Harrison Goodall Preservation Fellowship 2024

PROGRAM DEADLINE: April 12, 2024 at 11:59 PM EDT (Midnight) - CLOSED

This program is inactive or past the deadline.

Description

Inspired by a gift from Harrison Goodall and made possible by Preservation Maryland, this National Park Service program aims to develop students and enterprising professionals into the preservation leaders of tomorrow. Fellows grow professionally through coaching from the fellowship committee and a preservation mentor.  


The Harrison Goodall Preservation Fellowship gives fellows the opportunity to focus on their professional development within historic preservation, gain access to networking and resources, and learn leadership competencies. In addition to these growth opportunities, fellows undertake capstone projects that, through mentorship and coaching, will make a meaningful contribution to the broader field of historic preservation and support the stewardship of historic resources not only in the National Park Service (NPS), but nationwide and at any level (e.g., other federal agencies, state and county parks, nonprofit history museums, etc.). The format of the fellowship program is flexible to encourage creativity and allow fellows to continue to study, work or engage in other activities.

The fellowship awards $10,000 to support an innovative project in the field of historic preservation. The capstone project must impact more than just one historic place; it must have the potential to be applied elsewhere and impact how we do preservation. If you can improve the way we steward our historic places, we want to see your ideas!

Requirements

What types of capstone projects will you consider?

Under the guidance of the fellowship committee, fellows are coached to take their capstone project and expand it into something that impacts the broader field of preservation. Creativity and divergent thinking are encouraged for this fellowship capstone project.
Example project categories include:

  • Preservation trade tool, material, or method
  • Technological development such as an app, program, or device to document, diagnose or investigate historic properties
  • Web-based resource or toolkit to support community-based preservation efforts
  • Research methodology for documenting and understanding historic properties in a novel way
  • Pedagogical approach for teaching about historic places, preservation, or a method for interpreting historic sites
  • Approach to solve a common but unsolved preservation issue
  • Housing policy or urban planning strategy that benefits historic buildings

Who can apply?

This opportunity is aimed at both emerging and seasoned preservation professionals and students enrolled at least part-time in a preservation-related degree program (historic preservation, museum studies, history, archeology, urban planning, architecture, preservation trades, etc.). Applications will be accepted from federal and non-federal applicants who want to invest in their professional growth.


What is expected of me if selected?

Once accepted into the Harrison Goodall Preservation Fellowship, fellows have one year (August to August) to develop their preservation leadership skills through their work with a mentor and the committee on a final capstone project. Fellows and mentors must present their progress to the committee quarterly so the committee members can help support the fellow and project development. In addition to the capstone project, the committee will provide a custom set of opportunities for professional development relevant to the selected fellow which could include up to two weeks of in-person and/or virtual workshops. 


Upon completion of a final presentation and capstone submission, program participants will be given the title of Harrison Goodall Preservation Fellow. The fellow's capstone and presentation will be shared on The Campaign for Historic Trades website. Additionally, the committee expects fellows to have a plan to share their work with the broader preservation community.

Payment of the fellowship award will be made at the completion of the final presentation and final deliverable submission, and as approved by the fellowship committee. A fellow may request a partial payment of the fellowship award once the fellowship is 50% completed. While partial payments are a possibility, they are not guaranteed and are approved on a case-by-case basis by the fellowship committee.

The Campaign for Historic Trades is a program of Preservation Maryland. Preservation Maryland is not required to withold any income taxes from the fellowship payment. Fellows are responsible for calculating, reporting, and paying any income taxes that may be due on this payment and may wish to obtain professional tax advice on this matter. Preservation Maryland cannot advise you regarding your tax obligations. 

Number of Awards

1

Award Amount

$10,000
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