Multiplier Grants

(Photo by Thomas Callahan)

Ribbon cutting for the Serpent Mound in Schiller Park cr Thomas Callahan
Amount

Up to $10,000

For

Organizations

Open

Feb 1, 2024
9:00am

Deadline

May 15, 2024
5:00pm

Nonprofit organizations carrying out partnerships and collaborations with other nonprofits, humanities groups, or directly with their audience or community are candidates for this project-based grant. From projects that impact under-funded, under-served communities, to telling stories of forgotten history, these initiatives champion collaboration in the public humanities. Partnering with organizations in this work helps us all to make valuable connections for the humanities throughout Illinois.

Award Timeline

The entire review process typically takes about 10 weeks from the deadline until groups are notified about funding. The timeline for activities seeking funding should not begin until 12 weeks after the initial LOI deadline. Groups should submit one grant application per cycle.  

  1. LOI's are reviewed. Successful LOI applicants are invited to submit a full proposal. (Approximately two weeks)
  2. Applicants have two to three weeks to complete the full proposal
  3. Full proposals are reviewed. Successful applicants are notified. (Approximately three weeks)
  4. Applicants review and sign grant agreements. Grant funds are issued two to three weeks after the signed grant agreement is received.
  5. Within 30 days of the conclusion of a project or grant period, grantees must complete a final grant report.
Eligibility and Guidelines

Eligibility

  1. Must be a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization or have a fiscal sponsor
  2. Organizations or projects must be Illinois-based
  3. The project must be rooted in the humanities
    a. Learn how we define the humanities in our Frequently Asked Questions section below
  4. Priority given to organizations with an annual budget of $1 million or less
  5. Applicants can have an open Activate History, Vision, Action, General Operating, Envisioning Justice, or Foreground Rural Initiative grant
  6. Buy-in by all partners before submitting a proposal is a must.
  7. Preference will go toward initiatives that impact under-funded, under-served communities.

Questions about your eligibility? View our Frequently Asked Questions or contact us.

Guidelines

Multiplier Grants support projects that represent partnerships of a wider scope, place-based community-building efforts, and/or coalition or network building efforts. Preference goes toward projects that impact under-funded, under-served communities, and toward telling stories of forgotten or uncovered history and themes. Current Illinois Humanities grantees are eligible.

Additional Funding

  1. Optional Accessibility Fund: An additional stipend of up to $250 for services such as American Sign Language interpretation or captioning to help make events more accessible to everyone.
  2. Optional Media Fund: An additional stipend of up to $100 for services such as documentation, photography, videography, etc.
How to Apply

Submit a Letter of Intent (LOI) using our grant application portal, Foundant.

Note: 

  1. The timeline for activities seeking funding should not begin until 12 weeks after the initial LOI deadline. 
  2. Applicants should submit one grant application per cycle.
  3. Recurring Deadlines*: 5:00 p.m. CST on May 15th 

*When the grant deadline falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline will move to the next business day.

Evaluation and Documentation

Evaluation and documentation are important to us, and we are eager to see how grant applicants define success and plan to measure progress toward it. We ask grant applicants to describe in precise terms the project's desired outcome, and how they will know if it was successful. Within 30 days of the conclusion of a project or grant period, grantees must complete a final grant report.

We ask all Grant recipients to document their initiatives or events by taking photos, recording audio or video, and sharing their experience with us. We want to share with others the great work that grantees are doing and frequently feature stories of grantee partners in our news and on social media @ILHumanities.

Additional Funding

  1. Optional Accessibility Fund: An additional stipend of up to $250 for services such as American Sign Language interpretation or captioning to help make events more accessible to everyone.
  2. Optional Media Fund: An additional stipend of up to $100 for services such as documentation, photography, videography, etc.
Grantee Resources
  1. Complete your final report via our grantee portal.
  2. Official IH Logo (August 2021 version "Illinois Humanities" is bolded)
  3. Grant Acknowledgement Language: This program was made possible in part by a grant from Illinois Humanities.
  4. Resources for grantee partners and grant seekers.

Below are brief descriptions of funded projects.

