06/01/2026
đź“– One book. Three states. Hundreds of libraries. Thousands of readers.
This weekend marked the culmination of One Book, One Coast, a regional reading initiative that brought together libraries, cultural organizations, and readers across California, Oregon, and Washington through a shared reading of They Called Us Enemy by George Takei.
The celebration featured a special conversation with George Takei and remarks from Skye Patrick.
California Humanities was proud to support a program that demonstrates the power of stories to connect people, spark dialogue, and build community across the West Coast.
Thank you to everyone who read, reflected, and participated in this year’s One Book, One Coast. 💙
05/29/2026
🎉 Congratulations to the newest recipients of Connecting California funding!
Across California, organizations are creating opportunities for people to connect through stories, culture, history, and community conversations. We are proud to support these inspiring projects and the communities they serve.
As we celebrate our newest awardees, we’re also excited to announce that Round 3 of Connecting California is now open.
If your organization has an idea that brings Californians together through the humanities, we encourage you to apply.
đź“… Applications are accepted on a rolling basis through July 13, 2027.
Explore the opportunity and learn more at California Humanities.
05/27/2026
We’re proud to share that our President & CEO, Rick Noguchi, will join national leaders for the Opening Keynote Conversation at the upcoming virtual summit convened by the American Association for State and Local History on Wednesday, May 27, from 9:30–10:30 a.m. PT.
Facilitated by Jamie Bosket, the conversation will explore how historical organizations and cultural institutions can help strengthen democratic practice through storytelling, public engagement, and the humanities.
Also joining the keynote:
• Natalia Crujeiras
In America’s 250th anniversary year, the two-day summit will explore how history organizations can help strengthen civic participation, bridge divides, and address contemporary challenges through public history and community engagement.
05/14/2026
Stories connect us. Culture grounds us. Public humanities programs help communities across California learn, reflect, and engage with one another.
For 51 years, California Humanities has invested in the people and organizations doing this important work statewide.
Now, we need your help.
California Humanities is urging supporters to contact their Assemblymember and State Senator in support of Senator Ben Allen’s $6 million funding request to help sustain humanities programming across California during ongoing federal funding uncertainty.
Take action today and help protect the stories, cultures, and community programs that matter to Californians.
Find your representatives:
findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov
05/12/2026
Episode 2 is here.
“Whose 250 Years?” brings together Georgiana Sanchez (Chumash, O’odham) and Judge Abby Abinanti (Yurok) in a powerful, deeply alive conversation with Story Weaver Victorio L. Shaw.
This episode moves through truth-telling, Indigenous governance, survival, memory, laughter, contradiction, and the enduring strength of Native communities across California.
These conversations are living knowledge.
And they continue.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
https://youtu.be/qdfrE7HRIL4
Acknowledgements
Reclaiming Our Stories: Voices of Indigenous Peoples of California is made possible with support from The 11th Hour Project and Weingart Foundation.
Reclaiming Our Stories is a part of By the People: Conversations Beyond 250. By the People: Conversations Beyond 250 is a series of community-driven programs created by humanities councils in collaboration with local partners. The initiative was developed by the Federation of State Humanities Councils and the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage.
They think they own the land.
“Whose 250 Years?” brings together Georgiana Sanchez (Chumash, O’odham) and Judge Abby Abinanti (Yurok) in a powerful, deeply alive conversation with Story W...
05/11/2026
✨ Connecting California Grants are now open!
California Humanities is proud to support publicly accessible projects that bring people together across difference and foster shared understanding, connection, and civic participation.
We’re looking for community-centered programs that help Californians engage with one another through storytelling, dialogue, culture, history, and the humanities.
Eligible applicants include nonprofits, libraries, schools, tribal governments, public agencies, and fiscally sponsored organizations across California.
Apply now and help strengthen connection in communities across our state.
đź”— Visithttps://calhum.org/connecting-california-quick-grants/ to learn more and apply.
Connecting California Quick Grants - California Humanities
Program Purpose Connecting California supports publicly accessible activities and events that strengthen social connection and cohesion across California’s diverse communities. Funded projects help foster understanding, empathy, and trust by creating […]