Boston Foundation 2017 Annual Report

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THE Problem Solvers How a Group of Unusually Creative Philanthropists Are Helping to Solve Some of Boston’s Big Problems

T h e B o s t o n F o u n d a t i o n 2 017 A N N UA L R E P O RT


Cover Photos Top Left > Jill and Niraj Shah Top Right > BOSTON BASICS representatives (standing, from left): Harvard Achievement Gap Initiative Director Dr. Ronald Ferguson; Black Philanthropy Fund members Wendell Knox, Margaret Daniels Tyler and Chair Jeffrey Howard; (seated from left) Black Philanthropy Fund members Ruth Ellen Fitch and Rahn Dorsey; (seated far right) Boston Basics Executive Director Mari Brennan Barrera Bottom Left > Paul English Bottom Right > Roger Brown and Linda Mason


THE Problem Solvers

About the Boston Foundation

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By the Numbers

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HOW A GROUP

4 Introduction

THE PROBLEM SOLVERS

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Growing the Permanent Fund for Boston

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Centennial Circle Centennial Society

Boston Foundation Legacy Societies Funds and Donors

25 25 26

Legacy Societies Longley Legacy Society Rogerson Legacy Society

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Funds and Donors The Permanent Fund for Boston Donors to the Civic Leadership Fund Donor Advised Funds Support Organizations Designated Funds Scholarship Funds

29 36 40 46 47 49

Becoming a Donor

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Applying for a Grant

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OF UNUSUALLY CREATIVE

PHILANTHROPISTS ARE HELPING TO SOLVE SOME OF BOSTON’S BIG PROBLEMS

Financials 56

Boston Foundation Board

Boston Foundation Staff

59 60

See page 5


About the Boston Foundation

OUR VALUES STATEMENT In everything we do, we seek to broaden participation, foster collaboration and heal racial, ethnic and community divisions.

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T

he Boston Foundation, Greater Boston’s community foundation, brings people and resources together to solve Boston’s big problems. Established in 1915, it is one of the largest community foundations in the nation—with net assets of more than $1 billion. In 2017, the Foundation and its donors paid $135 million in grants to nonprofit organizations and received gifts of $194 million. The Foundation is a close partner in philanthropy with its donors, with more than 1,000 separate charitable funds established either for the general benefit of the community or for special purposes. It also serves as a major civic leader, think tank and advocacy organization, commissioning research into the most critical issues of our time and helping to shape public policy designed to advance opportunity for everyone in Greater Boston. The Philanthropic Initiative ( TPI ) , a distinct operating unit of the Foundation, designs and implements customized philanthropic strategies for families, foundations and corporations around the globe. OUR MISSION As Greater Boston’s community foundation since 1915, the Boston Foundation devotes its resources to building and sustaining a vital, prosperous city and region, where justice and opportunity are extended to everyone. It fulfills this mission in three principal ways: 1 Making grants to nonprofit organizations and designing special funding initiatives to address this community’s critical challenges; 2 Working in partnership with donors to achieve high-impact philanthropy; and

3 Serving as a civic hub and center of information, where ideas are shared, levers for change are identified, and common agendas for the future are developed.


2017 By the Numbers

It was a notable year for the Boston Foundation.

$135

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NUMBER OF STARTUPS PLEDGING 1% BOSTON IN OUR FIRST YEAR

Million

and planning to commit 1% of their equity or other resources to the community

by the FOUNDATION and OUR DONORS

Record Grants Paid

$2 MILLION TOTAL OPEN DOOR GRANTS

made in response to expressed community needs and for new ideas and nonprofits

$50 MILLION Largest Gift Ever

{

ANNOUNCED BY

CURRICULUM ASSOCIATES

}

$750,000 TOTA L G R A N T S M A D E BY LIVE ARTS BOSTON

to support small performing arts groups

Floor We Moved To at 75 Arlington

Street with expanded public meeting spaces for nonprofit and donor events

CIVIC LEADERSHIP

4,762 Square

Feet of New Meeting Space in the new Edgerley Center for Civic Leadership, expanding our capacity for large forums

2,800 Number of

People who attended forums in 2017 with 12 new research reports published 3


Introduction This Annual Report tells the stories of Boston Foundation donors who do much more than give. They immeasurably strengthen the work we do through their deep dedication to the nonprofit organizations they support and the issues they care about most. They serve on boards, work side by side with nonprofit staff and the people they serve, develop special initiatives and engage other philanthropists in the work. They are problems solvers, dedicated to tackling some of the most serious issues we face as a community, a commonwealth and a country. This has been a remarkable year for the Boston Foundation. Records were set in total grants paid and in gifts received. We also learned that the Foundation would be receiving the largest gift in its 102-year history: $50 million as part of the transfer of a majority investment in the Billerica, Massachusetts based education company Curriculum Associates. This is a transformative gift, especially since a substantial portion of it will be used to grow the Boston Foundation’s Permanent Fund for Boston, the endowment we hold for our strategic grant making and other work. It’s the fund that has allowed us to be “There at the Beginning” for some of Boston’s most iconic organizations, a tradition we continue today by supporting innovative ideas and nonprofits through our Open Door Grants program. The Boston Foundation also moved this year—from the tenth floor to the third floor of 75 Arlington Street, the location that has served us so well over the last 16 years. We have new, flexible, meeting rooms that are larger, better equipped and designed to accommodate the hundreds of people who come to each of our forums and other events, adding up to thousands over the course of year. We are proud to make these facilities available to the entire nonprofit community. In the midst of all of this growth and positive change, the board and staff of the Boston Foundation have been sobered by the climate within which we are conducting our work. The Foundation was established more than a century ago to lift up all members of our community, and we will not shy away from that mission as we head into the next year and deeper into the 21st century. We will continue to support immigrants and refugees, all people of color, all members of our LGBTQ community and everyone who is fighting to protect their rights, expand their opportunities and realize their dreams.

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Sandra M. Edgerley Chair, Board of Directors

Paul S. Grogan President & CEO


THE PROBLEM SOLVERS MAKING INVESTMENTS IN INNOVATIVE IDEAS AND NEW NONPROFITS. HELPING BOSTON’S PARENTS GIVE THEIR YOUNGEST CHILDREN THE BASICS THEY NEED TO THRIVE. PRESERVING ONE OF THE WORLD’S MOST PRECIOUS NATURAL LEGACIES. This annual report tells the stories of just some of the enterprising, highly engaged philanthropists the Boston Foundation has the honor of working with every year.

FUNDING NEW IDEAS 6 J E N N I FE R G I LB E RT STARTING FROM BIRTH 8 B L AC K PH I L ANTH ROPY FU N D INVESTING FOR IMPACT 10 DW IG HT PO LE R

ADVANCING BREAKTHROUGHS 12 S HAH FAM I LY FOU N DATION

ADDRESSING CORE CAUSES 14 ET TA AN D M A R K ROS E N

PLEDGING IT FORWARD 16 PAU L E N G LI S H TOUCHING YOUNG LIVES 18 LI N DA M A SO N AN D ROG E R B ROW N ADOPTING A GENDER LENS 20 N E W E NG L AN D I NTE R NATIONAL DO NO R S

HONORING BOSTON’S LEGACIES 22 W E N DY S HAT TUC K AN D SA M PLI M PTO N

The following articles are brief reflections based on longer conversations we had with all of these remarkable philanthropists. Go to tbf.org/2017Annual for transcripts of the full conversations.

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OPE N DOOR G R ANTS

FUNDING NEW IDEAS Jennifer Gilbert supports the Boston Foundation’s Open Door Grants program. “As a donor, I like to contribute to things that are in the early stages and emerging. A real added value of being part of the Boston Foundation is that it’s a partner I can trust to go out there and find new ideas,” she says. “Why wouldn’t you want to see what the Foundation is finding and see if it fits with your goals?”

JENNIFER GILBERT has a favorite Egyptian proverb: “A clever woman can weave with a donkey’s hoof.” It was an auspicious day, then, when she met Madeleine Steczynski, the founder of ZUMIX. Both women have taken on problems as challenging as weaving with a donkey’s hoof— and succeeded. In 2001, Gilbert was working on planning for the redevelopment of East Boston’s Maverick Gardens, which included demolition of the 60-year-old buildings. “I got the idea to work with kids there and teach them photography so they could document and memorialize their homes,” she says. She needed a nonprofit organization to be a fiscal agent for the project and connect her to local youth—and that led her to ZUMIX. “Madeleine said ‘yes’ right away,” she adds.

Gilbert eventually joined the ZUMIX board and helped the organization line up financing to buy an abandoned firehouse in East Boston. The renovated building has been a dynamic space for hundreds of young people who have played and experienced music there ever since. Recently, Steczynski reminded Gilbert of a stark reality: In the skyrocketing East Boston market, it’s likely that ZUMIX couldn’t afford to stay if it didn’t own its building. Gilbert’s work and her experience with ZUMIX has sparked an ongoing interest in the problem many nonprofits have finding affordable space—in Boston’s increasingly difficult real estate market. That difficulty, she explains, “means that a lot of things I value about cities, such as diversity, including racial and economic diversity, and grassroots civic institutions like ZUMIX, are really threatened.”

Jennifer Gilbert in a rehearsal studio at ZUMIX, an East Boston based nonprofit organization that works with young people to build community through music and creative technology.

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TH E BOSTON BAS IC S CAM PAIG N

STARTING FROM BIRTH When members of the BLACK PHILANTHROPY FUND (BPF) assemble, expect an energy surge. These passionate philanthropists exemplify the power of financial capital combined with social capital in pursuit of a goal. It began when a core group, who knew one another professionally, began discussing how to most effectively and meaningfully give back. They all believed that education had put them in a position to give, so they narrowed their focus to that—still an infinitely broad category! In researching the field, they consulted experts, among them Harvard Achievement Gap Initiative Director Dr. Ronald Ferguson. Knowing that 80 percent of brain development happens before age three, Ferguson said that the “achievement gap” was established long before kids arrived at pre-K. He asked, “Wouldn’t it be better

to prevent the gap in the first place than remediate it later?” He’d codified five behaviors, or basics, in interacting with children that boost their language abilities, reasoning and confidence—starting from birth (see BostonBasics.org). The Fund’s members immediately saw the potential, identified partners and launched a citywide initiative: The Boston Basics Campaign. The BPF pays for materials and the partners establish connections across the city with health centers, child care centers, hospitals, churches and others, even barbershops. BPF Trustee Wendell Knox explains, “The strategy is to mobilize the existing infrastructure of the city.” The overlapping skills, connections, interests and resources of the BPF’s members are the rocket fuel for Boston Basics. Says BPF Chair Jeffrey Howard, “It’s almost like we lived out our careers to do this work.”

Members of the Black Philanthropy Fund established a Donor Advised Fund at the Boston Foundation as a rallying point around which to focus and magnify their giving. Fund Trustee and former Abt Associates CEO Wendell Knox says, “We felt the Foundation would be the right place not only to manage our money but to develop a relationship— as a funding partner, a programmatic partner, a thought partner.”

Black Philanthropy Fund trustees and Dr. Ferguson at The Dimock Center in Roxbury with practitioners, parents and children participating in the Boston Basics Campaign.

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PAY FOR S UCC E S S

INVESTING FOR IMPACT For DWIGHT POLER , whose family has a Donor Advised Fund at the Boston Foundation, philanthropy is not the only tool for solving Boston’s problems. While a Managing Director at Bain Capital, Poler cofounded a social investment model in London called the Private Equity Foundation (PEF). Bain, alongside other private equity firms, invested funds and pro bono skills through PEF into charities that help disadvantaged young people achieve education and employment, including a social impact bond which generates returns to investors from the British government if the outcomes are realized. When the Boston Foundation approached Poler about investing in Pay for Success, he was immediately interested. Like PEF, it’s a program that otherwise might not be supported due to tight public funding. Through Jewish Vocational Service, some 2,000

Greater Boston immigrants receive vocational English-language lessons. If they learn English and move on to higher salaries within three years, the investors will get their money back— and possibly a profit—from the state. Poler thinks that this kind of “impact investing” can attract a new class of investors. “I’ve started to see some social investments that truly are generating market-level returns,” he explains. When it comes to returns on his family’s fund, he says the Foundation “not only identifies impactful projects worth supporting, it also offers the best asset managers available.” He’s planning to focus more on philanthropic investing going forward. “I am most interested in structural innovations around economic selfempowerment. Contributing to projects that catalyze job creation and a source of funds that doesn’t remain donor-dependent is very exciting.”

“I see impact investing and philanthropy on a spectrum,” says Dwight Poler. “Impact investing works well providing proof-points to other funders willing to pay for delivered results, such as a government entity seeking more effective social services or employers with a vested interest in job training. But many important needs lend themselves more to pure philanthropic funding, such as early stage innovation or areas where the social benefit is not easily quantified or otherwise supported.”

Dwight Poler is one of 40 investors in Pay for Success. Others include the Boston Foundation’s Permanent Fund for Boston, some of the Foundation’s board members and other foundations and individuals.

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C IVIC LE ADE R S H IP FU N D

ADVANCING BREAKTHROUGHS The Shah Family Foundation has supported the Boston Foundation’s annual campaign for the Civic Leadership Fund. “The Boston Foundation is an excellent convener,” says Jill, who has attended the Foundation’s forums. “It’s at the epicenter of philanthropy in Boston and an important touch point. When we started spending significant time philanthropically, we thought it was important to support the work of the Boston Foundation, which provides access to information and data that otherwise is hard to find.”

