Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program
Agency: National Park Service
Assistance Listings: 15.933 -- Preservation of Japanese American Confinement Sites
Description
The Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program provides financial assistance to organizations and entities working to preserve historic Japanese American confinement sites and their history, including: private nonprofit organizations; educational institutions; state, local, and tribal governments; and other public entities, for the preservation and interpretation of U.S. confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II. The authorizing legislation for the Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program identifies up to $38 million for the entire life of the grant program for projects to identify, research, evaluate, interpret, protect, restore, repair, and acquire historic confinement sites in order that present and future generations may learn and gain inspiration from these sites and that these sites will demonstrate the Nation"s commitment to equal justice under the law (Public Law 109-441, 120 Stat. 3288; as amended by Public Law 111-88). Projects funded through the Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program must benefit one or more historic Japanese American confinement sites. The term historic confinement sites is defined as the ten War Relocation Authority sites (Gila River, Granada, Heart Mountain, Jerome, Manzanar, Minidoka, Poston, Rohwer, Topaz, and Tule Lake), as well as other historically significant locations, as determined by the Secretary of the Interior, where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II. These sites are specifically identified in Confinement and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites, published by the Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Western Archaeological and Conservation Center, in 1999. This document may be seen at www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/anthropology74 and at other internet sites.
Eligibility
Eligible applicants
Government
- City or township governments
- Federally recognized Native American tribal governments
- State governments
- County governments
Education
- Independent school districts
- Private institutions of higher education
- Public and state institutions of higher education
Nonprofit
- Nonprofits non-higher education with 501(c)(3)
Additional information
Grantor contact information
Description
katie_gaertner@nps.gov
Documents
| File name | Description | Last updated |
|---|---|---|
| Appendix-A-JACS-NOFO_2026.docx | Appendix-A-JACS-NOFO 2026.docx | Apr 30, 2026 03:37 PM UTC |
| FY_2026_JACS_NOFO_P26AS00021.docx | FY 2026 JACS NOFO P26AS00021.docx | Apr 30, 2026 04:13 PM UTC |
Link to additional information
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Closing: June 15, 2026
Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59 PM, MT, on the listed application due date.
Award
$4,604,000
Program Funding
20
Expected awards
$5,000
Award Minimum
$500,000
Award Maximum
Funding opportunity number:
P26AS00021
Cost sharing or matching requirement:
Funding instrument type:
Grant
Opportunity Category:
Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Category of Funding Activity:
Environment
Category Explanation:
History
Version:
2
Posted date:
April 30, 2026
Archive date:
September 30, 2026
