Save the date for the 2024 HistoryMaker Awards! On September 19th, we'll celebrate and recognize our community's trailblazers and pioneers who make history every day.
Made possible by support from Sponsors — Eastern Bank, Microsoft, MassEquality, Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition — and our Host Committee.
Community Curator: Kevin Hepner
Direct Action Documenters: Patricia A. Gozemba & Karen Kahn, Russ Lopez & Andrew Sherman
Underground Historians: Andrew Elder & Jose Ricky McFaline Figueroa, Tony Grima & Peter Muise, Marvin Kabakoff, Stewart Landers, Sarah Marina & Joan Ilacqua, Martha Stone, and Jessica Taylor & Anna Wilson
Host Committee and Sponsorship opportunities are available.
The 2024 HistoryMaker Awards will recognize the outstanding impact of The Combahee River Collective on their 50th anniversary. Active in Boston from December 1975 through June 1981, the CRC was one of the first groups to document the connection between racial injustice and other social inequities. Formed as a radical alternative to the National Black Feminist Organization and named after Harriet Tubman’s 1853 raid on the Combahee River that freed over 750 enslaved people, the CRC addressed the realities of Black women who felt excluded from other feminist movements. Although many founding members identified as Black lesbians, all were unified in a Black radical feminist movement inclusive of any Black feminist woman from the global Black diaspora. In 1977, the CRC released the Combahee River Collective Statement, authored by Demita Frazier, Barbara Smith, and Beverly Smith. This foundational document is essential — and still highly relevant — to contemporary Black feminism; pioneering the concept of interlocking oppressions of race, gender, class, and sexuality that intersect to create something more devastating than the sum of its parts.
The History Project is pleased to announce Print Ain’t Dead as the 2024 Lavender Rhino Awardee! Named after one of the early symbols of the Gay Liberation movement, the Lavender Rhino Award is presented to an activist or organization whose current efforts are making history for the LGBTQ+ community. The History Project is proud to recognize Print Ain’t Dead for their practice producing exhibitions, publications and public spaces that highlight Black, Brown and Indigenous artists and organizers, with an emphasis on queer and trans perspectives. Print Ain't Dead is a bookstore, reading room and micropress.
The History Project will celebrate the 2023 honorees with an early evening reception at the St. Botolph Club, featuring cocktails and hors d’oeuvres, on September 7, 2023.
The 2024 HistoryMaker Awards will take place in person at the St. Botolph Club, 199 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02116. Tickets, Host Committee, and Sponsorship opportunities are available at historyproject.org.
About the HistoryMaker Award
The History Project has presented the HistoryMaker Award since 2009 to those whose lifetime achievements have had a significant and positive effect on Boston and Massachusetts' LGBTQ+ communities. Past recipients of the award include Congressman Barney Frank, State Representative Byron Rushing, GLAD’s Civil Rights Project Director Mary Bonauto, BAGLY executive director Grace Sterling Stowell, Abe Rybeck from the Theater Offensive, journalist Susan Ryan-Vollmar, Larry Kessler of AIDS Action Committee, activist and community organizer Orlando Del Valle, Mayor Denise Simmons, Dr. Thea James, Dr. Ken Mayer, trans activist Nancy Nangeroni, GLAD founder John Ward, lobbyist Arline Isaacson, and Dr. Gary Bailey.
About the Lavender Rhino Award
Named after one of the early symbols of the Gay Liberation Movement, the Lavender Rhino Award is presented to emerging activists or organizations whose impact on the local LGBTQ community deserves recognition. Previous Lavender Rhino honorees have included Carmel Tre’Andre Valentine, the LGBT Elders of Color, activist and organizer Corey Yarbrough, musician and composer Omar Thomas, attorney Allison Wright, trans activist Chastity Bowick, prison abolition advocate Michael Cox, K.J. Rawson, founder of the Digital Transgender Archive, and the Boston Chapter of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.
The 2024 HistoryMaker Awards will take place in person at the St. Botolph Club, 199 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02116. There is a stairway to enter the club, an accessible entrance is available. Please call 617-536-7570 for staff assistance with the accessible entrance.
Can't attend but want to support The History Project? Donate here.
Please email Executive Director Joan Ilacqua at Joan.Ilacqua@historyproject.org with any questions.