Last updated: October 22, 2021
Article
NPS Grant Proves Essential to Restoring an Historic Black Church in the Upper Housatonic Valley

Courtesy of Clinton Church Restoration
The National Park Service’s State, Tribal, Local, Plans & Grants Division recently announced African American Civil Rights grant awards this summer. Of the 53 grants announced, two National Heritage Areas in Region 1 (Northeast) will be the recipients of these funds.

Special Collections and University Archives, W.E.B. Du Bois Library, University of Massachusetts Amherst
The grant to UPHV, which the Heritage Area will provide directly to the Clinton Church Restoration project, will be used to continue second-phase work on structural stabilization and repair work on this important historic building.
The Clinton Church long served as a center of Black culture in southwestern Massachusetts and northwestern Connecticut since its opening in 1887. W.E.B. Du Bois, born in Great Barrington, MA in 1868, was a member of the church in his youth and attended services there. In 2014 after many years of a declining congregation, and increasing amount of structural problems with the building, the church was officially closed.

Courtesy of Clinton Church Restoration
Based on the preservation priorities and treatment recommendations laid out in a 2018 Historic Structure Report, work to install a new fire-retardant cedar shingle roof began in late 2019. As often happens, during construction, extensive structural damage was uncovered on the building’s south side, requiring repairs to the foundation and rafters, and rebuilding of the south wall. Urgent repairs were completed in spring 2021 and a waterproof under-roof was installed on the entire building before the cedar shingles could be ordered.

Courtesy of Clinton Church Restoration

Courtesy of Clinton Church Restoration.
Once the building’s frame is structurally sound, it will be raised 12-18 inches to make the historically significant basement into a functional, code-compliant space. Foundation repair, a new slab and under-slab drainage, and site improvements to ameliorate water intrusion will be undertaken. Not until all of that is done will the contractors install cedar wood shingles on the entire roof.
Upon completion of this Phase I work, the building will be ready for the interior renovations and “build out” for its adaptive reuse as a visitor center. The Clinton Church Restoration organization intends to create an African American heritage site and cultural center, dedicated to educating the public about the life and legacy of civil rights pioneer W.E.B. Du Bois and the Berkshires’ rich African American history.
Bolognani added, “the value of this preservation project cannot be overstated. The Clinton Church remains a critical piece of the history of African Americans in the Upper Housatonic Valley, and its future adaptation as a cultural, educational and visitor center remains pivotal to the larger regional program of interpretation of Black history.”
You can learn more about the history of the Clinton Church Restoration from our past coverage of the project in Season 1 of the NHA Podcast (2017) and in our 2019 NHA Blog post.
*Read more about The African American Experience in Essex National Heritage Area on our past NHA Blog post.
*Read more about The African American Experience in Essex National Heritage Area on our past NHA Blog post.

Courtesy of Clinton Church Restoration.

Courtesy of Clinton Church Restoration