Sponsors
In brief
Several groups have been particularly helpful to THATCamp, and we’d like to thank them here. We are most grateful to them for their assistance in sponsoring THATCamp. If you know of a sponsor who should be listed here and isn’t, please notify the THATCamp Coordinator at info@thatcamp.org.
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has supported the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media in the amount of $264,000 for two years, which funds the salary of the THATCamp Coordinator, maintenance of thatcamp.org, and sundry other support and publicity expenses. More importantly, $50,000 of those funds were designated to provide $500 fellowships to deserving graduate students and faculty in the humanities, enabling many to pay travel expenses to THATCamps.
The Northeast Regional Computing Program

The Northeast Regional Computing Program has supported THATCamp New England in the amount of $12000 over four years. NERCOMP has also agreed to serve as THATCamp New England’s banker, which means that different universities and organizations all around New England can take turns hosting THATCamps. With NERCOMP’s support, THATCamp New England has been able to establish a certain amount of longevity and autonomy while still retaining its independence.
Microsoft Research

Microsoft Research has been a generous donor since 2009 in support of THATCamp Pacific Northwest. THATCamp Pacific Northwest was one of the earlier THATCamps, and it continues to be held every year, usually at the University of Washington in Seattle. Beginning in 2011, MS Research has provided more than $10,000 in support: $1,000 for THATCamp CHNM 2012, $500 apiece for many other THATCamps, and the very welcome in-kind donation of a great many lanyards. MS Research has supported the work of Internet ethnographer and privacy scholar danah boyd, has produced such useful open source tools for the humanities as ChronoZoom, and has organized an annual Faculty Summit for the express purpose of bringing academic researchers and educators together with Microsoft’s computer scientists and engineers. We’re proud to be associated with them. Special thanks are due to Donald Brinkman, program manager for the Digital Humanities at MS Research, whose vision made this happen.
The Kress Foundation

The Kress Foundation has provided $6000 in fellowship and travel money to the Center for History and New Media to support digital training for junior art museum professionals and graduate students, especially but not exclusively at THATCamps offered in affiliation with the Museum Computer Network.
Council on Library and Information Resources

The Council on Library and Information Resources has provided $5000 in fellowship and travel money to the Center for History and New Media to support digital training for library and archive professionals and graduate students. These fellowships have ensured that scholars and information science professionals have had a chance to talk to one another about issues important to both, such as the preservation and dissemination of scholarly work and primary sources for scholarship.
JSTOR

JSTOR is a not–for–profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive of over one thousand five hundred academic journals and other scholarly content. JSTOR uses information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship, and is used by millions for research, teaching, and learning. With more than a thousand academic journals and over 1 million images, letters, and other primary sources, JSTOR is one of the world’s most trusted sources for academic content. JSTOR generously supported THATCamp AHA in the amount of $1000, which provided an LCD projector and other audiovisual support at the Chicago Sheraton. This support was essential in making the technology skills workshops possible. JSTOR also supported THATCamp CHNM 2012 in the amount of $1000.
Alexander Street Press
Alexander Street Press is a publisher of award-winning online collections and videos for scholarly research, teaching, and learning. Alexander Street Press has supported THATCamp CHNM for several years, and gave $1000 in support of THATCamp CHNM 2012.
National Information Standards Organization

The National Information Standards Organization (NISO) funded THATCamp Publishing 2011 in the amount of $1000, and in addition sent representatives to share their expertise about emerging ebook standards.
The Digital Library Federation

The Digital Library Federation provided funds, food, and space at the Hyatt Regency in downtown Baltimore in support of THATCamp Publishing, held as a pre-conference to the 2011 DLF Fall Forum.
Automattic

We are continually grateful to Automattic for doing such a great job with WordPress; indeed, thatcamp.org is run on WordPress multi-site. More specifically, we are very grateful indeed to Automattic for hosting THATCamp Bay Area at their own San Francisco headquarters in 2010.
In addition to sending their wonderful Lead Geo Developer Advocate Mano Marks to THATCamp CHNM 2011 to teach a workshop on working with Google Fusion Tables and other geographic data visualization tools, Google provided space and support for THATCamp Bay Area 2011 at its headquarters in Mountain View, CA.
Brandeis University

Several departments and offices at Brandeis University gave generous support to THATCamp New England 2011. The Department of History gave $1000, and the Office of the Provost, the Mandel Center for the Humanities, and Brandeis Library and Technology Services gave both funds and in-kind support.
Brown University

Both Brown University Libraries and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Public Humanities and Cultural Heritage at Brown have supported THATCamp New England 2010 and THATCamp New England 2011, contributing a total of $2500 over two years. Note that THATCamp New England represents perhaps the largest collaboration among universities and organizations for a THATCamp; we are particularly grateful to these organizations for working together to support an external initiative.
Chapman University

Chapman University provided over $3000 in funds and in-kind support for THATCamp Southern California 2011, where more than sixty people met to discuss and learn from one another. The terrific staff of Chapman’s Office of Academic Technology and Digital Media organized and ran the event.
Simpson Center for the Humanities

The Simpson Center for the Humanities at the University of Washington has supported THATCamp Pacific Northwest since 2009 with funds, space, staff time, and other in-kind donations.
Emory University Libraries

Emory University Libraries generously supported THATCamp Southeast 2010 with space, staff time, and even some lodging expenses. THATCamp Southeast 2010 was attended by a hundred people, including librarians and library science graduate students, faculty, posdoctoral fellows, and developers.
The American Historical Association

The American Historical Association provided meeting space for THATCamp AHA in January 2012 in conjunction with its annual meeting in Chicago. Members of AHA’s staff also helped organize THATCamp AHA, and members of the Association volunteered their time to help run the event.
Individual Donors
Many, many thanks are also due to the hundreds of individual donors who have given small donations to THATCamp. Usually about one-third of all funding for a particular THATCamp comes from individual participants who willingly give $20 or $30 to support our funky little unconference: we literally couldn’t do it without you. We are also grateful to the many workshop instructors who have volunteered to teach digital skills sessions, and to all the THATCamp organizers who have dedicated a great deal of time not only to making their own THATCamp terrific, but also to sharing advice and information with other THATCamp organizers and with us here at THATCamp.org.








