In 2022, project funds totaling $750,000 were awarded to museums, academic institutions, and nonprofit organizations around the state to ensure the physical and digital preservation of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer materials relevant to the LGBTQ+ movement, culture, experience, and/or history in California. Collections are based in California, of research value, and relate to California LGBTQ+ history and culture specifically. Funding for 2022-2024 projects came from the 2021 California State Budget and all project outputs are accessible to the public.
Grantees and Projects (2022-2024)
University of Southern California ($134,947)
Preserved and shared through USC’s Digital Library and Calisphere historical collections documenting diverse LGBTQ+ experiences held by ONE Archives and identifying LGBTQ+ collections held by “L.A. as Subject” members.
California State University at Dominguez Hills Foundation ($100,000)
Cataloged and digitized LGBTQ collections relating to work, activism and publications as well as funding of an LGBTQ speakers’ series.
GLBT Historical Society ($100,000)
Built 10 new digital collections, processing and digitizing items from the historical society’s LGBTQ Film and Video Collection and hosting two public events that provide instruction on using digital resources and showcase the materials available at the GLBT Historical Society.
Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History at the McPherson Center ($91,029)
In partnership with The Diversity Center, digitized and published online a collection of photographs, printed materials, and audiovisual components that document LGBTQ+ leaders, communities, and activism in Santa Cruz County from 1974 to present.
The June L Mazer Lesbian Archives ($88,935)
Cataloged and made available to the public 297 cubic feet of unique lesbian and feminist material.
Lambda Archives of San Diego ($71,835)
Preserved and provided wider public access to materials and stories that document California’s LGBTQ history, shared knowledge and skills to help other LGBTQ+ community organizations start preserving other collections; and established a network of accessible workflows of basic archival processes for digital and analog materials.
BAYMEC Community Foundation ($61,250)
Provided public awareness and access to Silicon Valley’s rich but largely undocumented queer political and social history by cataloging and digitizing documents of people significant in the local LGBTQ movement.
Autry Museum of the American West ($57,056)
Preserved and provided access to the California Gay Rodeo materials held at the Autry Museum through archival processing, cataloging, digitization, public programming, a research fellowship, exhibit installation, and a social media campaign.
University of California, Davis ($18,000)
Digitized and preserved rare, historical LGBTQ+ newspapers, magazines, and other periodicals held in the UC Davis Library’s Gay and Lesbian History and Culture Collection.
Color Compton ($15,000)
Hosted programming focused on discovering and exploring the LGTBQ+ history of Compton, as well as offering youth an opportunity to explore and create a collaborative, cross generational archive of the LGTBQ+ history of Compton.
Louise Lawrence Transgender Archive ($11,948)
Cataloged, preserved, digitized and shared online the newsletters, photographs, and ephemera of the Educational Transvestite Channel and its successor, TransGender San Francisco.
More Information
Lisa Lindsay, Grant Monitor
LGBTQ@library.ca.gov