What is the need and how can it best be met? This is one of the questions all entrepreneurs ask before they start a business. It’s also something JILL AND NIRAJ SHAH ask before making a grant from their charitable foundation, the Shah Family Foundation. “Does it do something better? Are its leaders risk takers who are really looking at efficiently solving problems? Is it a breakthrough that could be exponentially powerful?” Both Shahs are entrepreneurs: Jill launched Jill’s List, a leading online platform for integrative health-care practitioners that was sold to MINDBODY in 2013; and Niraj founded the internet retail powerhouse Wayfair. Their philanthropy is focused on solutions that sit at the intersection of health care, education and community. They support the Boston Public

Schools’ Hub and Spoke Project, which is bringing locally prepared, healthy and delicious meals to schools in East Boston. The meals are freshly cooked, using recipes developed with renowned chef Ken Oringer and others—and the project can be replicated in schools throughout Boston and other cities. Wayfair and the Boston Foundation both support Hack. Diversity, a program initiative of New England Venture Capital Association focused on bridging the gap between jobs going unfilled and Boston talent going undeveloped—with an emphasis on young people of color and women. “Hack.Diversity is helping folks who are talented and can be successful, but may not have access to a path that would get them a job at a company like Wayfair,” explains Niraj. “We’re always looking for talented workers at Wayfair.”

Niraj and Jill Shah at Wayfair’s offices in Boston, an energetic, dynamic environment that accommodates more than 3,000 people in an open floor plan. Not even Niraj has an office.

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NON PROFIT E FFECTIVE N E S S

ADDRESSING CORE CAUSES MARK and ETTA ROSEN embody a beloved Boston Foundation motto: Don’t just give. Solve. The couple has always given to numerous organizations and causes but in recent years has taken a more strategic approach. They opened a Donor Advised Fund at the Boston Foundation and, through Foundationhosted convenings and conversations with staff, a focus emerged. While still giving to organizations they’ve long supported, they now have clearer goals. And their giving—their solving—goes beyond the financial. They’ve donated to conservation organizations, but also renovated their 1865 townhouse to LEED standards with an awardwinning green rooftop. They are committed to organizations that address early childhood issues and Etta serves on the board of Families First. They have made significant

contributions to the Institute for Nonprofit Practice (INP), and Mark chairs its board. The INP, which the Foundation also supports, is a highly affordable, one-year certificate-granting program for nonprofit leaders that equips them with the management and leadership skills they need to make their organizations effective and sustainable. It offers a track for current leaders and a track for emerging leaders. Both aim to fill a self-reported skills gap and a long-standing diversity gap in sector leadership. “It’s a significant philanthropic priority for us,” says Mark, “and we’re grateful for the Boston Foundation’s leadership in the field. It is in the vanguard of institutional funders that fully appreciate the importance of capacity-building in the nonprofit sector and remains a loyal partner to INP.”

Mark and Etta Rosen focus their philanthropy on addressing the core causes of— and systemic responses to—the most serious problems and inequities in our city, region and nation. At the heart of their commitment is support of the nonprofit sector itself with the goal of strengthening it so that it can be as effective as possible. They explain: “Improving the health of the sector will help all philanthropic dollars go farther.”

Etta and Mark Rosen were both working full-bore until retiring a few years ago and focusing on their philanthropy. Now, they’re busier than ever. “There are just so many urgent needs right now.”

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PLE DG E 1% BOSTON

PLEDGING IT FORWARD Paul English is a member of the Pledge 1% Boston movement, a partnership of the Boston Foundation and TUGG. “I encourage new companies to pledge 1% to charity on day one,” he says. While corporate giving may have tax advantages, a chief reason he urges new companies to join Pledge 1% Boston is that it creates a culture of “kindness” at a company. English hopes Pledge 1% becomes a new normal for businesses in the region.

PAUL ENGLISH loves Boston. The West Roxbury native has had a hand in envisioning, launching and profitably selling more companies than many individuals will ever work for in a lifetime, including Kayak.com. Through dotcom booms and busts, he has remained centered in Greater Boston, his allegiance to place strengthened by family ties and Atlantic tides. The region has benefited not only from the businesses he has hatched here, but also the impact of his philanthropy. It’s an impact that spreads beyond dollars, for while he has given many of them, he has as importantly set an example for how to do it. An early member of Pledge 1% Boston, part of a global movement of 3,500 startups committed to pledging 1% equity and other resources to support their

communities, English has pledged at least 10% of his founder stake in Lola to philanthropy. His advice on giving is to look first to organizations where your employees have ties. If they are giving their own money and time to a nonprofit, they’ve already vetted it for you. Then, says English, find compelling leaders whom you trust, write them a check and get out of the way. English also suggests that donors “diversify their giving portfolios.” He has given to—and serves on the board of—the global organization Partners in Health and has founded Summits Education, a network of 20 schools in rural Haiti. His local focus is on homeless service organizations, especially the Pine Street Inn and Boston Health Care for the Homeless.

Paul English at Boston Health Care for the Homeless. English’s latest project is to create a world-class memorial to Martin Luther King Jr. in Boston.

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DONOR ADVI S E D FU N D

TOUCHING YOUNG LIVES

Since Horizons for Homeless Children was launched in 1987, the need for high-quality child care has been amplified by research showing that the first three years are critical to the development of a child’s brain. “If you can create a stable, loving environment, it’s giving a child a great start in life,” says Linda Mason, who cofounded the nonprofit with her husband Roger Brown. They support Horizons and other organizations through their Donor Advised Fund at the Boston Foundation.

LINDA MASON and ROGER BROWN learned something powerful when they worked together in the 1980s in Sudan. They had created a program to respond to the drought and famine ravaging the people there—and while helping the children, they witnessed that even a modest intervention can dramatically impact the trajectory of a child’s whole life. And so, when they returned to the United States, they decided to create an organization that would help children here. “We were witnessing the most important sociological revolution of our lifetime,” explains Linda, “which was the entry of mothers with children into the workforce—all needing child care— and our existing child-care system was inadequate. We started Bright Horizons for Children in 1986.”

Soon after launching Bright Horizons, they started the nonprofit Horizons for Homeless Children with their good friend Michael Eisenson. “We had all recently become parents ourselves,” says Roger, “and it gave us enormous empathy. Here we were in a relatively stable situation and it was hard to be a parent. What if you were a mother doing it alone? What if you had no money? What if you had no place to live?” Today, Bright Horizons is the largest provider of worksite child care and early education in the world. Horizons for Homeless Children touches the lives of more than 2,000 Massachusetts homeless children through Playspaces in shelters and operates three early learning centers for homeless children while also helping mothers reach self sufficiency. The goal, as Linda puts it, “is to help mothers achieve their goals—for their children and themselves.”

(Adults, from left) Roger Brown, Senior Lead Teacher Jayd Rodrigues and Linda Mason on the playground at Horizons for Homeless Children’s Early Education Center in Roxbury.

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N E W E NG L AN D I NTE R NATIONAL DONOR S

ADOPTING A GENDER LENS EMILY NIELSEN JONES believes that “change happens through a network of relationships.” And so, when she heard about New England International Donors (NEID), a dynamic and growing learning network for globally focused donors at The Philanthropic Initiative, she didn’t hesitate to join. In 2009, she and her husband, Ross Jones, cofounded their family foundation, the Imago Dei Fund, which began by giving globally, but now also funds locally. Early in her development as a philanthropist, Jones visited Cambodia and learned more about the issue of human trafficking. “I realized that it’s no accident women and girls are primarily affected by trafficking,” she says. “My learning curve around the condition of girls and women’s lives happened very quickly after that.” As a result, she has helped

the fund adopt a “gender lens” for much of its grant making. When the idea of a Giving Circle on Women and Girls emerged through conversations among NEID members, driven by NEID cofounder Karen Ansara, Jones was naturally attracted to the idea. Giving circles have been a phenomenon in philanthropy for some time, but they can be challenging because the group’s members have to agree about the grants made. At a fall meeting of the Giving Circle, its members were poised to decide on their first grants. All of them agreed that the process of arriving at that point has been remarkably smooth. Jones credits NEID staff Ina Breuer and Odette Ponce. “The desire to collaborate is very hard to achieve without some support—and for sustained collaboration, you need an infrastructure. That’s what NEID has given us.”

“I literally joined that day,” says Emily Nielsen Jones about first learning of New England International Donors, a learning network of internationally focused philanthropists, family foundations and social investors. NEID was developed and nurtured by The Philanthropic Initiative (TPI), a distinct operating unit of the Boston Foundation and a pioneer in the field of strategic philanthropy. Today NEID is an independent initiative of TPI and the Boston Foundation.

Emily Nielsen Jones (seated fourth from left), and other members of the Giving Circle on Women and Girls. The Giving Circle was founded by Boston Foundation donor Karen Ansara, who also cofounded NEID.

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TH E PE R MAN E NT FU N D FOR BOSTON

HONORING BOSTON’S LEGACIES This is a story about legacies—the legacy of the brilliant landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed Boston’s world-renowned Emerald Necklace parks system. And the remarkable legacy of Justine Mee Liff, the City’s former Parks Commissioner, whose life ended in 2002 but who is remembered through a fund named in her honor to protect Olmsted’s masterpiece for the benefit of the people of our city. WENDY SHATTUCK was the public relations director of the Four Seasons when she met Liff. “We got together and decided that we would fill the old muddy pond in the Boston Public Garden with water to bring back winter skating in Garden.” Their effort was a success and Liff eventually invited Shattuck to join the board of a public-private partnership called The Emerald

Necklace Conservancy, which is dedicated to renewing, enlivening and advocating for the parks system. After Liff died, Shattuck proposed to the board of the Conservancy that they start a campaign in Liff’s honor to restore and maintain the landscape that she loved so much. The result was the Justine Mee Liff Fund for the Emerald Necklace and the Party in the Park, which every year raises $1 million to benefit the Emerald Necklace Conservancy and Olmsted’s historic park system. Next year’s Party will be held in Franklin Park, which, at 527 acres, is the largest of them all. “Parks are a very democratic concept because they are open to everyone—a place for people to rest and restore in the urban environment,” says Shattuck. “Justine really understood that.”

Wendy Shattuck and her husband, Sam Plimpton, have made a legacy commitment of their own to the Boston Foundation’s Permanent Fund for Boston—the endowment that fuels all of the Foundation’s work in Greater Boston. “We feel the Boston Foundation is the right place to harbor our own legacy,” she explains. “Like the Emerald Necklace, the Boston Foundation will always be here.”

In 2018, Wendy Shattuck and many others will celebrate the Emerald Necklace Conservancy’s 20th anniversary and the 15th anniversary of the Party in the Park, which supports the Justine Mee Liff Endowment Fund for the restoration and maintenance of the Emerald Necklace.

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Growing the Permanent Fund for Boston The very first gift to the Boston Foundation’s Permanent Fund for Boston was received exactly 100 years ago, in 1917. It came from James Longley, a New England industrialist who was deeply devoted to Boston. He left a bequest totaling $4 million—more than $80 million in today’s dollars. Established through bequests left by Longley and hundreds of other visionary Bostonians—and strengthened by outright gifts—the Permanent Fund for Boston provides the resources the Boston Foundation needs to respond to the most pressing issues facing Greater Boston.

Rose Fit zgera ld Kennedy Greenway

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Visionary Philanthropists Shaping Our City’s Future Through Their Generosity CENTENNIAL CIRCLE During the Boston Foundation’s Centennial year in 2015, a total of $192 million was raised for the Permanent Fund for Boston, including $15 million in outright leadership gifts of $1 million or more from a Centennial Circle of donors, all great Bostonians who care deeply about our community. These resources immeasurably strengthened the Permanent Fund for Boston and community grant making. We honor these philanthropists here and thank them. Anonymous (2)

Sandra and Paul Edgerley

Jacobson Family Foundation

Charles Ansbacher Foundation

The Flow Fund

Robert K. Kraft and Family

Joseph E. Corcoran

Paul and Patricia Gannon

Robert A. and Veronica S. Petersen

Desh and Jaishree Deshpande

Barbara and Amos Hostetter

Stephanie and Brian Spector

CENTENNIAL SOCIETY We are also deeply grateful for the generosity and vision of the following donors who have confirmed legacy commitments of $1 million or more to grow the Permanent Fund for Boston and benefit community grant making. Anonymous (6)

David J. Elliott and Hungwah Yu

Diane DeSerras Arenella

Grace and Edward Fey

James F. Becker and Randal D. Rucker

Atsuko and Larry Fish

Rick and Nonnie Burnes

Peni Garber

Belden, Pamela, and Andrew Daniels

Brian Hyde

Richard and Marcia DeWolfe

Jane Wegscheider Hyman

Michael and Barbara Eisenson

Louis and Marcia Kamentsky

Anne R. Lovett and Stephen G. Woodsum Bill Nigreen and Kathleen McDermott Robert A. and Veronica S. Petersen Sam Plimpton and Wendy Shattuck Joseph G. Prone Foundation Lindsey A. Rosen Sandra M. Stark

For information about how you can join these visionary philanthropists in strengthening the Permanent Fund for Boston, please contact the Senior Director of Leadership Giving at 617-338-3910.

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Boston Foundation Legacy Societies, Funds and Donors Since the Boston Foundation was founded in 1915, more than 1,000 individuals, families and businesses have strengthened the Greater Boston community immeasurably by establishing funds at the Boston Foundation. Thousands more have contributed to funds held by the Foundation. Donors work closely with the Boston Foundation to achieve high-impact philanthropy and take advantage of planned and legacy giving opportunities to benefit the future of our community. The following pages list all of the funds that are held by the Foundation and the many donors who have contributed to them. Each fund has its own name, but all of them gain strength from being managed and invested together—and all of them contribute to strengthening Greater Boston’s community foundation for today and the future.

