Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Braylon Edwards Keeps Million Dollar Pledge to Students

Braylon Edwards poses with some of the 100 eighth graders in the Cleveland Municipal School District participating in his ADVANCE 100 Program. Photo Credit: Gus Chan

Even though former Browns wide receiver Braylon Edwards has left the Browns, he is keeping his promise to award 100 Cleveland Public School students $10,000 each. In 2007, he selected 100 eighth graders and made a promise that if they kept a 2.5 average, did 15 hours of community service and had no unexcused absences he would award them each $10,000.

To date, 90 of the students have met the requirements. Kudos to Braylon Edwards for both his generosity and honoring his commitment to these kids.

The story and the photo are from the Plain Dealer.

Friday, October 16, 2009

11-year-old Raised More Than $56,000 for Cancer Research

Alexa Sankary lost her her good friend Michael Mancuso to neuroblastoma, a particular type of brain tumor. He died at the age of 7.

Since his death, she has raised over $56,000 for research through several fundraising events. Recently, she was honored by Cook Children’s Medical Center

For more information, visit this link.

This article was also mentioned in the Association of Fundraising Professionals Youth in Philanthopy Blog. I have now added this blog to the list of blogs in the sidebar.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Librarian Creates World Renowned Black History Collection

Avery Clayton sits in front of a portrait of his mother, Mayme Clayton
Photo Credit: Black America Web

Mayme Clayton was passionate about black history. She spent her career as a librarian at the University of Southern California and the University of California, Los Angeles. In the late 1960's, her work was instrumental in the creation of the African-American Studies Center Library at UCLA. She collected a body of material that is now been formalized in a museum. The curators of the Mayme A. Clayton Library & Museum of African American History & Culture say her collection will rival New York's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in size and significance.

According to an article on blackamericaweb.com, the collection that is currently being cataloged contains:
  • the first book published in America by African-born Phillis Wheatley, "Poems on Various Subjects Religious and Moral." It is signed and dated 1773, when she was a slave in Boston.
  • the largest black film collection in the world, with 1,700 titles dating back to 1916. It is housed at the UCLA School of Film and Television.
  • 9,500 sound recordings. The recordings include the earliest from Duke Ellington and Bessie Smith
  • 75,000 photographs and scores of movie posters, playbills, programs, documents and manuscripts
Mayme Clayton invested her time, talent, and financial resources to create and preserve a collection of material that benefits us all. The museum is working toward a 2011 opening. The first major exhibition of this material will be Oct. 24 to Jan. 4, in a joint effort with the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens in San Marino, California. Ms Clayton died in 2006 and her sons, Avery and Lloyd are cataloging her work and helping to establish the museum.

Special thanks to Dr. Harold Massey for sharing this information.

For more information:
Blackamericaweb.com: Mom's Legacy: World Renowned Black Collection
Press Release from the Huntington Library
Mayme A. Clayton Library & Cultural Center (A Division Of Western States Black Research & Education Center) Newsletter and Website

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Tom Joyner Foundation Has Raised Over $55 Million for Students at HBCUs

Photo Credit: Urban Mecca


The "fly jock" is also a man with a big heart. In an article published in Black Collegian magazine in 2005, , the foundation had raised close to $30 million dollars with over 65 percent of the funds generated through individual contributions and all the proceeds directed to the students. "The money we raise goes to help the students," says Joyner. "We don't take out administrative costs." In addition to individual funders who support the organization, The Tom Joyner Foundation has a number of collaborations with a number of businesses that share Joyners vision. "To date, the Foundation has worked with nearly 100 HBCUs. For these schools, we have been able to donate money that keeps students at the schools and spur the schools' alumni to get more involved with this important effort."

Recently the foundation donated an additional $200,000 to Knoxville College, bringing total money given to the college over the life of the foundation to half a million dollars.

According to a press release earlier this year, the Tom Joyner Foundation has finalized an agreement to produce a book entitled "Tom Joyner Presents How To Prepare For College. " The book is scheduled to be released this fall.