  1. Chicago Cultural Alliance: Stories of Im/Migration 
    The Chicago Cultural Alliance partnered with the Chicago Collections Consortium to create a project that brought immigration and migration stories to communities across Illinois, through the EXPLORE platform and a dialog toolkit for local cultural museums, community centers, and libraries.
  2. Full Spectrum Features: Access Reframed, Empowering Action
    Full Spectrum Features sought to embed awareness of disability and accessibility into the structure of arts and humanities programming in Chicago through education and accessibility training for film festivals through a lens of disability justice. Key partners included Backbones and All Senses Go. Full Spectrum Features evaluated its work through an accessibility audit to determine the success of the work to overhaul accessibility in festivals across the city. 
Landmarks Illinios People Saving Places Project

Landmarks Illinois Partnered with Kennedy King College for "People Saving Places: Stories about the Importance of Place"

Ribbon cutting for the Serpent Mound in Schiller Park cr Thomas Callahan

On Indigenous People’s Day 2023, community members gathered to celebrate the ribbon cutting for the Serpent Mound in Schiller Park. (Photo by Thomas Callahan)

Contact Us

Mark Hallett
Director of Grants Programs

Joanne Hsu
Grants Programs Manager

Grantee Partner Spotlight

Springfield Dudley Hotel 01 Courtesy Sangamon Valley Collection
The Springfield Dudley Hotel was demolished. (Photo courtesy of the Lincoln Library)

Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois DBA Landmarks Illinois

Grantee Partner Spotlight: Landmarks Illinois

Q&A with Frank Butterfield, Chief Operating Officer, Landmarks Illinois

Learn More

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the rules for partnering organizations?

The number of organizations partnering on a project is not limited to 4.

All organizations partnering on the project do not have to be a nonprofit. Only the organization submitting the proposal has to be nonprofit and tax-exempt.

What is your definition of the humanities?

The humanities are the examination of what it means to be human through the interpretation and discussion of all forms of thought, interest, and expression.

We value traditional humanities disciplines, such as art history, literature, history, and philosophy. However, our emphasis on the public humanities means that we look at the humanities as more than an academic discipline. For us, the public humanities are a mode of inquiry and conversation that aims to engage, support, or challenge the ideals, beliefs, tensions, and prejudices of the communities in which we live. We believe that important thought can happen outside of the academy–in neighborhood institutions, schools, churches, and at kitchen tables across the country.

We are especially interested in instances of the public humanities that promote civic engagement–in raising critical issues facing everyday people and conducted with the hope of increasing their thirst for staying engaged. Rather than being defined by rigid disciplinary boundaries, it is the humanistic lens, which emphasizes curiosity, questioning, and dialogue, that matters.

Does your organization have a working definition of the public humanities? Share it with us–we’re eager to explore how others are addressing this complex question.

What activities and expenses does Illinois Humanities not fund?

Illinois Humanities supports public humanities programs, initiatives, and organizations. We do not fund:

  • Activities that promote a specific political position or ideology
  • Alcoholic beverages
  • Businesses, for-profits
  • Capital projects (i.e., renovation or purchase of buildings or land)
  • Endowment contributions
  • Foreign travel
  • Lobbying
  • Major equipment purchases (though equipment to assist a specific program is admissible)
  • Out-of-state programs that have no specific relevance or thematic connection people in Illinois (though technically a grant recipient or fiscal agent can be located elsewhere in the U.S.)
  • Programming that falls outside of the humanities
  • Social services (though a social services agency may apply for funding of a humanities project)
Can I have more than one active grant with Illinois Humanities at a time?

In general, grantees may have one open Vision, Action, or General Operating grant at a given time.  Before applying for a new grant, current grantees should be sure to conclude their open grant by submitting a final report.

A grantee may have an open Vision, Action, or General Operating grant and still receive an Activate History microgrant, Multiplier, Envisioning Justice, or Foreground Rural Initiative grant.

Note: If your organization acts as a fiscal agent for another, you may have an open grant and still receive funding for any grant offered by Illinois Humanities.

Who can apply?

Nonprofit organizations can apply for Illinois Humanities grants. This includes 501(c)3 organizations and nonprofits under state law, as well as libraries, schools, faith-based organizations, and universities. We do not accept grant applications from individuals or for-profit companies. If you are unsure about whether you can apply, reach out to us.

Why does Illinois Humanities have a grant-making program?

Illinois Humanities has been making grants since its inception in 1973 with over 3,000 awards given, totaling over $22 million. We are proud to have helped support dozens of documentary films, conferences, exhibits, training programs, oral history projects, and scores of other activities. We are firm believers in the many organizations and individuals throughout the state of Illinois that value the humanities, culture, and dialogue as community-building activities, and wish to help them fulfill their missions, carry out high-quality programming, and grow their organizations. We are indebted to the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Illinois General Assembly for the support that allows this grantmaking program to exist.

Funders