Upha m’s Corner, Dorchester

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Legacy Societies Members of the Boston Foundation’s Legacy Societies are deeply committed to providing the Boston Foundation with the resources it will need today and in the future in order to meet the ever-changing needs of our community. We thank all of these generous donors and honor them here.

LONGLEY LEGACY SOCIETY Thanks to these generous donors who have confirmed legacy commitments to the Permanent Fund for Boston. Anonymous (11)

Kate R. Guedj

Beatrice and Peter Nessen

Howard and Carol Anderson

Ruben D. OrduĂąa

Dorothy and David, Jr.* Arnold

Dean T. Hara and Congressman Gerry E. Studds*

Catherine Axon and Thomas M. Elder

Ann S. Higgins

Nathaniel Pulsifer

Hanna and James Bartlett

Helen M. Jones

Gary and Natalie Robinson

Barry Bluestone and Mary Ellen Colten*

Jonathan and Judy Keyes

Anthony Mitchell Sammarco

Janine Bouchard

Anne F. Kilguss

Wendy C. Sanford

Margaret A. Bush

Vera Kilstein

Jennifer P. and Daniel I. Sherman

Barry B. Corden

Colman & Carol Levin Fund

Charles E. and Deana M. Shirley

Constance and Lewis Counts

Bernadette M. MacPherson

Binkley and Paula Shorts

Ralph J. Donofrio

Barbara and Myron* Markell

Scott E. Squillace, Esq.

Ellen Epstein and Rose* and Lee* Epstein

Rabbi Bernard H. Mehlman

Charles A. Walsh III

Timothy and Deborah Moore

Ann and Hans Ziegler

Paul and Patricia Gannon

Herbert E. Morse and Ellenjoy Fields

Paul S. Grogan

Katharine S. Nash

Jennifer Jossie Owens

* deceased

ROGERSON LEGACY SOCIETY These generous donors have communicated their intention to include the Boston Foundation in their planned and estate gifts, not specifically focused on the Permanent Fund for Boston. Anonymous (16)

Rich Becker

Jacob F. and Barbara C. Brown

Mary Lee T. and Peter C. Aldrich

Laurie A. Bencal, CPA

Rick and Nonnie Burnes

G. Thomas and Allison Aley

Doreen B. Biebusch

Margaret A. Bush

Geoffrey D. Austrian

Thomas W. Bird

Frank and Ruth Butler

Sherwood E. Bain

David Blot

David and Gay Campbell

Mary Barber

Kenneth S. Brock

Robert B. Canterbury

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Helen T.W. Chen and Keith R. Ohmart

Gary P. Kearney, M.D. and Susan Kearney

Ellen L. Simons

Edward A. and Penny Cherubino

James A. Kilmurray and Janice L. Quiram

Edward G. (Ted) and Nancy L. Smethurst

Arthur D. Clarke and Susan P. Sloan

G. Paul Kowal

Cheryl H. Smith

Diane Currie

Barbara N. Kravitz

Scott E. Squillace, Esq.

Marilyn Darling

Virginia Kropas

David F. and Patricia R. Squire

David S. and Shirley G. Dayton

Peter and Stephanie Kurzina

Arthur L. Stevenson

Ralph J. Donofrio

Frances J. Lee-Vandell

Anne B. Stone

Malcolm Dunkley

Donald J. and Susan Kelley MacDonald

Elihu and Bonnie Stone

Anita Maria Elliott

Robert and Poppy Mastrovita

Anne Thompson

Amy Zell Ellsworth

Stephen J. McCarthy

Libby and Sidney Topol

Ellen Epstein and Rose* and Lee* Epstein

Meredith and Elsa McKinney

Alan and Pamela Trefler

Joe Fiorello

Rabbi Bernard H. Mehlman

Joy E. Van Buskirk

Sandra and Philip* Gordon

Edward J. and Jane S. Michon

Peter S. and Pamela L. Voss

Andrew C. Goresh

Charles Fessenden Morse

Dr. G. Anne Guenzel

Frederick W. Neinas, MD

Robert R. Wadsworth and Catherine E. Moritz

Charlotte I. Hall

Carl H. Novotny and Rev. Judith Swahnberg

J. H. Walton, Jr. and Carolyn Walton

Dean T. Hara and Congressman Gerry E. Studds*

Mark A. and Judith A. Osborne

Constance V. R. White

Douglas D. and Geraldine Payne

Eric S. and Linda H. White

Marilyn L. Harris

Nancy E. Peace

Jeffrey and Theresa Whitehead

Barbara Hauter Woodward

Robert A. and Veronica S. Petersen

Michael N. and Mary M. Wood

Petie Hilsinger

Agatha W. Poor

Eleanor D. Young

Kenneth D. and Cynthia L. Holberger Chuck Holland

Warren Radtke and Judith Lockhart Radtke

* deceased

Helen R. Homans

Chris Remmes

Emily C. Hood

Richard L. Robbins

Marjorie Howard-Jones

Edith M. Routier

Stephen G. and Rosemarie Torres Johnson

John A. Russell

Karen A. Joyce and John Fitzgerald

Margaret Schmidt and Kenneth Danila

Ruth G. Kahn

Norman J. and Maryellen Sullivan Shachoy

Louis and Marcia Kamentsky

Annabelle W. Shepherd

Mrs. Chester Hamilton

Wendy C. Sanford

Binkley and Paula Shorts

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Inge J. Wetzstein


Funds and Donors THE PERMANENT FUND FOR BOSTON The Permanent Fund for Boston is Greater Boston’s endowment and the most flexible fund held by the Boston Foundation, giving our staff and board members the crucial resources they need to respond to the most pressing issues facing contemporary Greater Boston. Many donors have contributed to this fund since the Foundation was first established in 1915. This important fund supports grants in Education, Health & Wellness, Jobs & Economic Development, Neighborhoods & Housing, and Arts & Culture—all areas that have a profound impact on the quality of life in Greater Boston.

Unrestricted Funds The following funds are either totally unrestricted or directed to a general issue or area of concern. Many of these funds were established by families or organizations wanting to honor loved ones or colleagues by naming a fund after them. The year the fund was established is listed in parentheses and new funds are in bold type. Emily Tuckerman Allen Fund (2006)

Grace A. Jacobs Fund (1988)

Geno A. Ballotti Fund (1984)

Karoff Fund for Leadership in Philanthropy (2017)

Irene W. Bancroft Fund (1997) James R. Bancroft Trust Fund (1984) Harriett M. Bartlett Fund (1987) J. E. Adrien Blais Fund I (1967) The Barry Bluestone and Mary Ellen Colten Legacy Fund (2017)

Michael B. Keating Fund for Justice and Social Equity (2016) Thomas F. Lambert, Jr. and Elizabeth Branon Lambert Fund (2006) Live Arts Boston (LAB) (2016) Polaroid Fund (1997)

Franklin S. & Cynthia B. Browning Fund (1988)

Redefining our Public Places (2016)

Frank B. & Watson G. Cutter Fund (1984)

Ruth M. Reiss Memorial Fund (1997)

James Dean Fund (1946)

Samuel H. & Lizzie M. Robie Trust Fund (1982)

Katherine E. Dooley Fund (1997) Herbert and Lucy Fields Fund (2008) Edward Glines Fund (1938) Rev. Ray A. Hammond Fund for the Neighborhoods of Boston (2009)

Walter J. & Marjorie B. Salmon Fund (1999) Robert Wadsworth Fund for the Future of Boston (2008)

Nathaniel Hooper Fund (1938) Downtown Boston

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Field of Interest Funds The following funds are directed to a particular issue or area of concern. Many of these funds were established by families or organizations wanting to honor loved ones or colleagues by naming a fund after them. The year the fund was established is listed in parentheses. Solomon Agoos Fund (1987) For popular education, instruction and dissemination of information in the field of ethics Area IV Fund (2014) Unrestricted Arts Fund (1997) Edith Allanbrook Fund (2002) To provide for children with extraordinary promise in the area of the arts Boston Parks Access Fund (2002) To the Boston Parks Department or the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard or to the administrators of other public park land within the City of Boston boundaries Free For All Fund (2014) To ensure that everyone from the Boston region will have regular and permanent access to the rich world of classical, orchestral music and related cultural events Edward Hyde Cox Fund (2000) For support of programs involving classical music, painting and/or sculpture Anna Faith Jones Arts Fund (2000) Recognizing and honoring the leadership and service of Anna Faith Jones and her special commitment to supporting the arts MassDevelopment Arts Fund for Community and Economic Development (2003) To arts, cultural and community-based nonprofit organizations conducting arts and cultural development projects or studies that promote job creation, housing and economic development in Greater Boston

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Stephen and Sybil Stone Arts Fund (2003) To support programs and organizations that provide residents, especially youth and young adults who do not otherwise have the means for involvement, with opportunities to attend and participate in the arts Brother Thomas Fund (2007) To the support of struggling artists working in any and all media in the Greater Boston area Brooks White, Jr. Memorial Fund (2007) A component fund of the Boston Foundation Arts Fund Edith M. Ashley Fund (1960) Primarily for the aid of blind and physically disabled persons Diane Heath Beever Memorial Fund (2008) To support substance abuse treatment including alcoholism and drug addiction/dependence; and/or mental illness J. E. Adrien Blais Fund II (1967) For the relief, support or assistance of poor or needy Massachusetts residents J. E. Adrien Blais Fund III (1967) For the relief of needy and deserving persons who have or have had tuberculosis or who suffer from respiratory illness or disease Emily Budd Fund (1960) For fresh air vacations for under-privileged children Camping Associates of Roslindale & Milton Fund (1981) For camping programs in the Greater Boston area

Community Organizing & Advocacy Endowment Fund (1988) To support low-income neighborhood grassroots organizing and advocacy focused on institutional change Coolidge Christian Education Fund (1993) For Christian scholarship and the promotion of Christian values among young people through education and music Curtis International Council Fund (2000) To promote international peace and understanding, and to foster cooperation and increase communication among diverse organizations David W. Cushing Fund (1987) For such charitable work as shall assist young people, particularly women Mabel Walsh Danforth Fund (1949) For education, assistance or relief of physically disabled children Virginia Herrick Deknatel Fund for Children’s Services (2001) To be used for children’s services Major Arthur M. Diggles Foundation Fund (1993) To aid Massachusetts disabled and sick soldiers, sailors and women who have been in the US military, naval or nursing services during any war or to aid any Mass. hospital or institution to care for these individuals Annie S. Dillaway Fund (1965) To promote the welfare of boys and girls and young people Kate Ellis Fund (1953) For convalescents, children, blind and deaf persons, and homes for elderly Protestant men and women, especially charities outside of Boston


Equality Fund (2011) For organizations that serve the LGBTQ community of Greater Boston

Theodore C. Hollander Trust Fund (1929) For hospitals, education and the improvement of American citizenship

Maude A. MacNaught Fund (1979) Preferably for children suffering from diseases of the eye

Mary C. Farr Arts Fund (2005) For the enhancement of cultural affairs in Boston including scholarships and support for needy residents of Boston

Jacoby Club of Boston Fund (1984) To provide kind, personal help and concern for disadvantaged, local, elderly individuals and/or to support work in the field of alcoholism and/or other addictive substances

Azad & Doris Maranjian Charitable Trust Fund (2009) To be used for organizations helping the disabled in achieving greater autonomy, to organizations committed to maintaining the physical health of the general population as well as targeted populations of the disabled, to nonprofits dedicated to cultural and educational enrichment and to nonprofits dedicated to preserving and defending the Constitution

The Flow Fund (2015) For issues specifically addressing hunger, homelessness and heating Frederika Home Fund (1979) For the benefit and welfare of elderly men and women, and for research into the care of the elderly Fund for Self-Reliance (1989) For developing long-term solutions which go beyond traditional emergency responses to homelessness General Support Fund for Education (1988) Elizabeth D. Goldsmith Fund for Families (2010) To support families in the greater Boston area Charles W. Hapgood Trust Fund (1986) For educational purposes at MIT or a similar institution, and for the promotion of health and the alleviation of suffering at Massachusetts General Hospital or a similar institution Harcourt Family Fund (2001) For organizations in the Greater Boston area which are dedicated to Christian values, traditional families and activities designed to fulfill and support the lives of the born and unborn Mary Harris Fund (1940) For widows and single women in straitened circumstances Grace L. Holland Fund (2007) To assist in the rehabilitation of handicapped children

Jamaica Plain Dispensary Fund (1962) For the benefit of poor people in or near Jamaica Plain, particularly for health related needs Charles Frederick Joy and Dora Marie Joy Fund (1992) For summer vacations for two worthy Protestant girls and one boy and any excess income shall be used to help in the care of sick Protestant children or Protestant girls or women Kraft Family Non-Profit Emergency Fund (2015) For rapid response assistance grants to small- and mid-size 501c3 non-profits that experience unforeseen expenses as a result of factors outside of the organization’s control or that could not be anticipated by the organization, including, among other things, expenses related to critical facility, administration or program needs Louise P. Kush Fund (2015) For the enhancement of the quality of life for the homeless of Greater Boston Edith Shedd Larsen Fund (1962) To aid and advance research toward the cure and relief of arthritis Latino Legacy Fund (2012) To strengthen Latino nonprofits and leaders, improving educational outcomes for Latino children, creating economic opportunities for Latino families and improving health and overall quality of life for Latino families

