way to experience regional history. $5,163 The Teachers Institute The Teachers Institute sponsored three seminars in 2012 with 74 participants from 25 counties. The first of these seminars was conducted in March, led by Dr. Benjamin Filene (UNC Greensboro, Public History), and was held at Barton College in Wilson, NC. Designed in collaboration with three sites chosen to host Journey Stories, a traveling exhibition from the Smithsonian Institution’s Museum on Main Street, this seminar engaged teachers from Pender, Robeson, and Wilson counties who learned how to help their students become digital curators of stories and artifacts from their own families and communities. As a result of this workshop, teachers were able to work with their students to conduct oral histories, to collect and photograph illustrative artifacts for these stories, and to edit and upload this material on a Smithsonian Institute dedicated website. Caroline Courter, a first-grade teacher in Pender County, engaged not only her students, but their parents in conducting family oral histories. Her young students learned how to compose and ask questions as well as how to use a flip camera and other equipment. Winter/Spring 2013 Wake $4,900 to African American Cultural Center, Raleigh Infiltrating Hollywood: A Program Presented by the Southern Black Film and Media Consortium, a screening of the documentary film Infiltrating Hollywood: The Rise and Fall of the Spook Who Sat by the Door and a panel discussion by humanities scholars and filmmakers who contextualized and critically situated the film. $5,200 $9,649 to North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh Al Norte al Norte: Latino Life in North Carolina, a year-long photography exhibition with bilingual descriptions that accompanied photographs by the Pulitzer Prize-winning José Galvez. $62,182 The second seminar, the annual weeklong Summer Seminar, was held in Chapel Hill. Led by scholars Dr. Anne Baxter (NC State University, English), Dr. Rachel Willis (UNC Chapel Hill, American Studies), and Dr. David Zonderman (NC State University, History), participants engaged in an in-depth study of railroads, Laying Down Tracks: A Study of Railroads as Myth, Reality, and Symbol. Participating educators reported in a sixmonth follow-up assessment the various ways they have used materials from this seminar to enhance their curriculum and meet required objectives. For example, Guilford County high school history teacher Sharon Sullivan reported that her students have “assessed the competing forces of expansionism, nationalism, and sectionalism” using many of her summer seminar materials. She added that the content knowledge she gained from the scholars also helped her revise and focus her lesson planning. Penny Freeland, a middle school art and drama teacher from Yadkin County, reported that she has designed an enrichment social studies class using materials and information from the seminar. And Cole Osborne, an English and humanities instructor at Guilford Technical Community College, reported that he used much of the seminar material to illustrate the theme of equality in America in his English classes and is using many of the digital resources from the UNC libraries presented at the seminar to bring his Southern Culture class new YANCEY $4,681 to Traditional Voices Group, Burnsville Singing the Blues: Considering the History and Practitioners of the Piedmont Blues, the fifth annual RiddleFest celebrating the life and art of Yancey County resident Lesley Riddle, African American musician of significant relevance to mountain music culture. $5,195 materials as well as additional primary sources. These examples are symbolic of the responses of many of the seminar participants who are working with new ideas and new materials in their teaching that they would not have had without the seminar experience. The third seminar, Journey Stories in Western North Carolina, was held in October at Cullowhee in collaboration with Western Carolina University’s Mountain Heritage Center which was hosting the Journey Stories exhibition at the time. Participants worked with Dr. Scott Philyaw, director of the MHC, to explore Western North Carolina journey stories. Paisley Cloyd, a high school art teacher from the Nash-Rocky Mount Schools, has begun a Cherokee Journey Story unit for her students, and is looking forward to the opportunity to expand and refine this work. Also attending this seminar was Dr. Ernest Johnson from the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching. He will lead these participants in a follow-up seminar at NCCAT in April 2013. This spring seminar is designed to assist teachers in additional research and curriculum design that they began at the October seminar. As these educators return to their schools and classrooms, they bring a refreshed perspective and level of engagement that will prove invaluable to their students and colleagues alike. Participants of the Journey Stories in Western North Carolina Teachers Institute Seminar at the Jackson County Library in Sylva in October 2012. Photo by Lou Nachman. 2 0 1 2 T e ac h e r s I n st it u t e S e m in ar s 74 participants, 25 counties: Alamance, Brunswick, Buncombe, Cabarrus, Carteret, Cleveland, Davie, Durham, Forsyth, Gaston, Guilford, Johnston, Mecklenburg, Nash, Onslow, Orange, Pender, Robeson, Rowan, Rutherford, Stokes, Union, Wayne, Wilson, Yadkin Teaching Levels: 15 elementary, 26 middle, 26 high, 7 community college Courses Represented: English/language arts, reading, exceptional children, history/social studies, psychology, family consumer science, mathematics/algebra, sociology, computer skills, science/biology, journalism, technology, humanities, theatre/drama, creative writing, music, rhetoric/composition, art, French, woodworking, Spanish, physical education. Also participating were a librarian/media specialist, a school counselor, a technical facilitator, and an assistant principal. Special Scholarships: Three endowed scholarships awarded during 2012 sponsored the following teachers for the week-long Summer Seminar: 1) Evon Barnes, English, Chapel Hill Carrboro Schools, Alice Smith Barkley Scholarship; 2) Casey Campbell, Exceptional Children, Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools, Culbertson-Dagenhart-Hauptfuhrer Scholarship; 3) Jonathan Permar, History, Guilford County Schools, Moore-Robinson Scholarship. NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 25 Linda Flowers Literary Award Angela Kelly of Spartanburg, SC, has been awarded the 2012 Linda Flowers Literary Award for her collection of poems “Semper Fi of Appalachia.” Kelly is the