2008/2009
Charities
 
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2004/2005 Charities
  1. AccesSportAmerica
  2. ALLY Foundation
  3. American Anti-Slavery Group
  4. Artists For Humanity
  5. Artists' Association of Nantucket
  6. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Worcester County, Inc.
  7. Biodynamic Farmland Conservation Trust
  8. Boston Area Rape Crisis Center
  9. Boston Classical Orchestra
  10. Boston Dance Alliance
  11. Boston Theatre Works
  12. Bottom Line
  13. Breaking Barriers (Rompiendo Barreras)
  14. Cambridge Camping Association
  15. Camp Starfish
  16. Cape CARES
  17. Center for New Words
  18. Center for Public Representation
  19. Central Massachusetts Regional Library System
  20. Charles River Conservancy
  21. Chinese Progressive Association
  22. Coalition for Asian Pacific American Youth
  23. Configuration
  24. Cristo Rey High School (formerly North Cambridge Catholic High School)
  25. Ecclesia Ministries
  26. Esplanade Association
  27. Family & Children's Service of Greater Lynn
  28. Family Nurturing Center of Massachusetts
  29. Fenway Alliance
  30. Fitchburg Historical Society
  31. Forbes House Museum
  32. Friends of Children
  33. From the Top
  34. Genesis Counseling Services
  35. Girls' LEAP (formerly LEAP Self-Defense)
  36. Growth Through Learning
  37. Helping Our Women
  38. Historic Boston Incorporated
  39. Hope for the Children of Haiti
  40. Household Goods Recycling of Massachusetts (formerly Household Goods Recycling Ministry)
  41. Inflammation Research Foundation
  42. International Rescue Committee
  43. Karate Inspires City Kids
  44. Kids In Disability Sports, Inc. (K.I.D.S.)
  45. Lawrence CommunityWorks
  46. Louisa May Alcott Memorial Association
  47. Lower Cape Communications, WOMR-FM
  48. Massachusetts Animal Coalition
  49. Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center
  50. Massachusetts Down Syndrome Congress
  51. Medical Missions for Children
  52. Melanoma Foundation New England (formerly Massachusetts Melanoma Foundation)
  53. Molecular Immunology Foundation
  54. Moving Laboratory
  55. Multicultural Youth Tour of What's Now
  56. Mystic River Watershed Association
  57. Nantucket Human Services Center
  58. Nantucket Preservation Trust
  59. Nashoba Conservation Trust
  60. Neponset River Watershed Association
  61. Newton-San Juan del Sur Sister City Project (Free High School for Adults)
  62. Nonquit Street Neighborhood Association and Land Trust
  63. Providence Ministries for the Needy
  64. Rotch-Jones-Duff House and Garden Museum
  65. SMARTS Collaborative
  66. South Shore Art Center (formerly ARTSouth)
  67. Supportive Living
  68. Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill
  69. Vietnamese-American Civic Association
  70. Waterfront Historic Area League of New Bedford
  71. WICN Public Radio
  72. WiredWoods
  73. Young Entrepreneurs Alliance
  74. YouthBuild Boston

All Charities
 

Fitchburg Historical Society

CONTACT:

50 Grove Street, PO Box 953
Fitchburg, MA 01420
978-345-1157
FitchburgHistory.FSC.edu

Susan M. Roetzer, Executive Director

Donate Now to Fitchburg Historical Society

DESCRIPTION:

Fitchburg is another one of Massachusetts’ once-flourishing cities that suffered long economic decline, and is now experiencing rebirth — a renaissance. Here, too, philanthropy will play a key role in its recovery, through the new Community Foundation (Cat ’02) and now the Fitchburg Historical Society. Founded in 1892, in its own building since 1912, FHS has an outstanding Collection of 200,000 documentary and material remains from the 1700s to the present — an extraordinarily long, continuous, and comprehensive record of daily life here (e.g., Sentinel newspapers from 1838-1972), in good times and bad, reflecting great national events but rarely if ever influencing them. The Collection is being entered by volunteers in a searchable electronic database for universal Internet access. FHS also uses its treasures creatively for education — last year creating “traveling trunks” for school classrooms, filled with reproductions of period items like Civil War photos, soldiers diaries, and uniforms. Now the Society has a great opportunity for both itself and Fitchburg: it has purchased an historic building on Main Street for renovation as a history museum fully adequate for its superb Collection. Its $2.5 million capital campaign requires reaching out well beyond Fitchburg to succeed — appropriately, since the significance of this new resource also extends well beyond Fitchburg. If you are a history buff, why not be an angel, too?

(2004: CULTURE: Education: Informal: Historic Preservation)

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