Massachusetts Civic League Fund (1983) To promote sound government Willis Munro Fund (1989) For the relief, care, health, comfort, maintenance and support of needy adults or in maintaining and operating a home for needy adults in Boston or to furnish funds for the purpose of enabling such persons to live in their own homes Harry L. Nason Fund (1953) Preferably for the care of elderly Protestant men and women Florence Arnaud Newton Fund (1955) For the care and rehabilitation of needy persons suffering from tuberculosis and respiratory illness or disease Grace G. North Fund (1954) For aid to needy gentlewomen Augustus Page and Grace Fagan Browne Memorial Endowment Fund (2006) To be used to make grants to nonprofit organizations in Greater Boston that provide for the needs of the poorest of the poor, especially their needs for food, shelter and health care Norman Everett Pearl Fund (1996) For recognized charities in the Boston area

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Janet S. & George T.B. Perkins Fund (2000) For the benefit of children living in Boston, including programs to benefit their health or education, and for the benefit of organizations providing musical programs for the general public and which are located in the metropolitan Boston area

Sophia Snow Fund (1948) For care and support of destitute children of Roxbury

Petersen Family Fund for the Environment (2015) For issues of preservation, conservation, and sustainability of open spaces, food, and urban agriculture, and the prevention of climate change, with preference given to investments in advocacy, public awareness, policy, and constituency building

Stuart-Jones Trust Fund of the All Souls Lend A Hand Club, Inc. (1994) For care of poor and elderly people who are in need, especially women

Louise Phillips Bequest Fund (2003) For the benefit of the public with free music and ballet concerts to be offered in the summer and to be performed at the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade in Boston by the Charles River

The US-Nepal Fund at the Boston Foundation (2015)

David R. Pokross Fund for Children in Need (1996) For organizations that provide for childhood enrichment, health care, safety, education and other programs for Greater Boston’s children

Fanny Wharton Fund (1919) For the relief of poor, sick young women and children

Alice F. Rosenquist Fund (1984) With preference to organizations that assist the elderly or blind Louis Agassiz Shaw Fund (1991) For the benefit of under-privileged children Katherine Dexter Shelman Fund (1954) For the benefit of worthy aged people Arthur L. Sherin and Frances C. Sherin Fund (2003) For aid to the blind or disabled, the homeless or hungry people, convalescent or recuperative care of persons of limited means, care of the indigent aged, assistance for children considered to be not adoptable, and studies or experimental programs designed to bring about improvements in adoption procedures for the better matching of adopting parents and adopted children

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Helen & Marion Storr Fund (1986) For the care and benefit of elderly persons in Massachusetts, particularly those not cared for in institutions

Carroll J. Swan Memorial Fund for Children’s Charities (1935) For summer vacations for needy children of Greater Boston

Nelson E. Weeks Fund (1937) For alleviation of suffering in the major Boston hospitals

Katherine C. Wheeler Fund (1987) To increase knowledge of good government and for the encouragement of good citizenship Fund for Preservation of Wildlife & Natural Areas (1994) To maintain, in their natural condition, woodlands, open areas ,wet lands, wildlands, beaches and marshes; to preserve and propagate natural vegetation and wildlife, to maintain and preserve lands under cultivation...in order to demonstrate scientific principles of conservation; to produce, publish and disseminate information, educational and other material designed to promote the foregoing purposes, and to educate people to recognize the value of preserving our natural areas, vegetation and wildlife

Herbert Farnsworth Fund (1994) For land acquisition for preservation or for any purpose the Fund for Preservation of Wildlife and Natural Areas supports Hollis D. Leverett Memorial Fund (1994) For planting and upkeep of trees, shrubs and other plants which promote and encourage bird life, primarily on land in New England owned or controlled by conservation organizations Ruth and Henry Walter Fund (2010) To maintain, in their natural condition, woodlands, open areas, wet lands, wildlands, beaches and marshes; to preserve and propagate natural vegetation and wildlife, to maintain and preserve lands under cultivation, to produce, publish and disseminate information, educational and other material designed to promote the foregoing purposes Arthur L. Williston and Irene S. Williston Trust For Education (1953) To provide assistance, educational aid and training at institutions other than usual four year colleges Mary Denny Williston Fund (1969) For summer camp vacations for children; for work with alcoholics Window Shop Fund (1988) To provide educational aid including but not limited to the ACCESS Program and other assistance for refugees and foreign born residents of the United States Gladys W. Yetton Fund (1969) For widows and single women in straitened circumstances


GIFTS TO THE PERMANENT FUND FOR BOSTON The following lists include donors who have made gifts totaling more than $5,000 to this fund, with the year of their first contribution noted in parentheses and new gifts in bold type.

Individuals, Corporations and Foundations Anonymous (1994, 2004, 2010, 2013, 2015, 2016) Rosalin Acosta (2013) Pamela D. Adams (2016) Joel Alvord and Lisa Schmid-Alvord (2014) Dr. Barry Bluestone (2017) Mr. and Mrs. Peter Brooke (1994) The Boston Company (1991) Brother Thomas Charitable Foundation (2007) Peggy A. Brown (2008) Henry Burkhardt, III (1986) Catherine and Paul Buttenwieser Foundation (1998) William Putnam Cabot (1970) Linda Cabot Black Foundation (2005) Kevin T. and Julie Callaghan (2016) Dorothy Jordan Chadwick Fund (2002) Chester County Community Foundation, Inc. (2007) Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston, Inc. (2007) Commonwealth of Massachusetts (2009) Michael F. Cronin (2004) Theodore H. Cutler (2015) Lawrence and Susan Daniels Family Foundation (2003) Jonathan G. and Margot Davis (2017) Davis Family Charitable Foundation (2016) John H. Deknatal and Carol M. Taylor (2016) Wm. Arthur Dupee Memorial Fund (1984) Dusky Foundation (2013)

Eastern Bank Charitable Fund (2014) David J. Elliott and Hungwah Yu Virginia Ellis Memorial Fund (1976) Leon R. Eyges Memorial Fund (1963) George R. Farnum (1982) First National Bank of Chicago (1988) Martha M. Fosdick Fund (1978) Lucille Francis (2014) John Lowell Gardner Fund (1987) Gonzalez Saggio & Harlan LLP (2014) Grand Bostonians Dinner (1984) Anne C. Gray (2010) John Hancock Life Insurance Company (2014) Mrs. Jean Hanlon (1991) Haymarket People’s Fund (1994) HBB Foundation (1995) Katherine B. Hood (2000) Donald J. Hurley Memorial Fund (1978) Jane Wegscheider Hyman (2002) Institute for Affirmative Action (2007) Greg and Maria Jobin-Leeds (2014) Stephen P. Jonas (2007) Ross Jones and Emily Nielsen Jones (2015) John S. and James L. Knight Foundation (2009) Dr. & Mrs. Arthur R. Kravitz (1987) George and Ellen Lovejoy (2015) Mr. and Mrs. Gael Mahony (1982) Anne E. Markus (2016)

J FK Librar y, Columbia Point

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Thomas Melendez and Aixa Beauchamp (2013) MFS Investment Management (2014) Reinier Moquete (2013) Wilbert G. and Eunice Muttart Foundation (2007) Northern Trust (2005) The Overbrook Foundation (1991) Partners HealthCare System, Inc. (2013) Francis Ward Paine Foundation, Inc. (1982) Phillip Perelmuter (2013) Philanthropic Collaborative, Inc. (2005) David R. Pokross, Jr. (1996) Joan Pokross Curhan and Ronald C. Curhan (2004) William J. and Lia G. Poorvu (1996) Harry & Minnie Rodwin Memorial Fund (1975) Professor and Mrs. Walter J. Salmon (1998) Pamela M. Smith (2006) Reynolds R. and Pamela M. Smith Foundation (2008) Dr. W. Davies Sohier, Jr. (1990) Mrs. Helen Spaulding (1992) Starr Foundation (2005) Matthew J. & Gilda F. Strazzula Foundation (2000) Gertrude T. Taft (1956) Tech/Ops, Inc. (1982) United Asset Management Corporation (1994) Herb and Charlotte Wagner (2014) Albert and Judith Zabin (2008)

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Estates Anonymous (2016) Alice A. Abbott (1967) Emily T. Allen (2006) Matilda S. Alley (1964) Miriam S. Alley (1965) Margaret Sears Atwood (1970) Margaret E. Babcock (1973) Annie O. Baldwin (1953) Wilbert S. Bartlett (1969) George P. Beech (2009) Reginald Benting (1984) William L. Birely (1959) Edmund Bridge (1933) Frederick W. Bridge (1942) Jesse F. Burton (1971) Susan Cabot (1947) Charles T. Carruth (1983) Gladys Chiquoine (1983) Helen A. Claflin (1992) William H. Claflin (1983) Winifred I. Clapp (1990) Horace W. Cole (1992) Anastasia Conte (1988) Arthur S. Cummings (1943) Charlotte E. H. Curtis (1940) Maria Corinne Dana (1963) Luisita L. Denghausen (1990) Kenneth S. Domett (1960) Mary Frances Drown (1929) George H. Eastman (1971) Mary Farr (2006) Lucy Fields (2008) Benjamin Fisher (1996) Edith R. Fottler (1948)

Alma L. Frost (1948) Anna C. Frothingham (1941) Forrest C. Gates (1970) Mary M. Geist (1982) Pauline S. Germeshausen (2006) Anne C. Gray (2010) Donald Gregg (1963) Patricia Grisham (1964) Joseph Guild (1964) John Hagopian (2002) Ellen Page Hall (1931) Dorothy C. Harris (1967) Elizabeth M. Hay (1972) Fred R. Hayward (1969) Anna P. Hills (1969) Harry Holland (2007) Agnes G. Homes (1961) Adeline D. Hooper (1973) Mary Frothingham Hooper (1961) Elizabeth B. Hough (2002) Elizabeth B. Hurley (2000) Frances A. Jordan (1978) Paul Kimball (1964) James G. Knowles (1982) Louise P. Kush (2015) Ida Fales Lamb (1967) James Longley (1918) Clara N. Marshall (1943) Ann G. McFarlane (2000) Arthur W. Moors (1950) John Wells Morss (1940) John Adams Paine (1967) Winthrop D. Parker (1967) Annie S. Penfield (1979)


Trusts Blanche E. Philbrick (Merchant E. Philbrick Fund) (1965) Mary N. Phillips (1974) J. Christie Pingree (1957) Carrietta W. Proverbs (1984) Bertha J. Richardson (1975) Frank L. Richardson (1975) Mabel Louise Riley in memory of Charles Edward (1972) Charles E. Riley and Agnes Winslow Riley (1972) Jordan S. Ruboy, M.D. (2011) Helen S. Sharp (1966) Frank R. Shepard (1954) Anne G. Shewell (1984) Alice Wilder Smith in memory of Frank Langdon Smith (1968) Eleanor Smith (1986) Pamela M. Smith (2006) Francis M. Stanwood (1961) Albert J. Stone, Jr. (1960) Mary P. Stone (1948) Lenna R. Townsend (1952) Willis S. Vincent (1940) Clarice M. Wagner (1993) John M. Ward (1927) Madeline Cobb Webber (1973) Louise M. Weeks (1944) Arthur W. Wheelwright (1963) Stetson Whitcher (2008) Joseph A. White (1979) Edward E. Williams (1950) Lizzie A. Williams (1951)

Anonymous (2015) Margaret Shaw Allen Trust (1982) James R. Bancroft Trust (1983) Helen C. Barker Trust (1990) Nancy Beals Trust U/W (1984) Diane Beever Charitable Remainder Unitrust (2008) Reginald Benting Charitable Remainder Unitrust (2009) Richard A. Berenson Family Trust 1972 (2000) Nelson Bigelow Trust (1990) Mabel M. Brown Trust (1991) A. Page Browne Jr. Trust (2006) The Cynthia B. Browning 1992 Trust (2006) Franklin S. Browning, Jr. 1992 Trust (2008) Ellen E. Carroll Trust U/W (1979) Robert M. Christison Trust U/A (1984) Ford H. Cooper Trust (1982) Anne H. Davis Trust U/Ind (1964) Gladys Dean Trust U/Dec (Laurence Guild Dean Fund) (1977) Paul Elliott Trust U/Agreement (1991) Ruth S. Frake Trust Bequest (1981) Elizabeth D. Goldsmith 2005 Charitable Remainder Trust (2010) Donald Gregg Trust u/Will (1999) Charles Hapgood Trust (2009) Carrie A. Hartley Trust U/Ind (1963) Helen P. Hennessey Trust (1984) Ada H. and Clara Hersey Trust U/Ind (1955) Elizabeth D. Herteli Trust (2003) Vladimir N. Herteli Trust (2003) George L. Hill Trust (2002) Frances C. Huvos 1983 Trust (2011) Mark Hyman, Jr. Insurance Trust (1999) Cyril H. Jones Trust U/Ind (1974)

Pauline Kleven 1988 Trust (1990) Aimee Lamb Trust U/Ind in memory of Winthrop and Aimee Sargent (1980) Lambert Marital Trust (2006) Barbara Estabrook Livermore Trust (1982) Cora E. MacKenzie Trust U/Ind (Cora E. MacKenzie Fund) (1973) Mason Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust (2005) Adalaide Sargent Mason Trust (1982) Phyllis McGillicuddy Trust (1993) Ethel Fay McGuire Trust U/Ind (1973) David D. Moir Revocable Trust (1992) Gertrude Morrison Trust U/Ind (1965) Hetty R. Phillips 1974 Trust (1980) Robert O. Preyer Charitable Lead Unitrust (1992) Esther Frances Quinn Trust (1995) Harriet Rogers Unitrust (1990) Florence M. Scott Trust U/W (1971) George F. Shadwell Trust (1990) Arthur L. Sherin Trust (2008) J. de Vere Simmons Trust (1985) Edson B. Smith Trust U/A (1984) Irene C. Smith Trust U/A (1975) Pamela M. Smith Trust of 1970 (2015) Florence Snelling Trust (2006) The William D. Sohier Marital QTIP Trust (2014) Spaulding-Potter Charitable Trusts (1972) Esther G. Stoddard Trust Under Will (2006) Margaret Castle Tozzer Trust U/Ind (1978)

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DONORS TO THE CIVIC LEADERSHIP FUND FISCAL YEAR 2017 The following donors contributed to this year’s annual campaign for the Civic Leadership Fund. Their generosity provides the resources the Boston Foundation needs to commission fresh research, promote civic engagement and dialogue and advance public policy on critical issues—all focused on the most pressing needs facing our city and region. We thank all of these individuals, families and businesses.