author of four poetry chapbooks, most recently Post Script from the House of Dreams (winner of the 2006 South Carolina Poetry Initiative Prize), published by Stepping Stone Press. Her full-length poetry collection Voodoo for the Other Woman is forthcoming from Hub City Press in March 2013. Additional individual poems have been published in numerous journals including North American Review, The Bloomsbury Review, Nimrod, Kalliope, Rhino, Yemassee, Inkwell, Rosebud, The Ledge, and Rattle. In addition to the Linda Flowers Literary Award, Kelly was awarded the South Carolina Fellowship of the Arts from The South Carolina Commission of the Arts in 1999, received the 2011 Carrie McCray Nickens Fellowship presented by the South Carolina Academy of Authors, and received the 2012 William Matthews Poetry Award from the Asheville Poetry Review. Kelly has been awarded fellowships from the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Vermont Studio Center. The 2012 John Tyler Caldwell Award For The Humanities Born in Faison, North Carolina, Betty McCain graduated as valedictorian from Faison High School, attended St. Mary’s School, and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a BA in music and Columbia University’s Teachers College with an MA in music. The mother of two children and five grandchildren, McCain moved with her husband, physician Dr. John McCain, to Wilson, NC, in 1956. Although working as an ambassador for numerous causes throughout the state, she continues to make her home in Wilson where she serves on the Board of Advisors for Barton College, raises money for the Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park, and compiles oral histories of World War II veterans in Wilson County. She is a member of Wilson’s First Presbyterian Church, where she sings in the choir, and is a former deacon and elder. Perhaps best known as the Secretary of Cultural Resources, she Betty Ray McCain holds her Caldwell Medal. was appointed to this position in 1993 by Governor Jim Hunt and served in this Photo by Keith Tew Photography. capacity until 2001. During her tenure as Secretary, McCain was instrumental in the building of the current North Carolina Museum of History; in securing additional land for the North Carolina Art Museum; in securing major funding for the building of Meymandi Hall, home of the North Carolina Symphony; and in securing major funding for the excavation of the Queen Anne’s Revenge, the ship of the pirate Blackbeard. McCain is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, among them the UNC General Alumni Association Distinguished Service Medal, the Design Guild Award from the NCSU College of Design, and the Distinguished Citizen of the Year Award from the Wilson Chamber of Commerce. In 2006, McCain was awarded the North Caroliniana Award from the North Caroliniana Society and is the 2009 recipient of the North Carolina Award, the highest civilian award bestowed by the state for public service. Winter/Spring 2013 Let’s Talk About It The popularity of the Let’s Talk About It library discussion series continues to grow. The interchange of ideas among participants, scholars, and sponsoring librarians makes the Let’s Talk About It experience rich and rewarding for all. Let’s Talk About It brings people together around thematic approaches to universal ideas and provides a safe environment for broadening horizons. Through a civil discourse on issues as broad as Picturing America: Land of Opportunity to Writers from North Carolina’s Literary Hall of Fame, audiences and scholars draw on each other’s knowledge to share a common experience through the framework of literature. Twenty one libraries sponsored series in fiscal year 2012, offering twenty seven series to over 3,000 participants. Let’s Talk About It is a joint project of the North Carolina Humanities Council and the North Carolina Center for the Book, a program of the North Carolina State Library/Department of Cultural Resources and an affiliate of the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress. ALAMANCE $1,000 to Alamance County Public Library, Burlington Not For Children Only$2375 $1,000 to Chatham Community Library, Pittsboro Journeys Across Time and Place $1,700 Brunswick $800 to Friends of the Southport Library, Southport Journey Inward: Women’s Autobiograpy$2,360 Craven $1,000 to Craven Community College — Havelock Public Library, Havelock Tar Heel Fiction: Stories of Home $1,826 Cabarrus $1,000 to Cabarrus County Public Library, Concord Picturing America: Places in the Heart$1,892 Carteret $1,000 to Carteret County Public Library, Beaufort Making Sense of America’s Civil War$1,900 $1,000 to Carteret County Public Library, Beaufort Picturing America: Land of Opportunity$4,376 Chatham $1,000 to Friends of the Chatham Community Library, Pittsboro Mysteries: Clues to Who We Are $2,432 $1,000 to New Bern Craven County Public Library, New Bern Affirming Aging$2,849 Cumberland $1,000 to Cumberland County Public Library & Information Center, Fayetteville Mad Women in the Attic $4,193 $1,000 to Cumberland County Public Library & Information Center, Fayetteville Mysteries: Clues to Who We Are $3,382 Davidson $1,000 to Friends of the Lexington Library, Lexington Mysteries: Clues to Who We Are $1,700 Davie $1,000 to Davie County Public Library, Mocksville Making Sense of America’s Civil War$1,500 Martin $1,000 to Martin Memorial Library, Williamston Picturing America: Making Tracks $3,800 Pasquotank $1,000 to Pasquotank-Camden Library, Elizabeth City Making Sense of America’s Civil War$1,225 Edgecombe $1,000 to Edgecombe County Memorial Library, Tarboro Altered Landscapes$1,122 McDowell $1,000 to Friends of McDowell County Public Library, Marion Tar Heel Fiction: Stories of Home $1,039 Person $1,000 to Person County Public Library, Roxboro Altered Landscapes$1,625 Granville $1,000 to Richard H. Thornton Library, Oxford America’s Greatest Conflict $1,267 Haywood $600 to Friends of Haywood County Public Library, Waynesville Novels of Jane Austen$939 $1,000 to Friends of Haywood County Public Library, Waynesville America’s Greatest Conflict $1,549 Iredell $1,000 to Iredell County Library, Statesville Altered Landscapes$2,540 $1,000 to Friends of McDowell County Public Library, Marion Making Sense of America’s Civil War$1,135 Vance $1,000 to Friends of H. Leslie Perry Memorial Library, Henderson America’s Greatest Conflict $2,468 Mecklenburg $1,000 to Beatties Ford Road Library, Charlotte The African American Experience: Looking Forward, Looking Back $1,400 Warren $800 to Warren County Memorial Library, Warrenton Picturing America: Making Tracks $1,475 Nash $1,000 