Expand Massachusetts Stories: Open Track

The Open Track grant program offers up to $20,000 for projects that collect, interpret and/or share narratives about the Commonwealth, with an emphasis on the voices and experiences that have gone unrecognized, or have been excluded from public conversation.
Application Opens
February 5, 2024
Deadline
May 31, 2024

We believe that fostering robust civic engagement in the Commonwealth starts when communities tell, share, and reimagine their diverse stories and ideas.

Expand Massachusetts Stories provides you with an opportunity to do exactly that.

Photo: Larry Spotted Crow of the Ohketeau Cultural Center.

Grant DETAILS

Applicant organizations must:

  • Be a 501(c)(3), non-profit, fiscally-sponsored association or filmmaker (see below), state or federally recognized tribe, or non-federal government organization.
  • Serve Massachusetts residents.
  • Be in compliance with state and federal regulations which bar discrimination on the basis of race, gender, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, disability, age, or sexual orientation, and which require accessibility for persons with disabilities.

See the Grant Guidelines document linked above for more information on eligibility.

  • February 5, 2024–Applications Open
  • April 23, 2024–Applicant Webinars
  • May 31, 2024–Applications Due
  • September 27, 2024–Award Notification
  • Oral histories
  • Community-centered museum exhibitions
  • Facilitated discussions about underrepresented aspects of local histories
  • Exhibits and programs focused on new interpretations of collections
  • Short documentary films (15-30 minutes) or digital media projects that present new insights into the lives of Massachusetts residents past or present
  • Teacher professional development focused on connecting Massachusetts narratives to K-12 curriculum
  • Programs that use inquiry, contextualization, and/or reflection to support residents in recording and exploring their lived experiences

Creating a Living Archive

Boston’s Chinese Economic Development Council received an EMS grant to produce an oral history of Boston Chinatown residents. In this brief video, filmmaker Kenneth Eng and project coordinator Nancy Lo explain what went into making “Resiliency in Chinatown: Stories of Survival and Community Building.”

wITH this
GRANT, you can...

participate

in vital conversations about making a free and equitable society in the Commonwealth.

QUESTION

the status quo and shed light on untold histories of individuals and communities.

Spark

new ideas about the importance of storytelling and connect with your neighbors about current issues.

CREATE

exhibits, oral histories, teaching materials, documentary films, community programs, and more.

Where it
all began

Inspired by a visit to a correctional facility in 1995, writer Earl Shorris started a course with faculty of fellow scholars at the Roberto Clemente Family Guidance Center in the city’s Lower East Side neighborhood. Graduates of that first course went on to become dentists, nurses, fashion designers, and drug counselors with two participants later earning their PhDs. Since 1996, over 10,000 students have benefited from the Clemente Course in the Humanities. Classes continue to take place across the U.S., and around the world.

In 1999, we brought the Clemente Course to Massachusetts to give everyone, regardless of race, income and educational background, the opportunity to enrich their lives through the humanities. Overcoming formidable obstacles such as economic instability, health challenges, family responsibilities and disability, we have seen over 750 Massachusetts residents graduate from the program.

past grantees

Learn about past projects completed by grantees.

grant webinars
& workshops

Mass Humanities hosts periodic webinars and workshops to support you and set the stage for a successful funded project. 

Al and Sally Griggs
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, through the Federation of State Humanities Councils
The Beveridge Family Foundation, Inc.
F. Roscoe and Vila B. Webber 1985 Charitable Trust
Marcia Butzel Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts
Paul and Edith Babson Foundation
University of Massachusetts Amherst
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Wells Fargo Foundation

Let’s do more good
work together

The work we do wouldn’t be possible without the generous support of donors like you. Make a donation today and help build a better Massachusetts.

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connected

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Grant Program
  • READING FREDERICK DOUGLASS TOGETHER
  • 2020 SUPPORT GRANTS
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