Grants
Successful applications will focus on some aspect of the history of the Dutch-Russian Mennonites who came to Manitoba in the 1870s, including:
- their historical background in Russia, Poland-Prussia and the Netherlands
- their history in Manitoba and Western Canada
- the history of their descendants spread throughout the Americas
The Plett Foundation encourages grant recipients to consider depositing relevant research materials from their projects at the Mennonite Heritage Archives in Winnipeg, Manitoba in order to support and promote continued research into the study of the 1870s Mennonites and their descendants.
Research Grants
Publication Grants
Eligibility
Application Procedure
Application Deadlines: April 1 & October 1
FAQs
Grants can be awarded to either private individuals or to organizations. Grants to individuals and organizations that are not charities are disbursed as reimbursements based on receipted expenses. Grants administered through a post-secondary institution such as a university or college, or to a registered charity, may be disbursed to the organization in one lump sum.
Recipients, whether individuals or organizations, will be asked to provide interim reports to the Foundation’s Board twice annually, until the completion of the project, at which point a final report must be submitted. Additionally, we ask that two copies of any published material supported by a Plett Foundation grant be submitted to the Foundation with the final report and that the financial support of the Plett Foundation be acknowledged in any publications or promotional materials related to the project.
Navigation
Recent Grant Recipients
2023
Grant to support the publication of The Swift Current Mennonite Reserve, 1904–1927.
2022
Grant to support the publication of The Swift Current Mennonite Reserve, 1904–1927.
Grant to support research trips to the Fort St. John and Burns Lake areas of British Columbia for a book on the history of Mennonite in the province.
2021
2020
2019
This grant will support Brent Wiebe’s ongoing “Trails of the Past” project of georeferencing historical maps of areas of Mennonite settlement and publication of these resources online. Funds will assist with georeferencing and digitizing maps of Manitoba, West Prussia, Crimea, and Ukraine. The grant will also assist with making improvements to the comprehensive Mennonite village map found on the Trails of the Past website, and with database development.
The Plett Foundation publication grant will help cover the costs of production and dissemination of a book first published in Paraguay in Spanish: Hannes Kalisch and Ernesto Unruh, ¡No llores! The book is a collection of oral histories told by Enlhet elders to Hannes Kalisch and Ernesto Unruh in the 1980s and 1990s. The Enlhet and the other indigenous peoples of the Chaco had been virtually untouched by colonialism until the 1920s. But in 1927 Mennonites from Canada began settling in their territory, followed in 1930 by an additional group of Mennonites from the Soviet Union. In 1932 the Chaco War broke out between Paraguay and Bolivia over possession of the Chaco. Some of the bloodiest fighting was in the middle of the Enlhet territory. The combination of the war, the arrival of the Mennonites, and a severe smallpox epidemic that decimated the community,
For Mennonites, including Kanadier Mennonites in Paraguay and those Mennonites in North America with family connections to the Mennonites in the Chaco, the book is a reminder that the Mennonites now own or occupy most of the 97% of ancestral Enlhet territory taken from them as a result of colonization and the war. Kalisch and Unruh intend the book as a call to dialogue.
2018
2017
“Rebels, Exiles, and Bridge Builders: Cross-cultural Encounters in the Campos Menonitas of Chihuahua” is an oral history project that will collect audio recorded interviews from members of Mennonite, Mexican and Indigenous communities near Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua, Mexico. These interviews will feature narratives by and about “outlier” Mennonites past and present who had forbidden and/or unexpected relationships with the larger Mexican community, as well as, narratives of Mexican and Indigenous people who developed close ties with the Mennonite community. The digital audio recordings, transcripts and translations (when applicable) from these interviews will be housed in the Mennonite Heritage Archives and select interviews will be featured on the DarpStories YouTube Channel for greater access to researchers and the general public, particularly in Latin America.
2016
This Plett Foundation grant provides funding for “The Virtual Collection of Mennonite Clocks,” a project developed by the Estate of the Late Arthur Kroeger. The project seeks to develop a website (www.kroegerclocks.com) intended to present a virtual collection of historical clocks made by Mennonite clock makers from the mid-eighteenth century to the early twentieth century, beginning in the region around Gdansk, Poland and continuing in southeastern Ukraine/Russia. These wall clocks were an important part of Mennonite material heritage and served as cultural touchstones and family heirlooms as Mennonites migrated around the world throughout the twentieth century. This research grant supports the work of a contracted researcher, compiling primary sources and creating the database for the project.
2015
This grant supports the Mennonite Archival Image Database (MAID), an online database of photos from Mennonite archives, created by the Mennonite Historical Society of Canada in partnership with the Plett Foundation and Mennonite historical societies and archives across Canada. The funds from this grant will be used to provide advisory services to MAID partners. The MAID advisor will spend a number of days with volunteers in partner archives, providing training and support on using the MAID database (http://archives.mhsc.ca/).
This grant supports the purchase of an archival quality flatbed scanner for assist the Centre for Mennonite Brethren Studies (CMBS) in scanning and uploading archival images to the Mennonite Archival Image Database (MAID). To date, MAID includes over 80,000 descriptions of photos, 10,000 of which have scanned images connected to them and available to the public online. CMBS holds about a third of these descriptive records and about 1,500 images of the site. This grant will enable CMBS volunteers, under the direction of archivist Conrad Stoesz, to continue uploading high quality scans of archival images to this database.
2014
2013
The Canadian Mennonite Genealogy Project is a redesign of the web site www.mennonitegenealogy.com, which is run by MHSC. The project is to preserve original historical documents that are currently difficult to access and make these sources readily and easily accessible online to researchers worldwide. Examples of the types of documents that will be made accessible in the project include: church and family books; congregational data; cemetery, birth, baptismal, and marriage documents; immigration data; census documents; obituaries; school registers; and private documents.
This grant assisted in creating the Mennonite Archival Image Database (MAID), a project initiated by the Mennonite Historical Society of Canada (MHSC) to create an online database that combines the photo collections of the major Mennonite archives. With the assistance of this grant, together with other project partners, MAID was launched by MHSC in 2015.