Clinton Church Restoration Announces New Funding

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Clinton Church Restoration has been awarded a $117,000 capital grant from MassDevelopment and the Mass Cultural Council, part of a round of Cultural Facilities Fund grants.
 
The funds will be used to help complete architectural and engineering plans for the African American cultural heritage center the nonprofit is creating in downtown Great Barrington. This is the project's second award from the Fund, whose planning and capital grants provide investments in cultural facilities throughout the Commonwealth. 
 
"It's wonderful to see this funding from the Cultural Facilities Fund," said Dan Bolognani, executive director of the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area and ex officio member of the Clinton Church Restoration board. "Their impact on the cultural scene in the Berkshires cannot be overstated and we are honored to have their support in developing a unique new center that will expand the region's cultural offerings."
 
According to Eugenie Sills, the project's interim executive director, the Cultural Facilities Fund grant is one of six grants the project has received in as many months. In March, the American Historical Association provided a $75,000 grant to support a one-year historian-in-residence position, research assistant, and public history programming. The nonprofit was one of 50 organizations to receive the AHA-NEH Grant to Sustain and Advance the Work of Historical Organizations, a program made possible with funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.
 
"Thanks to the support of a diverse group of funders, Clinton Church Restoration is not only making progress on the development of a vibrant downtown visitor center with museum-quality exhibits and programming, we are planning a series of engaging programs that will begin this summer and continue into next year," Sills said. The lineup, to be announced soon, includes roundtable discussions, tours of African American historic sites, music and more.
 
Last fall, Mass Humanities awarded Clinton Church Restoration a $20,000 Expanding Massachusetts Stories grant for interpretive exhibit design. The monies will support further development of exhibits that educate the public about the life and legacy of W. E. B. Du Bois, the community that formed and maintained the historic Clinton A. M. E. Zion Church, and the rich African American heritage of the Berkshires. 
 
"There is a much-needed reckoning with history unfolding in our nation, and these grants represent our investment in that movement," said Mass Humanities Executive Director Brian Boyles when the grants, made possible by Mass Cultural Council, were announced. "We believe that every resident should see their stories and the stories of their ancestors as valued parts of the Massachusetts story." Boyles and his team visited the former church in November.
 
Clinton Church Restoration has also received a $15,000 grant from the Town of Great Barrington's Community Impact Funding Program for development of its tours of African American heritage sites in town. The Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area, known as Housatonic Heritage, and First Church Outreach, an initiative of the First Congregational Church in Williamstown, have provided critical capacity building support.
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Great Barrington Fire, Police Respond to Chimney Fire

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Fire Chief Scott Turner called for mutual aid as soon as he saw flames. 
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Firefighters made quick work of a chimney fire on Tuesday afternoon and two police officers aided the occupant in escaping the building. 
 
Fire Chief Scott Turner said the blaze at 205 North St. was reported about 12:38 p.m.
 
"When I arrived on scene, we had a small amount of flames coming out of the eaves of the roof over by the chimney for the wood stove, and then we had light smoke conditions on the second floor," he said. 
 
Police Officers Andres Huertas and Elias Casey were first on the scene and immediately entered the single-family home to find the occupant was on the second floor. 
 
They helped her out of the building, Turner said, "they did a great job."
 
The chimney is a metal chimney and burn marks could been seen where it meets the eaves on the side of the building. 
 
North Street is a narrow residential way and firetrucks from Alford, Egremont, Monterey, Richmond, Stockbridge and West Stockbridge were parked along nearby streets. Scene support was provided by police, Southern Berkshire Ambulance, and National Grid. 
 
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