The press release goes on to indicate that "since 1998 The Tom Joyner Foundation® has raised more than Fifty Five Million Dollars to help students attending Historically Black Colleges and Universities stay in school. The Tom Joyner Foundation also hosts an annual cruise named the Fantastic Voyage which raises money for the (HBCUs)."

Giving Circles Are a Major Force in Philanthropy

Birmingham Change Fund
Birmingham, Alabama


HERITAGE QUILTERS
Warrenton, North Carolina


According to a report issued by the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers, giving circles have become a major force in philanthropy, raising over $100 million. What are giving circles? They "involve a group of friends who pool their charitable donations and decide together how to use the money to benefit the causes they care most about."

Giving circles have traditionally been thought of as a philanthropic approach used mainly by women, but that is increasingly no longer the case.

For background on giving circles, including information on how to form one, see the Forum's information below.

Resources on Giving Circles:

Report: Giving Circles Are Here to Stay by the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers (the nation affiliate of the Ohio Grantmakers Forum).

More Giving Together: THE GROWTH AND IMPACT of GIVING CIRCLES and SHARED GIVING
A report researched and written by Jessica E. Bearman for the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers

The Joy of Philanthropy:
My Giving Circle Friends and I Find That You Don't Have to Be Oprah to Make a Difference (The author of the article joined a giving circle sponsored by the Washington Area Women's Foundation)

A Circle With a Deep Center:
Black Women Pool Resources in Grass-Roots Effort to Alleviate D.C.'s Social Ills

Community Investment Network
The Community Investment Network works with young adult African Americans in the American South to focus how they engage and give back to their communities. This work has yielded nine giving circles.

African American Womens Giving Circle: Founded in 2004, the African American Women’s Giving Circle (AAWGC) is a charitable fund established out of The Women’s Foundation. The circle includes 15-25 women who have each made a financial commitment of $2,000 or more over a two-year period and agreed to work together as part of a shared grantmaking and learning experience.

Cleveland School Teacher Donates $2 Million to Her Alma Mater


Here is another example of what can happen when motivation and proper financial planning combine to create a legacy to benefit others.

Baldwin Wallace graduate Laura Bickimer donated $2 million to Baldwin Wallace, even thought she never made more than $40,000 per year as a Cleveland school teacher, according to the Plain Dealer. The article does indicate that she received some inheritance to augment her own saving.

Birmingham Couple Pinches Pennies to Endow Scholarships and Make a Difference

Ron Howard and his wife Elizabeth have funded $20,000 scholarship endowments that support education students at the University of Alabama, Ron's alma mater.

They have also endowed a $10,000 scholarship fund at the University of Mississippi and Samford University, , the Howards are midway toward funding a $15,000 scholarship endowment where Elizabeth received her education degree and master's degree, respectively.

"I'm basically poor," he says, turning his empty pockets inside out. "I drive a 1987 Dodge Diplomat. We live in a three-bedroom split level. I don't buy a lot of clothes and stuff. I'd rather put my money in this. I want to make a difference."

To learn how this couple managed to accomplish so much on his $55,000 salary from Bell South and her salary as a teacher, read the article written by the Birmingham News in 2005.

Frugal Farmer Leaves Millions to Charity

According the the Chronicle of Philanthropy, Minnesota farmer Harvey Ordung left a significant part of his $9.3 million estate to charity. The largest gift was to Luverne Dollars for Scholars, a scholarship program in Luverne, Minnesota.

Community 101 Program Teaches Giving to Young People

Portland-based PGE Foundation has invested more that $1 million since 1997 in an innovated program that teaches students to be philanthropists.

"Based on Colorado's El Pomar Youth in Community Service model, the program turns kids into grantmakers by awarding each class up to $5,000 to run their own mini-charitable foundation. Each group surveys community needs, develops a mission statement, and researches local nonprofit agencies. Students then solicit grant requests and ultimately make tough decisions on who gets funded and by how much. The young philanthropists commit to performing four hours of community service a month and are encouraged to raise an additional $500 for their program, which is matched 1:1 by the sponsor."