to Braswell Memorial Library, Rocky Mount Mysteries: Clues to Who We Are $1,499 North Carolina Stories In 2012, the Humanities Council launched a new grant opportunity, North Carolina Stories, a grant of up to $2,000 to produce a digital public humanities project around the theme of “movement.” The Council supported two North Carolina Stories projects from The Friends of the Jackson County Public Library and Wake Forest University. The first examined local journey stories of western NC; the second hosted online videos of NC immigrants telling their stories of migration. The Council is proud to be a part of this new digital method of public humanities engagement, broadening audiences on an international scale, and expanding the life of these projects. Forsyth $2,000 to Wake Forest University, Ethnic Studies Program, Winston-Salem Where Are You From? Stories of Migration to North Carolina in Our Own Words $2,000 Jackson $2,000 to Friends of the Jackson County Library, Sylva In, Out, Through and Back Again: Smoky Mountain Journeys $29,504 NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 27 Road Scholars $271 to Piedmont Crossing Retirement Community, Thomasville North Carolina in a Bottle$440 Road Scholar programs were held in 54 counties in fiscal year 2012, with a total attendance of 7,098 people. Sponsoring organizations included historical societies, civic groups, community colleges, churches, libraries, retirement centers, museums, and universities, from the mountains to the coast. Discussions on history, music, literature, and religion led to exchanges of information and ideas, connections with neighbors, and an expanding sense of community. Civil discourse broadens horizons as program participants from widely diverse cultural backgrounds, academic levels, and beliefs come together to gain knowledge and new perspectives from scholars and from each other. ALAMANCE $350 to Alamance Community College Foundation, Graham Nazi POWs in the Tar Heel State $750 $347 to Alamance County Historical Museum, Burlington Hard Times in the Mill$473 $282 to Haw River Historical Society, Haw River God in Southern Story and Song $313 $309 to Haw River Historical Society, Haw River Race to the Dan$455 $350 to Mebane Historical Society and Museum, Mebane Nazi POWs in the Tar Heel State $455 $304 to Bladen Community College, Dublin Slave Voices in North Carolina $620 Brunswick $315 to Winding River History Group, Bolivia Outside the Frame: the Astonishing Life of Whistler’s Mother$1,295 Buncombe $304 to Handmade in America, Asheville Southern Craft: a Revival in the Mountains $2,385 Cabarrus $350 to Cabarrus County Public Library, Concord Long Legacies$878 $305 to Twin Lakes Retirement Center, Burlington North Carolina’s Long Civil Rights Movement$289 $350 to Eastern Cabarrus Historical Museum, Mount Pleasant The Culture of Bluegrass Music in North Carolina$651 Ashe $350 to Ashe County Public Library, West Jefferson Southern Cooking, High and Low $745 Carteret $350 to Bogue Banks Public Library, Pine Knoll Shores The Lost Light$3,185 $350 to Ashe County Public Library, West Jefferson Lost in Translation$878 Avery $326 to Havurah of the High Country, Boone Two Christian Responses to Hitler and the Holocaust$455 $350 to Havurah of the High Country, Boone The Biblical Windows of St. Stephan Church, Mainz, Germany $715 Bladen $250 to Bladen Community College, Dublin License to Snoop: the Making of Biography$755 $350 to Bladen Community College, Dublin God in Southern Story and Song $550 Winter/Spring 2013 Caswell $268 to Thomas Day House, Milton John Day in Liberia$390 Catawba $350 to Catawba County Library, Newton Slave Voices in North Carolina $930 $328 to Catawba County Library, Newton An Introduction to the Ancient Maya$863 Chatham $0 to Friends of the Chatham Community Library, Pittsboro Literary Trails of the North Carolina Piedmont$520 Cleveland $350 to Jacob S. Mauney Memorial Library, Kings Mountain The Jack Tales, North Carolina Heritage Tales$688 Craven $350 to New Bern Craven County Public Library, New Bern Slave Voices in North Carolina $1,050 $261 to Lewisville Historical Society, Lewisville Trailing Daniel Boone$579 Granville $281 to Granville County Historical Society Museum, Oxford Solving the Mystery of the Missing Cape Hatteras Fresnel Lens$890 $250 to New Philadelphia Moravian Church, Winston-Salem Life as a Moravian in Old Salem $95 $281 to Granville County Historical Society Museum, Oxford War Zone: World War II Off North Carolina’s Outer Banks$890 $350 to New Bern Historical Society, New Bern Outside the Frame: the Astonishing Life of Whistler’s Mother $1,000 $324 to Southside Branch Library, Winston-Salem Septima Clark, Citizenship Education, and Women in the Civil Rights Movement$1,606 $340 to Granville County Historical Society Museum, Oxford History of North Carolina in 45 Minutes$1,020 $350 to New Bern Historical Society, New Bern George Moses Horton$971 $250 to Walkertown Area Historical Society, Winston-Salem Do Not Toss Out Your Grandmother’s Letters$130 Guilford $278 to Alexander Martin Chapter NSDAR, High Point Before They Were Heroes at Kings Mountain$470 $332 to Winston-Salem Writers Inc., Winston-Salem Mosaic Writing: Using Fiction, Poetry and Memoir in Creative Nonfiction$665 $255 to American Association of University Women, Greensboro, Greensboro The Jack Tales, North Carolina Heritage Tales$195 Gaston $350 to Gaston County Museum of Art and History, Dallas Bryan Grimes: Soldier and Citizen $1,530 $325 to First Evangelical Lutheran Church, Greensboro War Zone: World War II Off North Carolina’s Outer Banks$565 $350 to New Bern Historical Society, New Bern War Zone: World War II off North Carolina’s Outer Banks $1,065 $350 to Twin Rivers Reading Council, Havelock The Jack Tales, North Carolina Heritage Tales$741 Cumberland $338 to Fayetteville Downtown Alliance, Fayetteville The Culture of Bluegrass Music in North Carolina$835 Dare $313 to Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum, Hatteras North Carolina’s U-Boats: U-85, U-701, U-352$770 Davie $350 to Davie County Public Library, Mocksville The Divided Mind of Civil War North Carolina$358 Durham $316 to Durham Civil War Roundtable, Durham Heroes of a Divided Culture $370 $319 to Pvt. Lorenzo L. Bennitt-Pvt Robert F. Duke Camp # 773 SCV, Durham General Robert E. Lee: the Autumn of His Life$539 Forsyth $305 to Forsyth County Public Library, Winston-Salem Picturing America: Migration in North Carolina$288 $350 to Friedberg Moravian Church, Winston-Salem Fannin’ the Heat Away$615 $350 to Gaston County Museum of Art and History, Dallas William Henry Singleton’s Recollections of My Slavery Days $1,270 $320 to Gaston County Museum of Art and History, Dallas The Divided Mind of Civil War North Carolina$1,010 $350 to Gaston County Public Library, Gastonia Trumpet and Cornet: Influences of Jazz$1,515 $350 to Gaston County Public Library, Gastonia God in Southern Story and Song $1,385 $350 to Gaston County Public Library, Gastonia Lead Belly, the Lomaxes, and the Construction of America’s Musical Heritage$1,158 $350 to First Presbyterian Church, Greensboro God in Southern Story and Song $1,808 $340 to Piedmont Crossing Retirement Community, Thomasville The Tar Heel Traveler$590 $264 to Senior Citizens Resource of Guilford, Greensboro The History of North Carolina in 45 Minutes$228 Harnett $350 to Campbell University, Buies Creek What Happened to the Lost Colony?