$100,000 + Anonymous Paul and Sandra Edgerley Jack and Elizabeth Meyer Jill and Niraj Shah

$ 50,000- $99,999 Anonymous Josh and Anita Bekenstein Elizabeth and Phillip Gross The Klarman Family Foundation Linda Mason and Roger Brown

$25,000- $49,999 Anonymous (2) Amy and David Abrams Thomas and Lisa Blumenthal Michael and Barbara Eisenson Grace and Edward Fey GE Foundation Globe Mallow Fund Amos and Barbara Hostetter Joanna and Jonathan Jacobson John Hancock Financial Robert K. Kraft and Family Barbara Kravitz Michael Krupka and Anne Kubik Alan and Harriet Lewis George and Ellen Lovejoy Ronald O’Hanley

Civic Leader ship Forum

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Tim and Lynne Palmer Partners Healthcare Dwight and Kirsten Poler David and Louise Weinberg Arthur Winn

$10,000- $24,999 Anonymous (4) Karen and Jim Ansara The Baupost Group Rick and Nonnie Burnes Eileen and John M. Connors, Jr. Brian and Karen Conway Joseph E. Corcoran Jonathan and Margot Davis Eastern Bank Charitable Foundation Eos Foundation Chris and Hilary Gabrieli Paul and Patricia Gannon Spencer Glendon and Lisa Tung Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Robert and Diane Hildreth Albert and Diane Kaneb Stephen and Jill Karp Liberty Mutual Foundation James and Lois Lober Anne R. Lovett and Stephen G. Woodsum The Lynch Foundation Martin and Tristin Mannion William and Ann Marie McCarron Christopher McKown and Abigail Johnson William and Linda McQuillan Robert S. and Mary Helen Morris Saul Pannell and Sally Courier Elizabeth and Robert Pozen Prime, Buchholz & Associates, Inc. Mark and Etta Rosen David and Marie Louise Scudder Wendy Shattuck and Sam Plimpton

Binkley and Paula Shorts John and Susan Simon Daniel E. Smith Jr. and Elizabeth G. Riley Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation Brian and Stephanie Spector Wagner Foundation

$ 5,000- $9,999 Anonymous (2) Pamela D. Adams Allied Printers Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Barry Bluestone Stephen and Alicia Bolze Boston Partners Boston Scientific R. William and Barbara Burgess William T. Burgin Denham Capital Management Richard and Marcia DeWolfe Timothy and Maureen Dibble Douglas and Susan Donahue The Drew Company, Inc. Atsuko and Larry Fish Robert and Linda Glassman Carol and Avram Goldberg Linda and Jay Hooley John Hancock Investments KPMG, LLP Sherry and Alan Leventhal Charles and Susie Longfield Richard and Nancy Lubin Massachusetts General Hospital Robert and Joan Murray Scott Nathan and Laura DeBonis Peter and Beatrice Nessen Joseph and Katherine O’Donnell Stephen and Judy Pagliuca Glenn and Faith Parker Alison Poorvu Jaffe and Daniel Jaffe Joseph G. Prone Foundation

Ellen Remmer and Chris Fox John and Dorothy Remondi Robert L. Reynolds Rutabaga Capital Management William Schawbel and Judy Samelson Robert and Jean Sheridan Robert Small and Christine Olsen David and Stephanie Spina Raymond and Maria Stata State Street Bank Howard and Fredericka Stevenson James M. and Cathleen D. Stone William H. Swanson Michael and Nancy Tooke Gregory T. Torres Tufts Health Plan Hans and Ann Ziegler

$2,500- $4,999 Anonymous (3) Allyn Foundation Bruce J. Anderson Foundation Andrew Arnott Eugene and Meredith Clapp Constance and Lewis Counts Michael and Linda Frieze Peni A. Garber Gardiner Howland Shaw Foundation David and Anne Gergen Charles and Anne Gifford Robert Grinberg Anthony and Brenda Helies Charles and Charlene Hyle Edmund and Margaret Ingalls Stephen and Cheryl Jonas Brian and Susan Kavoogian Michael and Martha Keating Jill Ker Conway and Mark Leahy Legal Sea Foods Shari and Robert Levitan McCall & Almy, Inc. James and Maureen Mellowes Lynn and Patricia Mormann

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Tami Nason National Development Jesus Ramos Jerry Rappaport, Jr. and Lori Rappaport Donald Rodman Rohda Family Charitable Foundation Roger Snow and Harron Ellenson Lionel and Vivian Spiro Scott E. Squillace, Esq. Standard Life Investments Lisbeth Tarlow Christine Kondoleon and Frederic Wittmann Peter and Ellen Zane

$1,000- $2,499 Anonymous (4) A.W. Perry, Inc. Rosalin Acosta Carol and Howard Anderson W. Gerald Austen and Patricia Austen Bank of New York Mellon Joan T. Bok Boston Private Bank & Trust Company Peter A. Brooke Gordon Burnes and Suzie Tapson Margaret Bush Thomas Butters Jim Canales and Jim McCann Katherine Chapman Stemberg Gerald and Kate Chertavian Ciccolo Family Foundation Arthur Clarke and Susan Sloan The Cleveland Foundation Susanna and Ferdinand Colloredo-Mansfeld Commodore Builders Nicholas and Gretchen Covino Steve Crosby and Helen Strieder John and Diddy Cullinane Curriculum Associates Catherine D’Amato and Debbi Ford Carol Deane

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Steve DiFillippo Stephanie F. Dodson and James K. Cornell The Druker Company, Ltd. William Edgerly Philip J. Edmundson James A. Ellis Amy Zell Ellsworth Rev. Susan Esco Chandler and Mr. Alfred D. Chandler Thomas Feeley David and Nina Fialkow James and Audrey Foster Allan and Judy Fulkerson M. Dozier Gardner Bink and Weezie Garrison Rosalind Gorin and Matthew Budd Roger Greene Paul S. Grogan Steven and Barbara Grossman Kate Guedj John and Kathryn Hamill Margaretta and Jerry Hausman Hill Holiday Lucius and Wendy Hill Thomas and Diane Hollister Nancy and Tom Howley The HYM Investment Group Income Research + Management Isaacson, Miller J. Atwood and Elizabeth Ives Ira Jackson Helen M. Jones Marcia and Louis Kamentsky Martin and Wendy Kaplan Becky Kidder Smith and Thomas C. Smith Paul and Mary La Camera Edward and Berthe Ladd John and Nancy LaPann Paul and Mary Lee Thomas and Barbara Leggat Jo-Ann and Martin Leinwand Robert L. and Judy B. Lindamood Linde Family Foundation

Colleen MacLeod Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly Edward and Sydell Masterman Janice and Bill McCall Kevin McCall Robert Meenan Barbara and Robert T. P. Metcalf David and Mary Ellen Moir Michael Mooney Herbert Morse and Ellenjoy Fields J. Keith and Angela Motley Bob and Alison Murchison Sherif and Mary Nada NAIOP Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP O’Neill and Associates Danielle Oristian York Anthony and Creelea Pangaro Kevin and Anne Phelan Ellen M. Poss Karen F. Richards Mitchell and Jill Roberts Dr. Jordan S. Ruboy Charitable Fund Paul and Ann Sagan Mark and Marie Schwartz Charles Scimeca James Segel Charles and Deana Shirley Alan D. and Susan Lewis Solomont David and Patricia Squire Jill and Michael Stansky Jeanne and Donald Stanton State Street Foundation John and Nadine Suhrbier Summit Financial Corporation Brendan and Kerry Swords Dorothy A. Terrell Emily V. Wade J.H. Walton, Jr. WBUR James P. Whitters III Benaree P. and Fletcher H. Wiley Judy and George Wilson


Marshall and Katharine Wolf Megan Zug and Linda Zug

Up to $999 Anonymous (2) Jon Abbott and Shari Malyn AmazonSmile Foundation Zamawa Arenas Marta Bach Anthony and Jacqueline Baudanza Thomas W. Bentley Kevin Bolduc Bove & Langa John Bradley Casey Brock-Wilson Robin and Marcia Brown Richard and Gail Buck Barbara and Michael Caccese Joseph and Carolyn Campanelli Meg Campbell Cynthia Chace Macniel Stephen Chan and Tim Schofield Frederic H. Chicos Paul Ciampa and Mary Azzarto Ciampa Robert Cooper and Miriam Lesser Heather Coulter Kemp Ann Crane Donna Cupelo Andre and Marilyn Danesh Corey Davis Lynn DePippo Lawrence S. DiCara Robert and Tara Donnelly Ralph Donofrio Michael Douvadjian and Lynne Brainerd Jeanne DuBois David W. and Marion Ellis Deborah Ellwood and Andrew Dick Ellen Epstein Carmen Fields and Lorenz Finison Stephen and Ellen Fine Laurence Flood and Mary Tyler Knowles Tom and Carla Fortmann

Barbara Freedman Wand and Mitchell Wand Susan Y. Friedman Robert and Jill Gallery John and Beth Gamel Tim and Mary Anne Gassert Susan Geller Rev. Gregory Groover, Sr. Paul and Joanne Guzzi George and Daphne Hatsopoulos Petie Hilsinger Michael P. Hogan and Margaret M. Dwyer Pamela and Ken Hurd Deborah C. Jackson Patrick and Shelsey Johnson Robin and Tripp Jones Susan and Jeffrey Jones David Kalan Barbara Keezell Jonathan and Judith Keyes Anne Kilguss Kersten Lanes Garrett Larivee Martin Liebowitz and Mary M. Lassen Candace Lau-Hansen Mary Kay Leonard and Richard W. Valachovic Amy R. Lonergan Keith Mahoney Brooke and Kevin Manfredi Elizabeth L. March and David E. Stein Thomas J. and Jane N. Martin Wm. Shaw McDermott Ted G. McEnroe James F. and Katherine S. McHugh Jane Mendillo and Ralph Earle III Amber Mercer Scot and Lorraine Miller Myechia Minter-Jordan Bryce Mochrie Sandra O. Moose Mary F. Myers David G. and Jean F. Nathan

Neighborhood of Affordable Housing, Inc. Bill Nigreen and Kathleen McDermott Christopher Norris and Scott Bartley Judith Obermayer Stephen and Cynthia O’Brien Thomas L. P. O’Donnell Pauline O’Leary and John Malarkey Lauren Palmer Emma Penick Anne Perry Margery and Mark Piercey Michael E. Porter Jeffrey Poulos Bernard and Suzanne Pucker Hanson Reynolds Marie E. Roberts William G. Rogerson Gregory Ruffer and Peter Stark Carmen and Brian Savarino Helen Chin Schlichte Jeremy Seeger Daniel Fleishman and Barbara Shapiro Shawmut Woodworking and Supply Daniel and Jennifer Sherman Gary and Lynne Smith Julie Smith-Bartoloni Gail Snowden William and Christine Speciale Micho Spring Ning Tang Benjamin and Kate Taylor Peter and Laurie Thomsen Paul F. Toner Alfred and Marta Van Ranst Renata von Tscharner William Walczak Stephanie Ward WCVB-TV Robert and Joan Weinstein Katherine B. Winter Alice Wolpert Albert and Judith Zabin

39


DONOR ADVISED FUNDS The following is a list of all Donor Advised Funds established by individuals, families and companies choosing to be actively involved in their charitable giving. The year the fund was established is listed in parentheses; new funds are in bold. $30K for 30 Years Fund (2016) 3C Fund (2012) 63 Marlborough Street Fund (1984) AADS Memorial Fund (2004) Walter and Alice Abrams Family Fund (2005) Abromowitz/Ruttenberg Family Fund (2000) Acacia Fund (2004) Adler Family Fund (2006) Adlib Foundation (2010) Adopt-A-Statue Endowment Fund (1988) Adopt-A-Statue Program – Bill Russell Legacy Project (2013) Affinity Services Corporation Fund (2003)

The Akili Fund (2016) James F. Alenson Memorial Fund (2007) Aley Fund (2009) Aliad Fund (1993) Emily T. Allen, Linda P. Allen and F. Towne Allen Charitable Gift Fund (2004) Rosamond W. Allen Charitable Fund (2004) Dwight & Stella Allison Fund (1982) Alper Family Fund (1995) George and Nedda Anders Fund (1991) Barbara Jane Anderson Fund (2000) Ashley Anderton Memorial Fund (2017) Selma and Bayness Andrews Fund (2006) Michael & Ellen Angino Fund (1997) Anony Fund (1998)