Videos from the Council of Foundations

The Council of Foundations has a section of its website that has videos from a number of speakers involved in Philanthropy. They include Bill Clinton, Van Jones, Melinda Gates, and Ronn Richard of the Cleveland Foundation. Unfortunately, the site does not allow embedding or linking directly to its videos.

Earl Stafford of the Stafford Foundation Interviewed on CNN



This video is a brief interview with Earl Stafford about his foundation's efforts to enable those would otherwise never have had the opportunity to Washington D.C and join in the inauguration events for President Barrack Obama. Learn more by visiting the foundation's blog and website: thestaffordfoundation.org.

Thanks to Vivian Hairston for sharing this information.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

African-American Lessons in Giving

This link provides some interesting statistics on African-American giving. Did you know that Blacks "give 25 percent more of their discretionary income to charity than do whites,"
according to the Chronicle of Philanthropy?

Jabari Asim, the author of this Washington Post Op-Ed, African-American Lessons in Giving, also talks about Thomas Cannon, man who rarely earned more than $30,000 but managed to
give away $150,000 over his lifetime.

Conventional wisdom is that you have to be wealthy, like Bill Gates, Michael Jackson, or Oprah Winfrey, in order to give. This is not true, as I hope will become apparent from the articles in this blog.

Any readers with other examples of people who have made significant contributions with "normal" incomes are encouraged to post information about these people in the comments section of this blog.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Bibliographies on African-American Philanthropy

The Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society at City University of New York has published a historical overview and literature review of African-American Philanthropy from the time of slavery until the present. The PDF document can be found here:
http://www.philanthropy.org/programs/literature_reviews/african_american_lit_review.pdf


The Council on Foundations hosts this document that appears to be a summary of remarks made by speakers on Black Philathropy as well as an annotated bibiography:
http://www.cof.org/files/Documents/Publications/Cultures_of_Caring/bibafam.pdf

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Council of Foundations Speaker - Wenda Weekes Moore


Wenda Weekes Moore, Association of Black Foundation Executives Board Member and W.K. Kellogg Foundation trustee talks about the importance of philanthropy at this pivotal time in America. Recorded on May 3, 2009 at the Council on Foundations 2009 Annual Conference in Atlanta.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Amazon.com: A Philanthropic Covenant with Black America: Rodney Jackson, Emmett D. Carson, Tavis Smiley: Books



This is a great resource for anyone wanting to learn more about African-American's using wealth to benefit the community. Here is the description from Amazon.com:

Black philanthropy has been shaped by the realities of black life in North America since the eighteenth century. From churches to the Underground Railroad to abolitionist newspapers to colleges, Black America has been enriched with the actions of many individuals who have given of their time, their talents, and their money. Today, Black philanthropy has taken on a new face, one that requires intentionality and strategy in your use of time and talent, one that says, "I am willing to take risks with my treasure," and to which you can commit through actions that strengthen your community and its families by carrying out your own Covenant Commitment.

Starting with the Introduction by Tavis Smiley—author of The Covenant with Black America, which brilliantly advanced a plethora of bold strategies for addressing critical issues affecting the Black community today—A Philanthropic Covenant with Black America is one of the most authoritative collections of essays ever amassed on African-American philanthropy, written by an unprecedented compilation of professionals, including:

  • Angela Glover Blackwell, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, PolicyLink
  • Harold Dean Trulear, Associate Professor of Applied Theology, Howard University School of Divinity

  • Birgit Smith Burton, Senior Director of Foundation Relations, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Jeanette Davis-Loeb, founder and CEO, Rising Oak Foundation

  • Stephanie Robinson, President and CEO, The Jamestown Project

  • Sherece West, President, Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation

  • Kermit "KC" Burton, Deputy Director, Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility

  • Charisse Carney-Nunes, Senior Vice President, The Jamestown Project

  • Carol Brunson Day, President and CEO, National Black Child Development Institute

  • Judith Gordon Samuel, Partner, Samuel Consulting LLC

  • Emmett D. Carson, President and CEO, Silicon Valley Community Foundation

Black Greek-letter organizations in the twenty-first century - Google Books

An understanding of philanthropy in the African-American community would be probably be incomplete without looking at the accomplishments of Sororities and Fraternities.