$790 $293 to Harnett County Public Library, Lillington The Tar Heel Traveler$630 Haywood $350 to Sons of Confederate Veterans, Sanford, Maggie Valley General Robert E. Lee: the Autumn of His Life$748 Henderson $350 to Agudas Israel Congregation, Hendersonville Discovering Elvis$682 Johnston $278 to Johnston County Community College, Smithfield Sit a Spell$310 Lee $347 to Sons of Confederate Veterans, Sanford General Robert E. Lee: the Autumn of His Life$400 $318 to Sons of Confederate Veterans, Sanford The American Tobacco Culture: Our Heritage$636 $350 to First Presbyterian Church, Greensboro Fannin’ the Heat Away$1,436 Lenoir $331 to Black Heritage Society, Inc. DBA Cultural Heritage Museum, Kinston Forgotten Rural Black Women $340 $266 to First Presbyterian Church, Greensboro, Greensboro Exploring Faith Traditions Through Parables and Teaching Stories$839 $346 to Kinston-Lenoir County Library, Kinston Septima Clark, Citizenship Education, and Women in the Civil Rights Movement$475 $250 to High Point Public Library Literacy Program, High Point Stories From the Underground Railroad$343 Mecklenburg $311 to Bethlehem Center Head Start, Charlotte Sit a Spell$910 $269 to High Point Quilt Guild, High Point The History of North Carolina in 45 Minutes$797 $255 to Harvey B. Gantt Center for African American Arts and Culture, Charlotte Poetry Pickin’s$510 $329 to Piedmont Crossing Retirement Community, Thomasville The Changing South: Who’s Benefitting, Who’s Losing$655 $350 to Harvey B. Gantt Center for African American Arts and Culture, Charlotte Slave Voices in North Carolina $970 $264 to West Mecklenburg High School, Charlotte Breaking the Silence and Healing the Soul$310 Moore $350 to Moore County Historical Association, Southern Pines Women’s Attitudes Towards Secession and the Civil War $585 $336 to Sandhills Community College, Pinehurst North Carolina in a Bottle $510 $302 to Sandhills Community College, Pinehurst Southern Cooking High and Low $657 $307 to Sandhills Community College, Pinehurst Carolina Jazz Connection $403 $255 to Sandhills Jewish Congregation, Foxfire Village The Biblical Windows of St Stephan Church, Mainz, Germany $330 $350 to The College Club, Pinehurst A Confluence of Remarkable Women$570 $322 to Winnie Davis Chapter #259 United Daughters of the Confederacy, Carthage Women’s Attitudes Toward Secession and the Civil War $800 Nash $350 to Nash-Rocky Mount Council of International Reading Association, Rocky Mount The Jack Tales, North Carolina Heritage Tales$754 New Hanover $350 to Bellamy Mansion Museum of History and Design, Wilmington Thomas Day, Cabinetmaker: Man in the Middle$820 $350 to Federal Point Historic Preservation Society, Carolina Beach War Zone: World War II Off North Carolina’s Outer Banks $925 $251 to Lower Cape Fear Historical Society, Wilmington America Without Indians$323 $250 to Stamp Defiance Chapter NSDAR, Wilmington North Carolina Indians Before the English$171 $301 to Winter Park Baptist Church, Wilmington Fannin’ the Heat Away$190 Onslow $350 to Friends of the Swansboro Library, Swansboro Still Cookin’$1,834 $325 to Tryon Fine Arts Center, $305 to Surry Community College, Tryon Dobson It’s Not Just a Game: Sports and Stories From the Underground Society in North CarolinaRailroad$195 $820 $350 to Surry Community College, Orange Dobson Robeson $268 to Orange County Public Samson and Delilah: From Pulpits $338 to Friends of the Library Library, Hillsborough to Pop Stars$310 UNC-Pembroke, Pembroke Sincere Forms of Flattery What Happened to the Lost $365 Union Colony? $676 $350 to Lois M. Edwards Memorial $258 to Orange County Public $300 to UNC Pembroke Mary Library, Marshville Library, Hillsborough Livermore Library, Pembroke The Language of Film$1,186 The Culture of Bluegrass Music in The African American Church in North Carolina$651 $273 to Union County Public Works by Ernest J. Gaines Library, Monroe Pamlico $805 Poetry Pickin’s$800 $350 to Pamlico County Public Rockingham Library, Bayboro Wake $279 to Rockingham Community Stories From the Underground $318 to Col. Henry K. Burgwyn College, Wentworth Railroad$585 Chaper Sons of Confederate Understanding Black History as Veterans, Wendell Pasquotank American History$390 General Robert E. Lee: the $350 to Elizabeth City State Autumn of His Life$650 Rowan University, Elizabeth City $288 to American Association of Stories From the Underground $250 to Eva Perry Regional Library, University Women, Salisbury Branch, Railroad$1,500 Apex Salisbury Southern Cooking High and Low $350 to Museum of the Albemarle, The Fabric of Hope and $464 Elizabeth City Resistance$430 Stories From the Underground $321 to Eva Perry Regional Library, $350 to Historic Gold Hill and Mines Railroad$1,662 Apex Foundation, Gold Hill Stories From the Underground Pender The Culture of Bluegrass Music in Railroad$510 $286 to Historical Society of Topsail North Carolina $1,734 $341 to Kirk of Kildaire Presbyterian Island, Topsail Beach $293 to NC Transportation Museum, Church, Cary North Carolina Indians Before the Spencer The American Tobacco Culture: English$805 Stories From the Underground Our Heritage$640 $350 to Historical Society of Topsail Railroad$520 $250 to Lake Lynn Seniors, Raleigh Island, Topsail Beach $290 to Rowan Museum, Salisbury War Zone: World War II Off North The American Tobacco Culture: Before They Were Heroes at Carolina’s Outer Banks$375 Our Heritage$1,377 Kings Mountain$260 $254 to Library for the Blind and Perquimans $350 to Rowan Public Library, Physically Handicapped, Raleigh $350 to Sons of the American Salisbury The Tar Heel Traveler$1,805 Revolution, Hertford The Language of Film$983 $250 to Meredith College Master Moving Into the Carolina of Science in Nutrition Program, Rutherford Backcountry$715 Raleigh $350 to Town of Rutherfordton, Person Southern Cooking High and Low Rutherfordton $350 to Mount