June 9, 2025
history

AASLH 2025 Albert B. Corey Award winner – Aaslh

AASLH 2025 Albert B. Corey Award winner – Aaslh

AASLH 2025 HISTORY AWARDS
United Lynn Lynn, Massachusetts,
Recognizable by
Albert B. Corey Award

During the eighty year, AASLH led the historical awards to create and promote the collection of state and local history in the collection, protection and interpretation of state and local history to be more meaningful in all people. We have announced 2024 leadership in historical premiums this week.

Albert B. Corey award recognizes its work in their work, primarily voluntary-controlled historical organizations and projects that best reflect vitality, scholarships and imaginary qualities. This is a reward for the request of the Award Committee and is the most prestigious award for all volunteer institutions and initiatives of AASLH.

2025 Albert B. Corey Award is going to Lynn Lynn for Lynn, Massachusetts, Project With a rainbow lens: a reflection in Lynn’s LGBTQ + history.

This project was shared and maintained with the grant support of the city’s LGBTQ + stories and mass humans. Lynn is a work-level city with a large immigrant population, the important Querin’s history has been transferred to the shadows. Lynn was the place where the oldest gay in Massachusetts (now closed) and the first same sex in America was licensed in 2004. As a reviewer writes “(this project) How to use the bridge is a model where history can be used, Call for assumptions and inspire change. “

TRL Project Group gathered and shared an important history and practices in a demonstration of meetings, topics, music, maps, topics, music, maps, photos and documents, pamfets and various public talks, pamfets and various public talks and tours.

Through a rainbow lens The main members of the LYNN LGBTQ + Society, which cover the last fifty years, held a historical historical interview with the main members of the Society. The narrators include the widespread diversity of Lynn society, including people from various generations, races, national, religion, class and gender backgrounds and Americans of both local and foreign origin. The team also included three transcripts from the archive of three transcripts from the 1980s, three transcripts from the archive in the history project, the main sources for a new generation.

Ths Project examined articles on LGBTQ + issues Gay Community News, Weekly, Lynn Element and Boston sphere Returns to the nineteenth centers. In general, they collected two hundred news and showed them as an online schedule to show both the change and the sustainability of Queer’s life in the city. They also collected 1,400 pictures of photos, flies, advertising and other documents related to the community. They investigated the dates of the places and places of the bars and places and discovered nineteentially different job names in nine places and conduct Lynn’s LGBTQ + view of Lynn.

In June 2024, at the exhibition opened in the Lynn Museum, LGBTQ + community and allies in one place in one place, the last gay bar was closed eight years in one place. Numerous panels discussion at Salem State University presented this date to a younger audience. Through a rainbow lens Historical deletion and community sustainability addresses comprehensive research and scholarships, empathy and joy. With the words of a reviewer, “This is more than a history project.”

Learn more about this project.

More rewards will be announced this week! Look for Historical Rewards for History on Wednesday and Friday for Date for Date for Perfection Awards.

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