The
White House Historical Association Research Grants Program .
For a list of Recent Grant Recipients click here
The White House Historical Association invites scholars who are
conducting research at the National Archives and Records Administration
(NARA), Presidential Library System, Library of Congress, or other
appropriate repository, to apply for grants that will defray costs
of travel and accommodations.
Sponsor
The White House
Historical Association is a private, non-profit organization
whose mission is to share and promote a greater understanding
of the history of the Presidents House. The Association,
founded in 1961 through the efforts of Mrs. John F. Kennedy
and others, is located in Washington, D.C.
Purpose:
The Association
wishes to encourage new scholarship on the history of the White
House. For the research grants program, the Association will
consider projects that make use of textual and non-textual records
pertinent to the president, first family and subordinates while
the president lives in the White House. The focus of the
research should be the White House, including life and work
there, as well the physical structure. This would include, but
not necessarily be limited to:
- Image of the
White House: the White House as symbol or icon; perceptions
of the White House from the public, press or foreign dignitaries.
- White House personnel;
personnel management; Executive Residence staff; White House
staff (West Wing and East Wing operations, including Oval
Office, Office of the First Lady and the Social Office); White
House permanent operating offices; administration of the White
House Office.
- Social and diplomatic
functions: state dinners, performances, visits from heads
of state and other honorees, entertaining.
- Study of the
structure and its contents: construction, renovation, alteration,
furnishing, decoration, use of space, historical collections,
buildings and grounds; public tours and historical interpretation.
- Family life:
issues of security, public scrutiny, privacy; public role
of first family members; means of travel.
- Communications:
use of communications technology to document events, meetings,
conversations; the role of White House press corps and staff
photographers; public presentation of the president, first
lady and first family.
Awards
Grants awarded will
not exceed $2,000 and will be made according to need, using
submitted budget as a guide. Grants must be used within one
year of notification.
Eligibility
Preference is given
to those undertaking dissertation research or post-doctoral
research with plans for publication, but all proposals, including
graduate-level research and independent projects, will be considered.
Deadlines
Applications should
be received by March 1 and September 1. Awards will be announced
in spring and fall.
Application
Researchers should
submit the following:
- A letter briefly
describing the project title and the proposed final product
of the research (book, dissertation, article, etc.)
- A two-page project
proposal
- An assessment
form, letter, search report or other verification from the
Presidential Library that lists the appropriate holdings for
the project. Records must support the White House research
project.
- A current vita
- Three professional
references in support of the proposal
- A proposed budget,
including expenses related to travel, per diem and photocopying.
Please use local per diem set by specific Presidential Library
or consult GSA rate (visit www.gsa.gov,
and search for "domestic per diem"). Applicant should
include approximate dates of travel.
Applicant should
include approximate dates of travel. Send applications to:
Research Grants Program
White House Historical Association
P.O. Box 27624
Washington, D.C. 20038-7624
Application materials, letters of recommendation, and inquiries
may also be faxed (202.789.0440) or e-mailed: edu@whha.org
End-of-Grant
Responsibilities
Grant recipient
must: 1) Donate a copy of resulting publication or unpublished
paper to the Association, 2) Acknowledge support of the White
House Historical Association in resulting publication, 3) Provide
an update on progress of the research within two years of the
end of grant, 4) Submit a 500-word statement describing how
the grant forwarded the research project. Recipients are also
strong encouraged to submit for consideration the resulting
research for publication by the White House Historical Association.
Research Grants Program - Recent
Grant Recipients :
Jill Abraham, University of Virginia, “The First
Lady, the Women’s Movement, and the Modern Presidency.” Dwight
D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Jimmy Carter Presidential
Library
Daniel E. Bergan and Brandon Rottinghaus, Northwestern University, “Interbranch
Lobbying: Congressional Mail to the President.” Dwight D. Eisenhower
Presidential Library
Mark Cheathem, Mississippi State University, biography of Andrew
Jackson Donelson, President Andrew Jackson's advisor and private
secretary. Library of Congress
Jean Choate, Coastal Georgia Community College, to support
research for a biography of First Lady Eliza Johnson. Andrew
Johnson National Historic Site
Kenneth Collier, Stephen F. Austin State University, “Whose
Line Is It? The Institutionalization of Presidential Speech.” Nixon
Presidential Materials, National Archives and Records Administration
Tracy Davis, Northwestern University, on the Kennedy
family, executive relocation, and civil defense planning. John
F. Kennedy Presidential Library
Catherine Forslund, Rockford College, for a biography of Edith
Roosevelt. Library of Congress and Houghton Library,
Harvard University
Kathleen Galop, Independent, Jacqueline Kennedy’s role
in establishing historic preservation as public policy. John
F. Kennedy Presidential Library
David Greenberg, Rutgers University, study of President Calvin Coolidge’s
use of mass media for an upcoming Coolidge biography. Library of Congress
and Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library and Museum at the Forbes Library, Northampton,
MA
David Greenberg, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Nixon’s
Shadow: The History of an Image, an analysis of President Nixon’s
image-making efforts and relationship with the press. Nixon
Presidential Materials Project, National Archives and Records
Administration
C. M. Harris, Independent, social history of the White House
of Jefferson and Madison utilizing the Samuel and Catharine
Mitchill Papers. Museum of the City of New York and Library
of Congress
Utham Jamadhagni, University of Madras, The White House: Impressions
and Expressions from India. Franklin D. Roosevelt and
John F. Kennedy Presidential Libraries
Rick Perlstein, Independent, to support research on Richard
Nixon's use of the White House as a political base of operations
for the 1972 elections. Nixon Presidential Materials Project,
National Archives and Records Administration
Brandon Rottinghaus, Northwestern University, early public opinion
and polling practices in the Eisenhower White House Mail Room.
Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library
Mary Elise Sarotte, University of Notre Dame, President Carter
and the White House, a chapter for a larger work on the history
of détente. Jimmy Carter Presidential Library
Robert E. K. Schlesinger, Journalist and Author, “Welliver’s Children,” a
study of White House speechwriters. Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
Jennifer L. Weber, The University of Kansas, “Lincoln’s
Secretaries [John Hay and John Nicolay].” Library
of Congress
Christine Weiss, University of Heidelberg, the public
roles of the first lady during presidential election campaigns. Ronald
Reagan Library and National Archives and Records Administration.
Malcah Yaeger-Dror, University of Arizona, Comparison of the
Use of Communications Technology in the Kennedy, Johnson,
and Nixon Administrations. Lyndon B. Johnson and John F. Kennedy
Presidential Libraries
Nancy Beck Young, McKendree College, Forgotten Feminist: Lou
Henry Hoover as First Lady, for a biography. Herbert Hoover
Presidential Library