Zion United $141 Before They Were Heroes at Methodist Church, Roxboro Kings Mountain$1,070 $342 to Meredith College Master Fannin’ the Heat Away$1,180 of Science in Nutrition Program, Scotland $264 to Walnut Grove United Raleigh $350 to Scotia Village Retirement Methodist Church, Hurdle Mills North Carolina in a Bottle$375 Community, Laurinburg The Culture of Bluegrass Music in Women’s Attitudes Toward $312 to Meredith College Master North Carolina$1,015 Secession and the Civil War of Science in Nutrition Program, $1,310 Raleigh Pitt Green Design and the Quest for $332 to Tar River Sail and Power Stanly Sustainability$50 Squadron, Washington $349 to Stanly Community College, War Zone: World War II Off North $250 to Mordecai Historic Park, Albemarle Carolina’s Outer Banks$1,251 Raleigh Gone With the Wind? Never: Sit a Spell$65 Polk Scarlett O’Hara and Southern Womanhood$225 $292 to Tryon Fine Arts Center, Tryon Surry Women in Traditional Song $287 to Mount Airy Museum of $625 Regional History, Mount Airy $350 to Tryon Fine Arts Center, Tryon Native Americans and Their Use of the Environment$950 Race to the Dan: The Retreat That Won the Revolution$678 $350 to NC Museum of History Associates, Raleigh Tango! The Song! The Dance! The Obsession!$1,029 $346 to North Regional Library, Raleigh Do Not Toss Out Your Grandmother’s Letters$955 NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 29 Road Scholars continued $341 to North Regional Library, Raleigh Fannin’ the Heat Away$750 $255 to St. Matthew AME Church, Raleigh Sit a Spell$155 $286 to North Regional Library, Raleigh Still Cookin’$845 $350 to St. Philip Lutheran Church, Raleigh Scoundrels, Rogues and Heroes of the Old North State$310 $350 to Olivia Raney Library, Raleigh Writing Family and Local History From Genealogical Data, Oral History and Family Lore$540 $350 to Parkview Manor Senior Housing Center, Raleigh Poetry Pickin’s$975 $298 to Raleigh Sail and Power Squadron, Cary A North Carolina Icon Brought to Life$423 $328 to Raleigh Sail and Power Squadron, Cary The History of North Carolina in 45 Minutes$423 $250 to Raleigh Sail and Power Squadron, Cary How Shipwrecks Shaped the Destiny of the Outer Banks $325 $322 to Sons of Confederate Veterans, Wake Forest, Wake Forest General Robert E. Lee: the Autumn of His Life$646 $255 to St Paul AME Church, Raleigh Sit a Spell$130 The 2012 Harlan Joel Gradin Award for Excellence in the Public Humanities $350 to State Library of North Carolina, Raleigh Writing Family and Local History From Genealogical Data, Oral History and Family Lore $3,275 $250 to West Regional Library, Cary War Zone: World War II Off North Carolina’s Outer Banks $1,155 Sunday School Picnic, Penderlea Homestead, 1937. Photo by Ben Shahn. Courtesy Library of Congress. $273 to Whitaker Glen Retirement Community, Raleigh Women’s Attitudes Towards Watauga Secession in the Civil War$329 to Watauga County Library, $730 Boone $273 to Whitaker Glen Retirement Community, Raleigh John Charles McNeill: Poet Laureate’s Home Songs$390 Warren $314 to Warren County Memorial Library, Warrenton Southern Cooking High and Low $897 $300 to Warren County Memorial Library, Warrenton Thomas Day, Cabinet Maker: Man in the Middle$995 In the Footsteps of Daniel Boone $645 Wayne $318 to Old Dobbs County Genealogical Society, Goldsboro The Tar Heel Traveler$528 $333 to Wayne County Historical Association and Museum, Goldsboro North Carolina Indians Before the English$615 $320 to Wayne County Historical Association and Museum, Goldsboro Thomas Day, Cabinet Maker: Man in the Middle$395 $332 to Wayne County Historical Association and Museum, Goldsboro A North Carolina Icon Brought to Life$705 $288 to Wayne County Public Library, Goldsboro What If? Counterfactual Scenarios in the American Civil War$1,115 $350 to Wayne County Public Library, Goldsboro Stories From the Underground Railroad$831 Wilson $315 to Freeman Round House Museum, Wilson Thomas Day, Cabinet Maker: Man in the Middle$490 $284 to The Book Club, Wilson John Charles McNeill: Poet Laureate’s Home Songs$720 $345 to Wilson County Public Library, Wilson On North Carolina Waters $520 Wilkes $350 to Wilkes County Library, North Wilkesboro Carolina Jazz Connection$585 Museum on Main Street’s Journey Stories Museum on Main Street (MoMS) is a partnership between the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service and the North Carolina Humanities Council that places exhibitions in rural and small community museums and libraries. By hosting a Smithsonian Institution exhibition augmented by humanities programs, participating host museums and libraries embrace new opportunities for professional training in volunteerism, philanthropy, marketing, and collections care and handling. Working with in-state scholars, the North Carolina Humanities Council also provides resources in the form of programming grants to help host sites prepare exhibition-related events for and about their communities. Three such grants were issued to the sponsoring organizations that hosted Journey Stories in 2012. This funding has resulted in Pender County communities pulling together to investigate and celebrate their immigration and transportation history at the library and throughout Burgaw. The citizens, public officials, and Rockingham County Historical Society leadership retrofitted a former courthouse, transforming it into a museum in Wentworth. The communities of Cullowhee and Sylva found ways through the partnership between the Mountain Heritage Center and the Jackson County Public Library (another former courthouse) to bring a multiplicity of people and their journey stories to the public ear and eye, mind and heart. Jackson $2,000 to Mountain Heritage Center, Cullowhee Journey Stories Exhibition in Cullowhee Winter/Spring 2013 $46,779 Pender $2,000 to Pender County Public Library, Burgaw Journey Stories Exhibition in Pender County $7,200 Rockingham $2,000 to Rockingham County Historical Society, Wentworth Journey Stories Exhibition in Rockingham County $2,577 The Harlan Joel Gradin Award for Excellence in the Public Humanities honors outstanding work that reflects, affirms, and promotes the mission of the North Carolina Humanities Council. Humanities Council staff and trustees presented the 2012 Harlan Joel Gradin Award to the Core Sound Waterfowl Museum & Heritage Center for Workboats of Core Sound (2007) and Raising the Story of Menhaden Fishing (2009). Workboats of Core Sound, directed by independent scholar and photographer Lawrence S. Earley, offered the fishing communities of Carteret County opportunities to explore their history and cultures through personal experiences. In 