Ansara Family Fund (2006) Anthes Weitz Family Fund (2015) Anthropologists’ Fund for Urgent Anthropological Research (1996) APOC Fund (2011) Arba Lifnot Boker Fund (1992) Arch Stanton Charitable Fund II (2016) Armony Erel Charitable Fund (2008) Atalaya Fund (2013) Atlantic Fund (1997) Ausschnitt Fund (2004) Victoria J. Avery Charitable Fund (2014) Kathryn and Charles Avison – Miriam Avison Charitable Fund (2005) Susan M. Aygarn and Michael R. Aygarn Charitable Donation Fund (2012) Back Porch Fund (2014) Bagley Family Fund (2016) Royal P. Baker & Stephanie S. Baker Memorial Fund (1988) M. Baldwin Family Fund (2015) Balzer/Bellinger Fund (2007) John & Judith Barber Fund (2002) Richard Allan Barry Fund (2002) Hanna and James Bartlett Fund (2014) Baudanza Family Fund (1997) Baupost Group Charitable Fund (2004) Beachcomber Fund (2008) Belinda Fund (2011) Benjamin Foundation (2005) William D. & Mary E. Benjes Fund (1984) Jane Bernstein Fund (2006) Best Doctors Charitable Foundation (2010)

Sout h Boston

40


Charlotte Saltonstall Bigham Memorial Fund (2004) Bird Fund (1999) Bill Bither Charitable Fund (2013) Bitpipe Legacy Fund (2004) Black Philanthropy Fund (2008) NICSA/William T. Blackwell Scholarship Fund (1995) Emmanuel and Jane Blitz Fund (1992) Tom and Lisa Blumenthal Family Foundation (2005) Joan T. Bok Fund (1997) Bolze Family Fund (2013) The Bonomo Family Fund (2016) Boston City Hospital Social Service Fund (1981) BPE/Bank of Boston 200th Anniversary Fund (1982) Braverman Family Fund (1992) Bride/McEnany Fund for Safer Women (2014) Bronner Charitable Foundation (2006) Peter A. Brooke Fund (1998) Peter W. and Ruth H. Brooke Fund (2004) Brooke Family Donor Advised Fund (2007) Buckman Fund (2010) Dean Bullock Family Fund (1997) Bill and Barbara Burgess Fund (2002) William T. Burgin Fund (2001) John A. Butler Memorial Fund (1988) Kairos Butler Fund (1994) Butler’s Hole East (2011) Butler’s Hole Fund (1994) Butler’s Hole North (2011) Butler’s Hole South (2011) C & K Foundation Fund (2000) Norman L. Cahners Fund (1984) Campbell Foundation Fund (2003) A. Bruce Campbell Fund (2002) Krystle Campbell Memorial Fund (2013)

Carbonite Charitable Fund (2017) C. Alec and Sarah O’ H. Casey Charitable Fund (1993) Margaret W. Casey Fund (1986) Ellen W. Casey Fund (1993) John J. Cattaneo III Fund II (1984) Champa Charitable Foundation Fund (2003) Charlestown Benevolent Fund (2010) Charlestown Fund (2008) Chasin/Gilden Family Fund (2000) Charles Ezekiel and Jane Garfield Cheever Fund I & II (2006) Chelsea Community Fund (1997) Joyce Chen and Helen Chen Foundation Fund (1995) Cherry Stone Archives Fund (2011) Chertavian Family Fund (2005) Christ on Earth Fund (1989) Michael W. Christian Memorial Fund (1986) Dr. & Mrs. B.U. Chung Fund (1999) Chung Family Fund (1999) Churchill Family Fund (1997) Circle Fund (1997) Civic Engagement Fund (2010) CJE Foundation Fund (2007) Clark Family Fund (2010) Clarke Fund (1987) Clementine Fund (2014) Coit Family Fund A (2001) Colby Charitable Fund (1980) Colony Road Fund (1997) Condor Street Fund (1988) Karen and Brian Conway Fund (2016) Coolidge Family Fund (1982) Pat Cooke Fund (2016) Cooper Leeser Family Fund (1997) Stephanie Dodson Cornell and James Cornell Family Foundation (2016) Corvelli Fund (1996) Constance and Lewis Counts Fund (1990)

George D. & Angelyn K. Coupounas Fund (1994) Demetrios G. C. & Kimberly A. Coupounas Fund (1996) Jessie B. Cox CLT – Cox Family Fund (2009) Jessie B. Cox Charitable Trust Fund (2008) Coxhead Family Foundation (2016) Crane Fund (2012) Joseph Craven Family Fund (2014) Cregan Charitable Fund (2005) Crosby Family Fund (2000) Kate Crozier Fund (2007) Cuming Family Endowment Fund (1995) Cummings Foundation Fund at The Boston Foundation (2017) Tarrant and Laura Cutler Charitable Gift Fund (2008) John Da Silva Memorial Fund (1988) Dainger Fund (1997) Dammann Boston Fund (2003) Lawrence B. and Elisabeth T. Damon Charitable Fund (2013) Daniels Fund for Aspiring Boston Youth (2014) Darling Family Fund (1983) Kimberly Dawson Charitable Fund (2012) John H. Deknatel Family Fund (2009) Sarah Derby and Gary MacDonald (2007) Marshall and Laura Derby Charitable Fund (2007) Rebecca Derby and Evan Morton (2007) DeWolfe Family Fund (2000) Dibble Family Fund (2005) Larry DiCara Fund (2006) Dillon Fund (2004) Dintersmith-Hazard Foundation Fund (2006) Hack Diversity (2016) Doe Noordzij Fund (2001) Eugene B. & Nina L. Doggett Charitable Fund (1999)

41


Eric Dolinski & Kristen Ploetz Fund (2015) Marthanne Dorminy Fund (2015) Douglas Drane Family Fund (1984) Drane Center Fund (2002) Dryfoos Family Fund (2012) William J. Ducas Charitable Fund (2011) Bill and June Duggan Fund (2017) Dupre-Nunnelly Charitable Gift Fund (2007) Margaret Eagle Foundation Fund (2000) Ecclesia Mission Fund (2012) Edgerley Family Fund (2012) Egozy Fund (2006) Eisenson Family Fund (2005) Stephen J. Elledge (2016) Elliott and Yu Education Fund (2012) Ellis Family Fund (2003) Elphaba Fund (2014) Elpus Family Fund (2015) Elving-Carr Family Fund (2015) Employment Retention Fund (2004) Ethics Trust Fund (1993) Evans Family Fund (1999) Norris & Constance Evans Charitable Fund (1999) The Ewing Family Fund (2014) Faber Daeufer & Itrato Fellowship Program (2016) Peter and Ellen Fallon Fund (1997) The Farlovia Fund (2016) Steven D.H. Farrell Fund (2013) Carol Fazio Charitable Fund (2010) First Principle Fund (2006) Fish Family Fund (2009) Fishreys Family Philanthropic Fund (1999) Jack Florey Fund (2004) Flower Hill Fund (2012) Foote-Richards Family Foundation (2013) Forshey Family Fund (1997) Free for All Concert Fund (2011) Niki & Alan Friedberg Fund (1986)

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David Frisbie Family Charitable Fund (2010) Fulkerson Family Fund (1998) Lyle W. Fulkerson Fund (1999) Sarah Fulkerson and Robert Le Roy Family Fund (1999) Fuller Trust, Inc. Fund (2009) Future Fund (2006) Gabrieli Family Fund (1997) Gaffney/Kames Foundation Fund (1997) Galilean Fund (2008) Ganesh Fund (2001) Gannon Family Charitable Fund (2003) Gannon Family S.U.N. Fund (2010) John Lowell Gardner Fund (1986) Garuda Fund (2007) Brad Gatlin Family Fund (1995) Gaudette Family Fund (2000) Gergen Family Fund (2009) Gilbert Fund (2007) Ginsberg/Kaplan Fund (2011) Giudice Family Fund (2011) Glassman Gale Family Fund (1985) John & Ethel Goldberg Fund II (1984) Carol R. & Avram J. Goldberg Fund (1983) Golden Family Fund (2000) Peter G. Gombosi Memorial Fund for Autism Research and Services (2005) The Goodman-Swindell Family Foundation (2015) Goodworks Fund (2002) Gordon Educational Fund (2001) Sandra & Philip Gordon Family Foundation Fund (2001) Gordon Place Charitable Fund (2012) Laurie Gould and Stephen Ansolabehere Fund (2009) Gravelley Springs Fund (2005) Green Fund (2011) Greenhill Family Charitable Fund (2013) Grogan Fund (2012) Patricia H. Gross Fund (1999)

Elizabeth and Phillip Gross Family Foundation (2014) Grunebaum Charitable Fund (2006) Gualala Fund (1991) Guenzel-Pieters Family Fund (2008) Charles & Dorothy Gullickson Fund for Social Change (1998) Jay Habegger and Christine Nagle Fund (2004) Belle Linda Halpern Family Fund (2012) Ken and Becky Hansberry Fund (2001) J. Allan Hauter Memorial Fund (2004) Hebb Charitable Fund (2003) HEIRS Fund (1996) Henderson Fund (1996) The Hesperia Fund (2015) Hewitt Family Charitable Trust Fund (1993) The Hidden Garden Fund (2015) Hidden History Fund (2017) Higgins Endowed Fund (2011) Higgins Family Fund (2013) Ann S. Higgins Fund (2001) Hildreth Stewart Fund (2012) Joanne K. Hilferty Fund (2016) Lucius T. Hill III and Wendy Y. Hill Fund (2000) Petie Hilsinger Fund (1999) Marc Hirschmann Foundation Fund (2002) Hoffman Fund (1986) Holberger Family Fund (1993) Holland Family Fund (1993) Gilbert H. Hood Family Fund (1980) Emily C. Hood Fund (2011) Robert Hooper Family Fund (2004) Hourless Fund (1997) Hamblin L. Hovey Institute Fund (1983) Hoyt Family Fund (2000) Hunt Fund for Children (2001) Income Research and Management Charitable Fund (2013) Interstitial Fund (2009)


Rose Kennedy Greenway

J. Jill Compassion Fund (2002) Mitchell & Diane Jacobs Fund (1998) Jade Fund (2007) JAHELBE Fund (2002) Hope and David Jeffrey Fund (2011) Jewel Family Fund (2016) Jochkan Charitable Fund (2001) Julia and Peter Johannsen Charitable Fund (2015) Stephen G. & Rosemarie Torres Johnson Family Fund (2000) Jonas Family Fund (2000) Hubie Jones Fund (2004) Samuel Lamar Jordan Trust Fund (2000) The Joy Fund (2016) Jumping Rock Fund (2000) Louis and Marcia Kamentsky Donor Advised Fund (2010) Beton M. Kaneb Fund (1983) Albert J. & Diane E. Kaneb Family Fund II (1997) Kaplan Family Foundation (2016) Martin & Wendy Kaplan Fund (2006) Kassler Family Fund (2000) Kaufer Family Charitable Giving Fund (2004) Kaye Charitable Fund (2003) John & Anne-Marie Keane Foundation Fund (1997) Keewaydin Fund (2001) Sabina F. Kelly Catholic Charitable Fund (1991) Kensington Capital Children’s Fund (2002) Keogh Family Fund (2000) Kidder SBSM (Strong Body, Strong Mind) Fund (2005) Kidder Smith Fund (2003) M. R. Kidder Charitable Fund (2004) The Caren and Tom Kilgore Charitable Trust (2015)

Kindling Fund (2011) Bert King Fund (2016) John Thomas Kittredge and Charles R. Morehead Fund (2011) KJN Family Fund (1997) Kluchman Family Fund (1997) Allen and Elizabeth Kluchman Fund (1997) Klureza Family Fund (1997) Pamela Kohlberg Fund (1995) Stephen P. Koster Fund (1985) Ronni Sachs Kotler Family Fund (2007) Kravitz Family Fund (1993) Krivickas Family Fund (2006) Gregory and Deborah Laham Family Charitable Fund (2011) Lisa and William Lahey Fund (2016) Jay R. and Carol B. LaMarche Family Charitable Trust (2012) LandWave (2009) Lash Family Charitable Fund (2014)

Lorin A. Lavidor and Eric E. Berman Charitable Fund (2005) Leading By Example Fund (2014) Barbara Lee Family Foundation Fund (2004) Paul and Mary Lee Fund (2013) Roger & Clarissa Lee Family Fund (2009) Thomas E. & Barbara B. Leggat Fund (1986) Jo-Ann and Martin Leinwand Fund (1986) Colman & Carol Levin Fund II (2016) Levine Family Charitable Fund (2003) Levitt Family Fund (2000) Levy Family Fund (2014) Henry R. Lewis Family Fund (2007) Light-Curtin Fund (2016) John S. Llewellyn, Jr. Community Assistance Fund (1996) LMG Fund (1997) Marjorie L. and James M. Lober Fund (2010)

43


Boston H arbor

LOC Fund (2009) Joan Locatelli Foley Memorial Fund D (1997) GC & JW Lodge Fund (2000) Longfield Family Foundation (2011) Loomis Sayles Charitable Fund (2007) Lord-Buck Fund (1996) Bruce Lunder Fund (1982) John Lowell Lyman & Cynthia Forbes Lyman Fund (2007) Donald J. & S. Kelley MacDonald Charitable Fund (1998) Magic Penny Fund (1997) Mahoney Family Fund (1983) Mann Family Fund (2010) Margolin/Rushford Charitable Fund (2014) William G. Markos Fund (1982) Evelyn A. Marran Fund (1983) The Demond and Kia Martin Foundation (2014)

