APIAHiP Network’s 2025 Summer Institute Cohort

This summer, 11 community-based archives joined APIAHiP’s network through the Shift Collective’s 2025 Summer Institute. Explore their contributions now featured in our “East at Main Street” collection on Historypin!

  • Top image shows four young people gathered around a table, engaged in a discussion inside a restaurant or cafe. Bottom image depicts a group of people, some wearing masks, standing outdoors in a city square listening to a man speaking into a microphone, with modern buildings in the background.

    VIETNAMESE AMERICAN ROUNDTABLE

    The Vietnamese American Roundtable is dedicated to empowering a strong, unified Vietnamese American community through civi engagement, cultural education, and community-led advocacy.

  • A group of young men, some standing and some sitting, dressed in casual and sportswear, posing for a photo against a brick wall. There is a second group of musicians in formal attire with saxophones, clarinets, and a guitar.

    FILIPINO AMERICAN NATIONAL HISTORICAL SOCIETY

    Founded in 1982 by Dorothy Laigo Cordova in Seattle, the Filipino American National Historical Society is a volunteer-run nonprofit committed to preserving and promoting Filipino American history through its national office, museum, archives, and over 40 chapters nationwide.

  • Person walking up stairs with signs reading 'No Treaty of' and a child on their back, in front of a historic building with columns and palm trees.

    HAWAIIAN NATIONAL ARCHIVE

    The Hawaiian National Archive is a community-centered, publicly accessible archive that preserves over 1,200 cubic feet of contemporary materials related to Hawaiian national identity, supporting the revival of ʻŌiwi historical understanding and cultural activism.

  • Two children wearing hats, standing outside a wooden house with laundry hanging to dry.

    KANSHA HISTORY: NIKKEI FARM

    Kansha History documents the forced losses of Japanese American farmers during World War II, using federal records that capture the crops, land, and homes they were made to abandon.

  • A collage of images showing people participating in various educational and interactive activities, including discussions, presentations, and hands-on experiments.

    THE AJA PROJECT

    The AjA Project offers culturally responsive arts programming to underserved youth in San Diego, California using participatory photography to support self-expression, personal growth, and community connection.

  • A modern group meeting in a conference room with people sitting at tables, and a speaker standing in front of posters. Below, a historical black-and-white image of four women and two men in period attire, with vintage farming equipment in the background.

    1882 FOUNDATION

    The 1882 Foundation is a national organization that promotes public understanding of the Chinese Exclusion Laws and their enduring impact on civil rights and Chinese American history through education, advocacy, and historical preservation.

  • Black and white image of a small town street with buildings, cars parked along the street, and a sign for a chop suey restaurant.

    LOCKE FOUNDATION

    The Locke Foundation is dedicated to preserving and sharing the history of the town of Locke, California, the only remaining historic Chinese American rural community in the U.S.

  • Six boys are seated in a circle holding traditional bamboo wind instruments, playing music together in a room with informational posters on the wall.

    HMONG CULTURAL CENTER

    The Hmong Cultural Center is the leading organization in the Minneapolis–St. Paul area dedicated to promoting multicultural education, positive race relations, and the preservation of Hmong culture and history.

  • A woman in blue standing on a bridge near a body of water, with green hills in the background. An inset poster features two women, some flames, and text reading "Calling the Soul" and titles in a third language.

    HAU PROLEUNG: CALLING THE SOUL

    Hau Proleung: Calling the Soul is a deeply personal multimedia storytelling project by Darozyl that honors her Khmer family's migration journey and the cultural practice of soul-calling as a pathway to healing grief and reclaiming identity. The project weaves together home videos, historical archives, and ancestral memory.

  • Two groups of people; the top group are senior women performing a dance or exercise in a light purple room, and the bottom group are young adults and teens smiling outdoors in sunny weather during the daytime.

    API MIDDLE TENNESSEE

    Founded in 2020, API Middle Tennessee is rooted in the values of collectivism, radical transparency, justice, equity, belonging, and joy, working to uplift Asian and Pacific Islander communities through cultural celebration, inclusive spaces, and cross-community solidarity.

  • Black and white photo of four young Asian children sitting on stairs with an adult male standing beside them.

    RED THREAD ARCHIVE

    The Red Thread Archive is an emerging community effort rooted in intergenerational memory and cultural reconnection, inspired by a personal project that has grown to include elders, local families, and collaborators in academia and preservation.

  • A group of fifteen diverse young women and men posing together in front of a large presentation screen in a conference room. The screen displays a QR code and text about a collection on historypin. The group is smiling and standing close, some with arms around each other, with a table and chairs visible in the foreground.

    ADD YOUR COLLECTION

    Reach out to APIAHiP to learn more about the Historypin platform and our East at Main Street collection.

Historypin is project of Shift Collective, a partner organization that supports and designs community-driven initiatives to boost social, cultural and resource equity. “East at Main Street” is a collection within Historypin lead by APIAHiP, since 2014.

This collection gathers photographs, videos, memories, and other materials related to places that are important to Asian and Pacific Islander American communities. Sites associated with our collective and diasporic history and cultures have been underrepresented and disproportionately recognized through traditional historic and cultural designations at the local, state, and national registers. Raising awareness of these places will assist in their preservation and help create a more complete picture of our presence and contributions in America’s past, present, and future.

National Park Service: Asian Pacific Islander Historic Mapping Project
Final Report: December 31, 2014

Open in new window/optimized for mobile:

Historypin: East at Main Street

Embed Block
Enter a valid embed URL or code.