2008, the Humanities Council cosponsored with the North Caroliniana Society the “Workboats of Core Sound Symposium and Photography Exhibit” at the Museum. In Lawrence Earley and Karen Willis Amspacher. Photo by Keith addition to the extensive photography exhibit, Earley contribTew Photography. uted material from thirty interviews with local residents and fishermen. Earley and Karen Willis Amspacher, executive director of the Core Sound Waterfowl Museum & Heritage Center, contributed to the publication of Salt in Their Blood: The Spirit of Community Down East, a Humanities Council Crossroads (2008). An expanded photography exhibit has been offered at the North Carolina Museum of History, the Burke Arts Council, and Tryon Palace. Earley’s work will be published in 2013 by the University of North Carolina Press. A 2009 Humanities Council grant supported planning for “A Collaborative Perspective of the Menhaden Fishing Industry of Carteret County, North Carolina,” which resulted in the project Raising the Story of Menhaden Fishing, a day-long symposium also supported by Council funding. A highlight was a presentation and performance by the Menhaden Chanteymen. This project explored history and culture through community documentation of personal experiences and discussion of major changes in coastal North Carolina. Both projects provided the foundations for a unique Humanities Council Teachers Institute Summer Seminar in 2011. Core Sound: A People and a Place of Change and Courage offered educators a learning laboratory as they met in the museum, studied the community’s collected histories, and talked with boat builders and fishermen. Literature and Medicine The Humanities Council is pleased to announce that the program has expanded to three concurrent medical facilities: Charles George VA Medical Facility in Asheville, Randolph Hospital in Asheboro, and New Hanover Regional Medical Center in Wilmington. In 2012, the Humanities Council conducted a training in Guilford County of facilitators and hospital liaisons participating in the 2013 program. In 2013, the Literature and Medicine program will reach approximately 75 caregivers, from chaplains to nurses and doctors, expanding the program’s reach throughout these facilities, helping to restore the heart and soul of healthcare, revealing the humanness of the industry at a time when it is needed most. NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 31 Ways to Give UNRESTRICTED GIVING – Unrestricted gifts support the Humanities Council wherever the need is greatest. Operational support is necessary for the day-to-day activities of the Council. Financial Overview D es ign a ted Gifts RESTRICTED GIVING – Gifts may be given to any of the Humanities Council’s programs or special initiatives, such as Museum on Main Street or Teachers Institute. These gifts allow donors to support those programs most closely aligned with their personal interests. Public Support Program Services A pledge of support over multiple years allows donors the ability to support the Council at a higher level of commitment while enjoying a more flexible payment method. MATCHING GIFTS – Many businesses and corporations offering matching gift programs that often match dollar-for-dollar charitable contributions given by their employees and, in some cases, former employees. Please consult your employer to see if your gift is eligible. GIFTS OF STOCK – Transferring shares of stock to the Humanities Council is a convenient way for donors to support the Council and often offers tax benefits to the stockholder. Typically, transferring stock helps the donor avoid capital gains tax on appreciated shares of stock and often allows for a larger gift to the Council. National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) $862,650 State50,000 Other gifts and grants 205,379 Loss on sale of fixed asset Interest income 2,605 Investment income, net 36,100 $1,156,734 Net Assets Change in net assets Program activities $221,702 Road Scholars 59,346 Teachers Institute 136,203 North Carolina Conversations42,687 Other Revenue Total Revenue HUMANITIES North Carolina Fund $57,475 Net assets: beginning of year 943,350 Net Assets: End of Year $1,000,825 Let’s Talk About It 16,725 Literature and Medicine - Museum on Main Street 50,351 Linda Flowers Literary Award For more information, contact the North Carolina Humanities Council at (336) 334-5325. Winter/Spring 2013 1,492 Regrants — NEH funds 60,340 Regrants — NC funds 83,027 Supporting Services Management and general $265, 216 Public Relations 26,338 Fundraising135,832 Total Expenses $1,099,259 Richard & Cindy Brodhead Robert S. Brunk Luis H. Peña Cabello & Magdalena Maiz-Peña Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Ben & Norma Fountain Barnes & Cammie Hauptfuhrer Reginald Hildebrand Jonathan & Mary Howes Donovan McKnight Timothy Minor Margaret “Tog” Newman James Y. Preston Jane Preyer Jack & Cissie Stevens Pam Turner Reginald Watson Willis P. Whichard Lynn Wright-Kernodle Teachers Institute Endowment The Alice S. Barkley Endowed Scholarship John & Polly Medlin Bob & Sally McCoy Culbertson-DagenhartHauptfuhrer Endowed Scholarship Bob & Peggy Culbertson Larry & Sarah Dagenhart Barnes & Cammie Hauptfuhrer Hanes-Rubin Endowed Scholarship BEQUESTS AND PLANNED GIVING – One of the simplest ways to give to the Humanities Council is to name the Council in your will. For information on how to make a bequest, or to find out about planned or deferred giving, please contact the Humanities Council to help find the best plan for you. during the 2012 calendar year. This support is critical in funding the Humanities Council’s programs across the state and helps ensure that every program remains free and open to the public. The programs and initiatives represented here in North Carolina Conversations and in the 2012 Annual Report to the People would not be possible without our generous donors. Thank you. year ended October 31, 2012. The audited statement for fiscal year 2012 is available upon request. Expenses gift of cash to the Humanities Council is the most common gift. With deep appreciation and gratitude, we acknowledge those who contributed to the North Carolina Humanities Council Listed below are the balance sheet, revenues, and expenses for the fiscal Revenues GIFTS AND PLEDGES OF CASH – A 2012 North Carolina Humanities Council Donors Frank & Jane Hanes Michael & Debbie Rubin Please donate ONLINE www.nchumanities.org Moore-Robinson Endowed Scholarship Bill & Sandra Moore Russell & Sally Robinson The Lynn WrightKernodle Endowed Scholarship Annette Ayers Michael Corbitt Porter Durham Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Mary