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Martin Fund (1998) Mason-Brown Fund (2008) Match School Scholarship Fund (2007) Joan S. Mathews Charitable Fund (2014) Eric and Sue May Charitable Fund (2012) Mayel Fund (1982) May-McClain Charitable Gift Fund (2012) Austin and Tiverton McClintock Gift Fund (2014) Alice L. McDougall Donor Advised Fund (2015) Richard & Judith McGinnis Fund (1999) Eleanor P. McIntyre Fund (2001) McNeill Family Foundation (1997) McSweeney Family Charitable Fund (2009) Medical Research Fund (1992) Emily & Bernard H. Mehlman Fund (2002) Mellowes Fund (1998) Thomas M. Menino Fund for Boston (2013)

Gilbert G. Menna Family Fund (1999) Barbara Putnam Metcalf & Robert Treat Paine Metcalf Fund (1998) Meyer Foundation (2006) Allan Meyers Fund for the Advancement of Careers in Disability (2000) Michon Family Fund (1986) Microsoft Unlimited Potential Fund (2005) Mid-Century Fund (2004) J. F. Middleton Family Fund (1995) Milford Street Fund (2014) Mill River Foundation Fund (2004) Gabrielle J. Miller Donor Advised Fund (2004) The Mills Family Charitable Fund (2016) Anita L. Mishler Education Fund (1983) Moccasin Brook Fund (2000) The Modi Family Pass The Luck Foundation (2012) Molino Family Fund (2003) Monadnock Fund (2002) Mormann Family Fund (2006) Andy Morris and Lynne Salkin Morris Family Fund (2011) Robert S. Morris Advised Fund (2000) Sykes Moyer Fund (2005) Muddy Pond Trust Fund (1994) Munger Family Fund (2001) Bob & Alison Murchison Fund (2014) Murchison/Silvia Charitable Gift Fund (2009) Murphy Family Fund (2014) The Murray Family Fund (2016) Mussafer Family Fund (2013) Myrtle Field Fund (2004) Mystic Harmony Fund (2000) Mystic River Watershed Environmental Fund (2011) Paul and Kathleen Nagle Family Fund (2006)


Leslie & Sandra Nanberg Charitable Foundation Fund (2001) Tami E. Nason & Kent A. Lage Fund(2005) NE500/501Circle (2015) NEID Giving Circle (2017) New Beginnings/Kidder Fund (2004) New England Temperature Solutions (2013) Next Door Fund (2005) Nichols Foundation (2016) Nichols Foundation West (2016) Joan Nichols Family Fund (2016) The Nichols Philanthropy Fund (2016) William H. Nichols Fund (2016) North Conway Institute Fund (2001) Chad & Lia Novotny Fund (2002) Kathryn Novotny Fund (2007) Nicholas Novotny Fund (2007) Novotny/Ramirez Donor Advised Fund (2002) Novotny/Swahnberg Fund (1997) O’Brien Family Fund (2006) Vania and Barbara O’Connor Charitable Fund (2013) One Foot Plan (2015) Orchard Hill Fund (2013) Orpheus Fund (2002) E. Ostroff Fund for Service (2017) Owen Marie Fund (2012) Morgan Palmer Charitable Fund (1982) Palmer Family Fund (2015) John J. Pappenheimer Fund (1995) The Park Family Charitable Fund (2013) Parker Family Fund (2000) Field Parker Fund (1996) Partnership Fund in honor of Anna Faith Jones (2001) Alfred Nash Patterson Foundation for the Choral Arts Fund (1979) Payne’s Creek Fund (2001) Payson Family Fund (2000) Samuel Perkins and Nancy Reed Fund (1996)

Sheila and Sara Perkins Fund (1996) Perkins Improvements Fund – William (1996) John A. Perkins, Jr. Fund (2000) Robert C. Perkins Fund (2000) Peter Fund (2000) Petersen Family Fund (2001) Philancon Fund (1990) Katherine A. & Fannie Phillips Fund (1997) Picard Family Fund (2000) Jamie Pierce & Rick Cresswell Fund (2002) Karen Odessa Piper Charitable Gift Fund (2013) Plimpton - Shattuck Fund (2005) Pluhar Family Fund (2014) Renata Poggioli Fund (1991) The Poler Family Foundation (2008) Pool Family Fund (1997) Poss-Kapor Family Fund (1996) Helen C. Powell Donor Advised Fund (2015) Pride in Scholarship Fund (1992) Fred & Ruthann Prifty Fund (2001) Primary Care Progress Fund (2011) Thomas & Mary Prince Family Fund(2000) Joseph G. Prone Foundation (2014) Sue and Bernie Pucker Fund (2002) Donald and Frances Putnoi Charitable Fund (2006) Peg Pyne Fund for Handicapped Access (1985) Quid Nunc Fund (2001) Sidney R. & Esther V. Rabb Family Fund (1983) Barbara & Yale Rabin Fund (2002) Radtke Family Fund (1996) Otto W. Ramstad Fund (1998) Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Fund (2015) Bessye Bedrick Ravelson Fund (2003) Gene Record Fund (2002) Sara Delano Redmond Fund (1996) Remmer-Fox Family Fund (1995)

Reno Family Charitable Foundation (1998) Edward S. Reynolds Memorial Fund (1984) Rhyme and Reason Family Fund (2000) Roberts Family Fund (1995) Roberts-Belove Fund (2004) Robynhood Thanksgiving Fund (2002) Roscoe Trimmier Fund (2015) Rosedune Fund (1970) Rosen Family Fund (2008) Lindsey A. Rosen Fund (2011) Daniel and Brooke Roth Charitable Gift Fund (2007) Rothman Charitable Fund (2014) Rotman-Attardo Family Fund (2005) Rust Bowl Fund (1987) Saffron Circle (2011) David Salten Fund (2007) Risha C. and Paul A. Samuelson Fund (1982) Samuelson Family Gift Fund (2012) Sands Family Fund (2011) Susan F. Schaeffer Fund (2013) Schawbel Family Fund (1995) Margaret M. Schmidt and Kenneth J. Danila Fund (2004) Schott Fund (1999) Schumann Family Fund (2005) Joel Schwartz Family Fund (2000) Schwinn Family Charitable Foundation (2011) Charles S. and Zena A. Scimeca Charitable Fund (2004) Joseph Bishop Van Sciver Fund (1861-1943) (1997) September Fund (2000) A Servant’s Heart (2014) Norman and Maryellen Sullivan Shachoy Fund (1997) Shames/Egasti Fund (1991) Shapiro/Fleishman Fund (1999) Douglas Boyd Sharpe Donor Advised Fund (2006) Shawkemo Fund (2000)

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SheGives Fund (2014) Bob and Jean Sheridan Family Fund (2012) Sherman Family Foundation Fund (2005) Jon Shevell Cancer Fund (2010) Jon Shevell Children’s Fund (2010) Jon Shevell Education Fund (2010) William U. & J.W. Shipley Fund (2001) Shoe Box Foundation Fund (2004) Peter Sidewater Foundation (2016) Jean Karpas Siegel Fund (1994) Silvia-Chandley Fund (2014) John and Susan Simon Boston Foundation Fund (2007) Ellen L. Simons Fund (1997) Sixty-Nine Roses Charitable Foundation (2011) Skylight Fund (2000) Fay Slover Fund (2010) Ellin Smalley Fund (1987) Austin & Susan Smith Fund (1999) Clark R. and Trina H. Smith Family Fund (1990) J. Alper Smith Fund (1996) Nancy and George Soule Family Fund (1997) Sparky Foundation Fund (2003) La Spector Fund (2001) Spencer Family Charitable Fund (2014) David F. Squire Family Fund (1997) State Street Fund (2012) Harvey & Shirley Stein Fund (1999) Stewart Fund (2006 Tracy Stewart Fund (2009) Stith Hope Fund (2014) Elihu and Lillian Stone Family Charitable Fund (2003) James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Foundation (1995) Congressman Gerry E. Studds Fund (2006) Charles Sugnet Fund (1998) Suhrbier Family Fund (2005) Nancy L. Sullivan Fund (1989)

46

Diane Sullivan-Villano Fund (1998) Sunrise Fund (1993) Swift Harvey Family Fund (2014) Sylvan Fund (1985) TechFoundation Fund (2002) Tempero Family Fund (2002) Marc Thompson & Maureen Conway Family Fund (2008) Thomsen Family Fund (2000) Susan and Michael Thonis Fund (2005) TK Foundation (2014) Scott and Jennifer Tobin Charitable Fund (2004) Toms Family Fund (2015) Topol Family Fund (1991) Trefler Fund (1997) Elizabeth Trichel Joyce Family Fund (2007) The Tuukka Rask Foundation (2013) Tye Charitable Fund (2006) Nancy J. Vickers Fund (2006) Marlyn and Richard Victor Fund (2016) Violet Iris Fund (2014) Ann & Robert von der Lippe Fund (1997) James and Margaret Wade Fund (1997) JH & EV Wade Fund (1990) Linda M. Walczak Children’s Literacy Fund (2015) Walker Fund (1998) The Walter/Capone Fund (2010) Ruth and Henry Walter Fund I, II, III (2010) J. H. Walton Family Fund (1986) Mitchell and Barbara Freedman Wand Charitable Fund (2013) Warner Charitable Gift Fund (2000) Anita Barker Weeks Charitable Gift Fund (2011) Gordon Weil, Jr. Fund (2010) Weiss Charitable Fund (2004) Wellesley Hills Congregational Church Outreach Fund (2007) Janet White Memorial Scholarship Fund (2004)

Whitehead - Sayare Fund (2008) Guy and Maggie Wickwire Fund (1989) James and Debra Wiess Fund (2013) Benjamin J. Williams, Jr. Fund (1986) Hope A. Williams Fund (1986) Natica R. Williams Fund (1986) Ralph B. & Margaret C. Williams Fund (1985) Ralph B. Williams, II Fund (1986) Williamson Charitable Fund (2016) The Windy West Fund (2016) Winkler Family Foundation Fund (2001) Winn Family Charitable Fund (2016) Wesley L. Winship Fund (1998) Winsor Foundation Fund (1989) Jack & Judith Wittenberg Fund (1997) Howard L. Wolf Memorial Fund (1981) Michael N. Wood Fund (1996) Leila Yassa & David Mendels Fund (2000) Zabin Charitable Fund (2001) Emily Zofnass Fund (1998) T. Zouikin Charitable Fund (2003) Zug Family Fund (2008) Zwanziger Fund (2006) Note: In addition to the 31 new Donor Advised Funds listed in bold above, there were three new anonymous Donor Advised Funds in fiscal year 2017.

SUPPORT ORGANIZATIONS Bruce J. Anderson Foundation, Inc. (1980) Deshpande Foundation (2007) Horace Moses Foundation (1994) to support Junior Achievement James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Foundation (1995)


DESIGNATED FUNDS Designated Funds have been established by donors to support the organizations or issues they care about most. Through these funds, many nonprofit institutions receive crucial annual support. The year the fund was established is listed in parentheses and new funds are bolded. 1819 Greek Revival Renewal Fund (2011) ACCESS Education Fund (1985) Fund for Adult Literacy (1985) Rae and Aaron Alberts Foundation Fund (2002) Rae and Aaron Alberts Foundation Fund II (2005) Frank E. Anderson Fund (1975) Area IV Fund (2014) Artists Foundation Endowment Fund (1984) Red Auerbach Youth Foundation Fund (1983) The Helena and Alfred Barthel “Peace on Earth” Endowment (2016) Lilian G. Bates Fund (1951) Grace & Floyd Lee Bell Fund (1987) BLS Alumni of Color Scholarship Fund (2016) Boston Ballet – E. Virginia Williams Endowment Fund (1983) Boston Bar Association Endowment Fund (1983) Boston Baroque Fund (2003) Boston Schoolyard Funders Collaborative (1995) Richard L. Bowser Fund (1985) BPE/Hancock Endowment for Academics, Recreation & Teaching (1985) BPE/Support for Early Educational Development Fund (1985) Herbert Brandshaft Scholarship Fund (2007) Annie L. Breckenridge Trust Fund (2000) Brookline Youth Concerts Fund (1995)

Michael and Stella Buonsanto Charitable Fund (2013) Charles T. Burke Fund for the Watertown Boys and Girls Club (1994) Charles T. Burke Fund for the Watertown Free Public Library (1994) Agnes T. Carruth Fund (1983) James F. Casey Fund (1949) Dr. Walter Channing Memorial Fund (1933) Charles River Parklands Stewardship Fund (2002) Philip P. Chase Fund (1955) Julia Child Fund (1979)

Ellen D. Cholerton Fund (1969) Ernest & Vera Clivio Charitable Memorial Fund (1981) Committee to Light Commonwealth Avenue Fund (2011) Almon B. Cook-Relief Fund (2001) Allyn Cox Fund for Essex County Greenbelt (1994) Thomas G. Curtin - Bobby Kargula Nanae Fund (2009) The Tarrant Cutler Family Science & Animal Fund (2014) Dedham Choral Society Endowment Fund (1991)

Post O f f ice S quare

47


Sout h E nd

Harry Ellis Dickson Youth Concerts Fund (1982) Joy & George Dryfoos Charitable Fund (2012) Duggan Charity Fund (1998) East Boston Social Centers, Inc. Fund (1996) Douglas A. Eaton Memorial Fund (1962) William V. Ellis Fund for Our Lady of Good Voyage Carillon (2011) Ruby C. Emerson Fund (1966) English High School Class of 1934 Award Fund (1994) The English High School-John P. Murphy Scholarship Fund (1996) Gustavus John Esselen Award for Chemistry in the Public Interest Fund (2008) Philip M. Fagan Family Fund (1971) Paul R. & Jacqueline D. Fehrenbach Family Fund (1999) Benjamin M. Feinberg Fund (1962) Arthur Fiedler Esplanade Concerts Fund (1980) Mark Hayden Fineman Chess Tournament Fund (1985) Food and Fuel Fund (2008)