This link is to the full text of a book on Greek organizations.

Welcome to 21cf.org :: Giving for Black Community Change

The Twenty-First Century Foundation describes itself this way:

Our mission is to lead, innovate and influence giving for Black community change. As one of the few, endowed, Black foundations in the U.S., Twenty-First Century Foundation (21CF) works to advance the welfare of the Black community through strategic and collective grant making; special initiatives and research; donor education and donor services.

Overview of Black Philanthropy from OnPhilanthopy.com

This article gives a brief overview of Black Philanthropy. I found the links to other organizations interesting.

Black Philanthropy: Harnessing a Growing Resource
By: Marjorie Polycarpe, 08/06/04

In recent weeks the philanthropic world took notice of the impressive gift of $50 million by Wall Street money manager Alphonse Fletcher Jr., in commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education. Fletcher's gift was directed toward institutions and individuals working to improve race relations. It highlights a growing, but still under-recognized trend in the field - black philanthropy. l. .

The following is a list of local and national organizations focusing on the issue of Black Philanthropy.

- National Center for Black Philanthropy
- Association of Black Foundation Executives
- National Black United Fund
- Associated Black Charities
- Twenty First Century Foundation

Foundation Initiatives Focusing on Communities of Color

- Annie E. Casey Foundation,
- Emerging Funds for Communities of Color (EFCC)
- Kellogg Foundation: The Leadership in Philanthropy Project
- Communities of Color, an Initiative of The Community Foundation of Greater New Haven

Visit this site for the full article and links to the above organizations.

History of Black Philanthropy in Twin Cities Area



The Credjafawn Social Club of St. Paul, founded in 1927 and pictured here circa 1950,is one of the black social or fraternal organizations that have supported local philanthropy.


The Minnesota Council of Foundations published entitled: Black Philanthropy — Past, Present and Future — Depends on Long Traditions of Giving Time, Talent and Money.

The article looks at the history of Black Philanthropy in the Twin Cities area from a historica perspective and is interesting because I don't think of that area as having a significant minority population.

Visit: http://www.mcf.org/mcf/forum/2005/blackphilanthropy.htm


Black Enterprise Article on Black Philanthropy

Black Enterprise Magazine published this article on Black Philanthropy in 2005. (I had previously sent a link to this article.) Here is a full text version that is easier to read.I had sent this article previously.

The article has a list of leading individual donors such as Oprah Winfrey, Tom Joyner, and Jalen Rose.

America's leading black philanthropists: giving back is one of the major tenets of the Black Enterprise Declaration of Financial Empowerment. In doing so, we advocate using money to develop our community and build wealth. On the following pages meet America's largest, and most strategic, black philanthropists. . .

Night Club Promoter Brings Clean Water to Developing Nations

The Idea Camp - Scott Harrison from The Idea Camp on Vimeo.

This video tells the story of Scott Harrison, an individual who set up an organization to bring clean water to developing nations. Although he is not an African-American Philanthropist, his story shows one person can make a difference.

Scott starts talking at 1 minute 30 seconds into the video. You can drag the slider at the bottom of the screen forward to skip to this point.

Scott Harrison's outlook was transformed by exposure to conditions while on vacation abroad. He worked for an international charity that provided urgently needed medical care to developing countries. He founded Charity: Water to dig wells in developing countries and used marketing skill and online technology to provide aide to existing organizations that could dig the wells.

Read his story in this New York Times article or listen to his story in the video above.