Jo Edwards Larry Moore Lou Nachman Jeanne Tannenbaum Connie Whaley Tammy Young Literature and Medicine New Hanover Regional Medical Center Museum on Main Street Porter Durham Road Scholars Carolyn Allen Robert S. Brunk First Presbyterian Church, Greensboro Ralph & Vivian Jacobson Susan Ketchin William F. McNeill Mary Wayne Watson Spring 2013 Thomas Wolfe Society Program Anonymous Teachers Institute Scholarship Fund Howard L. Davis, Jr. Michelle R. Hunt Sherry Jolly Thrus & Patty Morton Deborah Russell Rebecca Summer Wendy Walker BENEF AC T ORS Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Porter Durham Ben & Norma Fountain Frank & Jane Hanes Barnes & Cammie Hauptfuhrer James Y. Preston P AT RONS Richard & Cindy Brodhead Robert S. Brunk Luis H Peña Cabello & Magdalena Maiz-Peña Mark Costley Bob & Peggy Culbertson Larry W. Ennis John & Nancy Garman Jonathan & Mary Howes Thomas S. Kenan Tom & Donna Lambeth Michael McCue John & Grace McKinnon John & Leigh McNairy Thrus & Patty Morton New Hanover Regional Medical Center Jane Preyer Russell & Sally Robinson Michael & Debbie Rubin Lanty & Margaret Smith Jeanne Tannenbaum Pam Turner David & Libby Ward P AR T NERS Herb & Frannie Browne Roddey & Pepper Dowd Friends of the Person County Library Reginald Hildebrand Timothy Minor Jack & Cissie Stevens Willis P. Whichard AD VOC AT ES Becky Anderson Larry & Sarah Dagenhart Dick & Marlene Daughtery Emory & Martha Maiden Betty Ray McCain Nan D. Miller Keith A. Pearson Gregory A. Richardson Hephzibah Roskelly Richard & Sharon Schramm Robert E. Seymour Neva Specht George & Melinda Stuart Smedes & Rosemary York ASSOC IAT ES Carolyn Allen Robert G. Anthony, Jr. Jim & Jan Applewhite June P. Bair Joseph & Joan Bathanti John Beck Michael A. Berkelhammer Bob & Elanor Brawley H. David Bruton James W. Clark, Jr. W. Robert Connor Anne C. Dahle Kelly Dail Frederic G. Dalldorf Howard L. Davis, Jr. Jerome Davis Wayne P. Diggs John & Lexi Eagles Lawrence S. & Renee Gledhill Earley Janet Edwards John & Rosemary Ehle Mary Ann B. Evans Joseph M. Flora John W. Fox Friends of the Gaston County Public Library S. Hewitt Fulton Frank & Carole Gailor Kent Gardner Abbe Godwin Karl Gottschalk Paul & Anne Gulley John H. Haley Tom Hanchett & Carol Sawyer Robert C. Hansen Dr. & Mrs. John B. Hardy, Jr. Bett Hargrave Jim & Joan Hemby, Jr. Elizabeth M. Holsten Frances Huffman Robert E. Hykes Glen Anthony Harris Patricia Inlow-Hatcher H.G. Jones Betty P. Kenan Susan Ketchin David LaVere Sarah E. Leak James R. Leutze Timothy H. Lindeman Mary Louise Little Elizabeth H. Locke John & Lucinda MacKethan Nancy P. Mangum Vernon & Becky Marlin Darlyne Menscer Miranda Monroe Margaret “Tog” Newman Ron & Kathy Oakley Linda E. Oxendine Cecil & Vivian Patterson David & Lisa Price Richard & Sue Richardson Lorraine H. Robinson Michael Sartisky Todd Savitt Loren & Patricia Schweninger Beth Sheffield Wade & Ann Smith Ronald & Mittie Smith Howard & Juanita Spanogle Benjamin Speller Christopher A. & Marian B. Story James M. Tanner William H. Terry Eunice Toussaint Doug & Anne Tubaugh Harry Tuchmayer & Kathleen Berkeley Susan B. Wall Thomas & Mary Kennedy Ward David & Marsha Warren Bill & Ruth Williamson Lynn Wright-Kernodle James E. Young Nancy Young John Young & Winn Legerton FRIENDS Allen Adams Meghan Agresto Elliott & Ina Alterman Annette Ayers Hoyt Bangs Montine Barnette Rosann Bazirjian Clara Bond Bell Ellis & Ellen Berlin Jeri Fitzgerald Board Scott Boatwright Mike Bohen Mary A. Bonnett Raymond & Margaret Bost Jacqueline Boykin Sally Buckner Dorothea D. Burkhart Jan M. Carmichael Caswell Friends of the Library Pauline Binkley Cheek Samuel & Genevieve Cole Michael Corbitt A.L. Corum Bettie Richardson Dixon Diane Donovan The Honorable Katie G. Dorsett Karen J. Dotson Phyllis Dunning NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 33 Ralph H. Eanes, Jr. Mary Jo Edwards Linda Evans First Evangelical Lutheran Church of Greensboro First Presbyterian Church, Greensboro Stephen & Sally Fortlouis Friends of the N.C. Maritime Museum Friends of the Union County Public Libraries William T. Fuller Debbie Gainey Gean Gentry William & Rochelle Gibney Rebecca G. Gibson Delilah Gomes John L. Griffin Margaret E. Griffin Calvin Hall Jacquelyn Hall Deborah Hallam Jonathan & Nahomi Harkavy Christopher Harris The Honorable & Mrs. A. Robinson Hassell Anna Hayes Charlotte W. Hoffman Terry Holt Michelle R. Hunt Haywood & Cathryn Ingram Deane & Sandy Irving Ralph & Vivian Jacobson Kristen E. Jeffers Sherry Jolly Leah R. Karpen Frank Kessler Julia W. Keville Richard H. Kohn Elizabeth Kohnen Dana Borden Lacy Jan H. Lawrence Edwin B. Lee Sally Logan Peter Lydens Melissa Malouf Jane Marsh Brent Martin James Martin Ann Phillips McCracken Donovan McKnight William F. McNeill Elizabeth McPherson Larry Moore Richard D. Moore Lou Nachman Robert W. Oast Old Dobbs County Genealogical Society Outer Banks History Center Sharon Owens Leland M. Park Pasquotank - Camden Library Alan R. Perry Gina A. Phillips Piedmont Crossing Bill & Susan Redding Art & Jan Ross Deborah Russell Dr. & Mrs. William Sasser Steve Schewel & Lao Rubert Linda Seale Eve Shy Stephen R. & Elizabeth P. Simmons Bland & Ann Simpson Sandy Sisson Barry L. Solomon Lois M. Sowers Celisa Steele Darrell Stover John & Janice Sullivan Rebecca Summer Arthur W. Swarthout L.J. Sweeney Tarkil Branch Farm’s Homestead Museum The Research Club Joe & Amy Thompson Nancy Tilly Donald & Sherry Toler Benjamin Torbert William H. Towe Tuesday Study Club Twin Lakes Enrichment Committee Wendy Walker Peter F. Walker James M. Wallace Reginald Watson Mary Wayne Watson Susan Weinberg Connie Whaley Judith White Alethea Williams-King Tammy Young Paul & Jean Yount Walter Ziffer & Gail Rosenthal IN H ON OR OF… Tom & Cherry Boswell Luis H Peña Cabello & Magdalena Maiz-Peña Fred & Susan Chappell Becky Anderson Alice & Jerry Cotton Robert G. Anthony, Jr. Shelley Crisp and the North Carolina Humanities Council Ben & Norma Fountain Edward Standish Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Benjamin Eagles Fountain, Jr. John & Lexi Eagles H.G. Jones Linda & Shelby Stephenson Anne C. Dahle Harlan Gradin Lawrence S. & Renee Gledhill Earley A.L. Corum Louise Taylor Nan D. Miller The Staff of the Person County Library Calvin Hall Howard & Juanita Spanogle Friends of the Person County Library Jonathan & Mary Howes Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Ben E. Fountain The Talented Artists in NC — Past, Present and Future Beth Sheffield Michele Y. Thomas Paul & Jean Yount H.G. Jones Humanities Council Staff Samuel & Genevieve Cole H.G. Jones Dana Borden Lacy Ben & Norma Fountain