Complete Story
03/12/2026
FLARE Offers New Grant for Archives
First Ladies Association for Research & Education
Lewis L. Gould Archives Grant
The First Ladies Association for Research & Education (FLARE) announces the Lewis L. Gould Archives Grant. This competitive award is available to non-profit archives for the purpose of making lesser-known sources connected to U.S. First Ladies more widely available to researchers and the public, ideally by processing, digitizing, transcribing, exhibiting, and publicizing all or part of a collection connected to the lives and legacies of First Ladies. The goal of the Gould Archives Grant is to help archives spotlight primary source materials valuable to the study of First Ladies heretofore overlooked or relatively unknown in an effort to encourage their use. This is consistent with the mission of FLARE: to create and sustain a network to promote and publicize research and education about the contributions, lives, impact, and lasting legacy of U.S. First Ladies
In addition to digitizing documents, further uses of the Gould Archives Grant could include, for example, the creation and publicizing of:
- transcriptions of the correspondence of First Ladies;
- an annotated, on-line finding aid;
- a webpage or website with information about the archival collection/documents, and/or;
- an on-line exhibit that centers on the documents.
As long as such expenditures result in drawing attention to documents connected directly to First Ladies, the Gould Archives Grant therefore supports:
- the purchase or upgrade of necessary archival supplies and/or equipment essential to project goals;
- a stipend for an intern or current staff member directly related to project activities;
- the creation of a catalogue or finding aid;
- transcription services;
- costs associated with creating an on-line exhibit;
- publicizing the existence of lesser-known documents or collections.
Further Gould Archives Grant Application Information
- Grants are up to $600. No matching funds are required.
- Priority will be given to archives which can make available lesser-known or lesser-utilized collections to a wide audience of scholars and the public.
- Applicants must clearly identify and connect their project to the stated goals of the Gould Grant.
- All applications must be submitted online.
- The grant application requires:
- a project summary of no more than 1,500 words, including a statement of the project’s connection to the study of First Ladies, its significance, and a description of the collection(s) to be utilized;
- a budget; and
- a work plan, including methodology and a timeline; and
- a final report to FLARE no later than one year after the grant has been awarded.
Eligibility Criteria
Eligible applicants must be non-profit archival repositories whose collections are open to the public.
The FLARE Gould Grant committee is tasked with reviewing all applications, making a final decision, and notifying both the successful and unsuccessful applicant(s).
About Lewis L. Gould
Historian Lewis L. Gould founded the modern scholarly study of First Ladies. He is the Eugene C. Barker Centennial Professor Emeritus in American History at the University of Texas at Austin where, in the fall of 1982, he taught the first course on First Ladies. The author or editor of more than twenty books, Gould’s commitment to archival research is legendary in the field. It undergirds the books in the “Modern First Ladies” series he began in 1998, including his three books for the series, Lady Bird Johnson: Our Environmental First Lady (1999), Helen Taft: Our Musical First Lady (2010) and Edith Kermit Roosevelt: Creating the Modern First Lady (2012). Gould is an inaugural lifetime founding member of FLARE, and the namesake and first winner of FLARE’s annual Gould Award for those making distinguished contributions to the field of First Lady research and education.

