Foundations exist either in trust form or as corporations. They receive their own funds originally from individuals, families, corporations, or other nonprofits and usually create endowments, with grants being made from the income earned from investing those endowments. Their donors are entitled to certain charitable tax deductions.
Other public grantmaking charities also exist, including some service club foundations such as a local Rotary Foundation. They generally have a somewhat narrower grantmaking focus than do community foundations and may or may not have endowed funds.
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"…to help institutions to help themselves."
— Jesse Besser |
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"The man who dies rich dies disgraced."
—Andrew Carnegie |
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"She offers us all a fine example of daily living and...'loving thy neighbor as thyself.'"
—On Grace Dow's death in 1953 |
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"I have endeavored to make provision…for the needs of mankind along physical, mental, and spiritual lines."
— James B. Duke |
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"Philanthropy, like everything else, ought to be productive. If human sympathy prompts us to feed the hungry, why should it not prompt us to go further and make hunger in our midst impossible?"
—(Quote found in "From These Beginnings" William Greenleaf, Wayne State University Press: Detroit, 1964.) |
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Edward and Frances Frey's genuine interest and involvement in progress and social change helped bring growth, culture, and educational opportunities to the Grand Rapids community |
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...he created one of the world's largest private foundations.
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"Use the money as you please so long as it promotes the health, happiness, and well-being of children."
—W.K. Kellogg to his Foundation Board of Trustees |
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Sebastian S. Kresge wanted to...
"leave the world a better place than he found it"
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"I figured out how to make the money. You fellows will have to figure out how to spend it."
—John D. MacArthur to his Foundation's first directors |
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"To relieve misfortune and promote the well-being of mankind."
—McGregor Fund Mission Statement |
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"In [a] larger sense,
every man is in partnership with the rest of the human race in the eternal
conquest which we call civilization." |
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A quiet woman, Rose Skillman never sought publicity for her charitable works, but let her donations speak for themselves. |
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The foundation he began in 1957 remains today, "small in design and primarily local in nature."
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"...its mission later became focused on programs promoting education, health care, shelter, and nutrition for children."
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When asked why he spent his life giving and serving in his community, Frederick Upton replied, "Because it's home." |
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