Tom & Donna Lambeth Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Let’s Talk About It Scholars & Librarians Carolyn Allen Pam Thornton Dr. & Mrs. John B. Hardy, Jr. Holden & Patti Thorp Tom & Donna Lambeth Dr. Charles C. Todd Ben & Norma Fountain G. Vance Tucker Benjamin Torbert Dot Walker Margaret E. Griffin Towny & Jane Ludington Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Betty Ray McCain The Honorable & Mrs. A. Robinson Hassell Jim & Joan Hemby, Jr. H.G. Jones William McNeill First Presbyterian Church, Greensboro Road Scholars Speakers Carolyn Allen Anne Whisnant Twin Lakes Enrichment Committee Emily Herring Wilson Nancy Young Lynn Wright-Kernodle A.L. Corum Sherry Jolly Joe & Amy Thompson Tuesday Study Club Jeri Fitzgerald Board Jim & Jan Applewhite Louise Averette Barnette Sue Fields Ross Art & Jan Ross Montine Barnette Dr. Todd Savitt Bill & Susan Redding Ali Standish Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish Pauline Binkley Cheek Virginia Yeager Bullock Mary Ann B. Evans Stephen Consor Ellis & Ellen Berlin Lynn Jones Ennis Hoyt Bangs Larry W. Ennis John & Lucinda MacKethan Willis P. Whichard William W. Finlator Haywood & Cathryn Ingram Linda Flowers Dr. & Mrs. William Sasser William C. Friday June P. Bair Julia W. Keville Elizabeth E. Griffin John L. Griffin Mary Frances Johnson Mary Wayne Watson Dr. Bobby Jones Mary Wayne Watson Z.Z. Lydens Peter Lydens Haynes McFadden Nancy Tilly John Medlin Shelley Crisp & Myles Standish David & Libby Ward Jerry Leath Mills Bland & Ann Simpson Dr. Thomas Parramore Deborah Russell IN MEMO RY O F… Henry Applewhite Hepsie Roskelly Olin and Pauline Binkley Phyllis Barrett Elizabeth M. Holsten Joseph D. & Roselyn Bathanti The Late Chief Jessie W. Richardson of the Haliwa-Saponi Indian Tribe Gregory A. Richardson Pearl F. Seymour Robert E. Seymour The father of Joe Nehman Ellis & Ellen Berlin Joseph & Joan Bathanti Betty Ray McCain T. Edwin Davenport DONATE ONLINE AT www.nchumanities.org Winter/Spring 2013 North Carolina Humanities Council Alumni Many gifted individuals from across North Carolina have served on the governing board of the Humanities Council since its inception. If you have the opportunity to do so, please thank these volunteers for their vision and leadership. Constituting Committ ee, 1971–1972 Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. George Bair† John T. Caldwell† Ben E. Fountain, Jr. H.G. Jones Dwight Rhyne Council Tr ustee Al umni Dr. E. Maynard Adams°† Dr. Robert L. Albright Dr. Annette Allen Mr. Harry Amana Dr. Douglas Antonelli Ms. Katherine Armitage Ms. Darnell Arnoult Dr. George E. Bair°† Mr. Donald Baker Dr. Barbara J. Ballard Dr. Richard Bardolph† Dr. Sydney Barnwell Dr. Gretchen Bataille Dr. John J. Beck Ms. Winnie Bennett Dr. Kathleen Berkeley Mrs. Sylvia Berkelhammer* Ms. Doris Betts† Dr. Barbara Birge Dr. H. Tyler Blethen Dr. Jeri Fitzgerald Board* Dr. Carol Boggess* Mrs. Jacqueline R. Boykin Mrs. Barbara Braveboy-Locklear Mr. Thomas Brewer Mr. James D. Brewington† Ms. Sue Ellen Bridgers Dr. Joseph R. Brooks Mr. Robert Brunk Ms. Elizabeth F. Buford Ms. Margaret Bushnell† Dr. Lindley S. Butler Dr. Barry M. Buxton Dr. John Tyler Caldwell† Ms. E. Thelma Caldwell Mr. James C. Cannon, Jr. Dr. Peter J. Caulfield Mr. Jack E. Claiborne° Mr. Edward H. Clement Dr. Alvis Corum Mr. Bob Culbertson Mrs. Peggy Culbertson Ms. Julie E. Curd Dr. Blanche Radford Curry Dr. Marvin V. Curtis Ms. Maggie B. DeVries Dr. Barbara R. Duncan Dr. John R. Dykers, Jr. Dr. Jean Eason° Dr. Eugene A. Eaves Mrs. Linda Edmisten Dr. David Eliades† Dr. Lynn Jones Ennis*°† Dr. Don Ensley Mrs. Helen Wolfe Evans† Ms. Georgann Eubanks° Ms. Janice Faulkner° Ms. Joyce Fitzpatrick Dr. Linda Flowers† Dr. Ben E. Fountain, Jr. Dr. Bernard W. Franklin* Mr. L. B. Frasier Mrs. Shirley Frye* Mr. Laney Funderburk Ms. Ellen W. Gerber Mrs. Edna D. Gore* Dr. Daniel Gottovi Dr. Sandy Govan Ms. Jaki Shelton Green Dr. John V. Griffith* Ms. Elisabeth G. Hair Dr. John H. Haley Dr. Calvin Hall Ms. Linda Harris* Ms. Hazel Harvey Ms. Dana Hay Dr. James B. Hemby, Jr. Dr. Karla Holloway Hon. Richlyn Holt° Ms. Ann M. Hooper-Hudson Dr. Suellen M. Hoy Dr. Austin T. Hyde, Jr.† Dr. Blyden Jackson† Mr. James W. Jackson Dr. Jimmy Jenkins Dr. Harley Jolley Dr. H. G. Jones Mr. Walter B. Jones, Jr. Dr. Joseph Jordan Dr. Bennett M. Judkins Dr. Ruth Kennedy Mr. Michael Lee King* Dr. John W. Kuykendall* Mr. Tom Lassiter† Mr. Tom Lambeth Ms. Carol Lawrence Dr. Sarah E. Leak Dr. James S. Lee Dr. Sarah Lemmon† Dr. Susan Levine Dr. Henry S. Levinson°† Mr. Richard D. Levy* Mrs. Lydia Lockman* Dr. Charles Long Rev. Jane Ann Love Dr. Clifford Lovin Dr. Lucinda MacKethan° Dr. William J. MacLean* Mr. Isaiah Madison Rev. W. Joseph Mann° Mr. Bill Mansfield Mr. James Marsh Ms. Joanna Ruth Marsland* Mr. Joel K. Martin Mr. Joe C. Matthews Dr. Lena Mayberry-Engstrom Ms. Easter Maynard* Mr. Arche L. McAdoo Mr. Robert McCoy Dr. James McGowan Mrs. Pat McGuire† Dr. Melton A. McLaurin° Dr. Neill McLeod Dr. David Middleton Dr. Heather Ross Miller Dr. Charles Milner Dr. Elizabeth K. Minnich° Mrs. Memory F. Mitchell† Mr. James R. Moody† Ms. MariJo Moore Mr. William M. Moore, Jr. Ms. Betina Morris-Anderson* Dr. Sydney Nathans Dr. John Oates°† Dr. Jean Fox O’Barr Dr. Linda Oxendine Mr. Roy Parker Dr. Cecil Patterson Ms. Nancy J. Pekarek* Dr. Patsy Perry Dr. Barbara A. Phillips† Dr. Della Pollock Dr. William S. Price, Jr. Dr. Judith Pulley Dr. Jeff Rackham* Mr. Sam T. Ragan† Ms. Glenis Redmond Mr. Addison Reed Ms. Mattye M. Reed*† Rev. Rebecca Reyes Mr. Dwight Rhyne Mr. J. Peyton Richardson Ms. Nancy Doggett Rigby Mr. Donald R. Roberts Mrs. Sally Dalton Robinson Dr. Ruby V. Rodney Dr. William R. Rogers* Dr. Sue Fields Ross Mr. Robert C. Roule* Dr. Thelma Roundtree Mr. David Routh Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler Mr. Robert L. Savage, Jr. Mr. Todd Savitt Dr. James A. Schobel* Ms. Beverly E. Smalls Dr. Ronald O. Smith Mr. William D. Snider† Dr. Richard A. Soloway Mrs. Marge Sosnik Mr. Alex Spears† Dr. Samuel R. Spencer, Jr.* Mr. Carl Stewart, Jr. Dr. Joan Hinde Stewart° Mr. Maurice Stirewalt Dr. George Edwin Stuart Mr. Douglas H. Swaim Ms. Jeanne Tannenbaum Father Wilbur N. Thomas Mr. Clark A. Thompson† Mr. Bill Thomson† Mr. William L. Thorpe Mr. William J. Trent, Jr. Mr. Ruel W. Tyson, Jr. Dr. Lucila Vargas Dr. Valerie F. Villines* Mr. William H. Wagoner Dr. Alfred A. Wang Hon. Willis P. Whichard*° Dr. Judith White Dr. Cratis Williams† Dr. Dorothy Williams Dr. Edwin G. Wilson Dr. John Wolfe Mrs. Winnie J. Wood Dr. Robert F. Yeager° Dr. John Young *Gubernatorial Appointee °Chairperson † Deceased NORTH CAROLINA HUMANITIES COUNCIL | 35