Maryland Humanities Awards Over $6,000 to Maryland Nonprofits

July 31, 2019

(Baltimore) – Maryland Humanities is pleased to award a total of $6,360 in mini grant funding to organizations in Maryland’s Capital Region, Central Maryland, Western Maryland, and on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. The mini grant recipients are: The Annapolis Maritime Museum, Charles H. Flowers High School, Hearing and Speech Agency of Metropolitan Baltimore (HASA), Strong City Baltimore, United Way of the Lower Eastern Shore, and Washington County Museum of Fine Arts. Recipients are located in Anne Arundel County, Baltimore City, Prince George’s County, Washington County, and Wicomico County.

Projects funded in this round of awards include a play reading and related programming inspired by public conversation about the removal of monuments in Baltimore; sign language interpretation for the literature portion of Baltimore Book Festival/Light City; and a panel discussion asking “What Is the Black Aesthetic?”

Maryland Humanities provides mini grants (up to $1,200) and major grants (up to $10,000). Funding goes to nonprofit organizations that use the humanities (literature, philosophy, history, etc.) to inspire Marylanders to embrace lifelong learning, exchange ideas openly, and enrich their communities. Grant criteria encourage free public programming in many forms.

Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning, and the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation.

Learn more about the recently funded projects here and learn more about our Grants Program, eligibility, and deadlines here.

Press Release