48

Felix Fox Memorial Fund (1974) Americo Francisco Fund, Estate & Realty/ Charitable Trusts (1998) Peter Marshall French Memorial Fund (1976) Gaywest Farm Fund (1994) Agnes A. Gidley Memorial Fund (2013) John & Ethel Goldberg Fund I (1984) John & Ethel Goldberg Fund IV (1984) John & Ethel Goldberg Fund V (1984) John & Ethel Goldberg Fund VI (1984) Bessie P. Goldsmith Fund (1994) Barbara W. & Frank B. Gopen Fund (1978) Walter W. Gove Fund (1972) Elizabeth Grant Fund (1980) Rosario Fajardo Hagan Fund (1991) Haiti Development Institute Fund (2015) Patricia Jellinek Hallowell Fund (1992) Hastings-Plummer Fund (1940) Jorge N. Hernandez Fund (1987) Gertrude Hooper Fund (1996) Madeleine C. Huiginn Fund (1993) Blanche Hyslop Fund (1982) Orchestra of Indian Hill Music Director Fund (2002)

James W. & Margaret A. Ingraham Charitable Fund (1992) Ella Jackson Artists and Scholars Fund (1982) Leslie Gillette Jackson Fund for the Visual Arts and Poetry (2013) Patrick F. Jones, Jr. Endowment Fund (1981) Donaldson F. Jones Fund (1999) William & Sean Kelley Scholarship Fund (2010) John F. Kennedy Library Foundation Endowment Fund (1984) Demetra Kenneth-Brown Fund (1920) Alice V. Kidder Fund (2001) Robert D. and Sally G. King Fund (1999) Kit Clark Senior Services Fund (2000) Gerald V. Levreault & Claire H. Levreault Fund (2001) Lawrence B. Lewis Fund (1957) Ralph Lowell Fund (1982) Martin’s Park Maintenance Fund (2016) Gertrude F. & Henry L. Maurer Fund (1998) John S. McCann Fund (2000) MHEAC Fund for ACCESS (1986) Dorothy Morse Endowment Fund (1999) Harry D. Neary Fund (1950) Neighborhood Preservation Initiative Fund (1995) New England Aquarium Education Fund (1983) New England Forestry Foundation Fund (1996) New England Women’s Club Fund (2001) Next Steps Fund (2016) Roger L. Nichols Internship Program Fund (1984) William H. Nichols Fund For Chemistry (2017) Lottie S. Page Fund (1984)


Robert Treat Paine Historical Trust Fund (1990) Palazzo San Gervasio Library Fund (1994) William Morgan Palmer Fund (1977) Harold Peabody Memorial Fund (1992) Permanent Fund for Vocational Education (1979) John M. Pero Scholarship Fund (2014) Charles & Cornelia Pfaff Fund (1964) Henry L. Pierce Fund (1958) Emma K. & Richard Pigeon Fund (1955) The Plimpton-Poorvu Design Prize Fund (2015) Primary Care Fellowship Program Fund (1983) Public School Management Research Fund (2002) Charlotte F. & Irving W. Rabb Family Fund (1984) Reading Visiting Nurse Association Fund (1976) Rogers Fund of the Riverside Cemetery (1997) Henry A. Root Fund (1926) Rose Fund (1981) Fund for Rosie’s Place (1984) Dr. Jordan S. Ruboy Charitable Fund (1998) Sheep Pasture Fund (1994) Bessie H. Short Fund (1997) Dana P. & Maude E. Simpson Memorial Fund (1998) Muriel & Otto Snowden Endowment Fund (1984) Social Law Library Endowment Fund (1982) SparkShare Fund (2016) Michael Spock Community Service Fund (1980) Alison L. Stevens Fund (1976) Eva and William Stillman Scholarship Fund (2013) Miriam & Sidney Stoneman Fund (1984) Surfmen’s Trust Fund (1977) Agnes & Lewis Taylor Fund (1962)

Frank B. Thayer Fund (1976) Pauline Toumpouras Fund (2010) David J. Tuttle, Jr. ALS (2016) David J. Tuttle, Jr. MIT (2016) United Way Millennium Fund for Children and Families (1999) Ansin Fund (2002) Chelsea Boys and Girls Club Fund (2000) Connell Family Fund (2000) Carol R. & Avram J. Goldberg Fund (2002) Lawrence & Beth Greenberg Fund (2000) Darlene & Jerry Jordan Fund for Children (2000) Margarete McNeice Fund (2001) David R. and Muriel K. Pokross Fund (2003) Schoen Family Fund (1999) Tom & Nancy Shepherd Fund (2001) State Street Foundation Fund (2000) J. C. Tempel Fund for Children (2001) Vinik Family Fund (2000) Peter and Pamela Voss Fund (2000) Robert E. Wallace Memorial Fund of the Urban League (1992) Inez Washabaugh Ward, PNP, Scholarship Fund (2011) Bradford Washburn Fund (1980) Bill and Estelle Watters Fund (1997) Jane Wengren Fund (1979) Stetson Whitcher Fund (1986) Wiener Fund (2009) May J. Wikstrom Fund (1998) Rudolph & Sara Wyner Prize Fund (1985) Note: In addition to the five new Designated Funds listed in bold above, there were two new anonymous Designated Funds in fiscal year 2017.

SCHOLARSHIP FUNDS The Laura Ahlbeck Memorial Scholarship Fund (2016) Harry Ankeles Scholarship Fund (1992) Benjamin Foundation Scholarship Program (2017) Blair Family AvalonBay College Scholarship (2012) George C. Brackett STEM Scholarship (2016) Francis J. Bresnahan Educational Scholarship Fund (1986) Alex Castoldi Memorial Scholarship Fund (1981) Paula Marie Danforth Memorial Scholarship Fund (1990) deVille Fund (1994) Eagle Bank-Frank E. Woodward Scholarship Fund (1985) Americo J. Francisco Scholarship Fund (1993) Albert Francis Gilmartin Memorial Scholarship Fund (2005) Robert L. Gould Fund (1987) Greatrex Scholarship Fund (1988) Charles Hammond Fund – Hanover (1972) Charles Hammond Fund – Springfield (1972) Janey Fund Scholarship Program (1999) Manton Scholars (2016) Nixon Peabody Scholarship Program in Recognition of Retired Managing Partners Robert S. Cummings, Nestor M. Nicholas and Harry P. Trueheart, III (1997) Stephen D. Paine Scholarship Fund (1999) Francis P. Sears Scholarship Fund (1973) Paul & Eleanor Young Fund (1988) Youth Business Institute Scholarship (2014)

49


Becoming a Donor DON’T JUST GIVE. SOLVE.

50


TACKLING THE PROBLEMS YOU CARE ABOUT The Boston Foundation welcomes all of the individuals, families, businesses and entrepreneurs who come to us to do their charitable giving because, like them, we measure philanthropy by impact created, not just dollars given. If you want to give confidently and have the greatest impact on the causes you care about most, whether in Greater Boston or around the globe, we will work with you to make it happen. The Boston Foundation is a complete source of advice about grant making for individuals, families, foundations and companies at any stage.

OFFERING DONOR ADVISED FUNDS AND PRIVATE FOUNDATION ALTERNATIVES For more than 30 years, the Boston Foundation has been an expert provider of Donor Advised Funds. Informed by decades of experience working with donors and hundreds of different funds, we can help you meet your charitable goals. Establishing a fund at the Boston Foundation is ideal for those who want the benefits of a private foundation with none of the administrative, legal, tax or regulatory burdens. We will design a program of philanthropy that’s just

The Boston Foundation is a complete source of advice about grant making for individuals, families, foundations and corporations at any stage.

right for you—bringing the same degree of commitment and passion to your philanthropy that you do.

MAXIMIZING YOUR GIVING WITH THE PHILANTHROPIC INITIATIVE A pioneer in the field of strategic philanthropy for more than 25 years, The Philanthropic Initiative (TPI) is an internationally recognized provider of philanthropic consulting and management services. Now a distinct operating unit of the Boston Foundation, TPI augments the donor services offered to the Foundation’s fund holders, and also offers strategic advising to private foundations, families and individuals, and companies in the United States and around the globe. Building from the values and interests of each client, TPI delivers innovative, customized solutions that help clients maximize the impact of their philanthropy by defining priorities and strategies, implementing programs and evaluating success. 51


SUPPORTING SYSTEMIC CHANGE THROUGH CIVIC LEADERSHIP By working with the Boston Foundation, you become an important part of a dynamic community of problem solvers. Through policy leadership, the Boston Foundation has helped to leverage hundreds of millions of dollars in federal and state funds, pass legislation in K–12 education, restructure our community college

The Boston Foundation has helped to leverage hundreds of

system, provide crucial state funds for cultural facilities and much more. This work is supported by the Civic Leadership Fund at the Boston Foundation, to which hundreds of donors contribute every year.

HELPING YOU SHAPE YOUR LEGACY

millions of dollars

The Boston Foundation is here to help individuals and families design both

in federal and

the vision for and the implementation of their philanthropic legacies. As the

state funds, pass legislation in K–12 education, restructure our community college system, provide

Boston Foundation’s endowment, the Permanent Fund for Boston provides the resources the Foundation needs to respond nimbly to the most pressing issues confronting Greater Boston. We can help you plan a lasting legacy by creating a Named Fund or Field of Interest Fund as part of the Permanent Fund for Boston—and help you decide how best to incorporate legacy giving into your estate planning.

crucial state

GETTING STARTED

funds for cultural

Every donor arrives at the Boston Foundation with a unique story, vision or goal.

facilities and much more.

Our rich diversity of funds offers a host of opportunities to meet your unique needs. We invite you to contact us so that we may assist you in determining the best approach for you. For more information about becoming a donor or making a planned or legacy gift to the Boston Foundation, call or email the Philanthropy Group at 617-338-2679 or dirdev@tbf.org.

52


Applying for a Grant VISION 2020

53


FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES Each year, the Boston Foundation distributes more than $16 million in grants and other support from our endowment, the Permanent Fund for Boston, which has been built over the years through outright gifts and bequests from hundreds of generous Boston area donors who care deeply about our community. Since 2009, the Boston Foundation has invested the majority of the resources

The Nonprofit

from that fund to “move the needle� in a set of five impact areas and two

Effectiveness

crosscutting strategies. We also distribute a portion of our resources through

strategy supports

Open Door Grants, designed to respond to the expressed opportunities and

and promotes effective, inclusive

needs of the communities we serve. And a number of grants and strategic investments are made to special issue-focused initiatives.

and sustainable nonprofits in Greater Boston by focusing on three core competencies: leadership, capacity and resources.

FIVE IMPACT AREAS

Major grants are made to proven or promising organizations and initiatives that seek to deepen their impact or bring their work to scale and are significantly aligned with our five impact areas: Education Health & Wellness Jobs & Economic Development Neighborhoods & Housing Arts & Culture 54


CROSSCUTTING STRATEGIES

The Boston Foundation also pursues two crosscutting strategies: The Nonprofit Effectiveness strategy supports and promotes effective, inclusive and sustainable nonprofits in Greater Boston by focusing on three core competencies: support, develop and recognize the sector’s leadership and build a diverse and inclusive nonprofit sector leadership pipeline; strengthen organizational capacity by bolstering the operational effectiveness of individual nonprofits and advancing the sector’s capacity for collective action; share

The Open Door Grants program is

resources with the sector by facilitating strategic, data-driven philanthropy via

designed to respond

the Giving Common (www.givingcommon.org), an open online database that

to the community’s

connects robust information about more than 1,100 Massachusetts nonprofit

expressed ideas

organizations with donors, funders and other stakeholders.

and needs.

The Grassroots strategy is set up to respond quickly to community needs, with grants from the Grassroots Fund that range from $200 to $10,000 going to grassroots organizations anchored in Boston’s neighborhoods. These grants help people come together, establish relationships, strengthen political will, form caring connections, heal divides and build clout and resilience. OPEN DOOR GRANTS

The Open Door Grants program is designed to respond to the community’s expressed ideas and needs. New and existing nonprofit organizations in Greater Boston that are not directly aligned with the strategies, goals and approaches pursued in the Foundation’s five impact areas can apply for support to meet existing needs as well as test new ideas and innovations that address the most critical challenges and biggest opportunities facing Greater Boston.

Visit www.tbf.org/grants for more information about all of these Funding Opportunities and detailed guidelines that will help organizations apply for a grant.

55


2017 Financials The Boston Foundation has a mandate both to fulfill its role as Greater Boston’s community foundation today—by maximizing the dollars available for making grants—and ensuring that the charitable dollars entrusted to the Foundation are available to continue this work tomorrow and in perpetuity. Robust development efforts and a well-diversified investment strategy enable the Foundation to meet these objectives.

FUND FOR THE 21ST CENTURY The Boston Foundation offers three separate investment pools within the Fund for the 21st Century. These three pools allow donors to select the option that best matches the time horizon of their charitable giving plans. Donors may also customize their asset allocation by investing among all three pools. The Balanced Plus Pool asset mix is expected to produce the highest long-term investment return. Accordingly, the Boston Foundation invests its endowment assets in the Balanced Plus Pool.

FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT The Foundation’s Investment Committee establishes investment policy and monitors the individual investment managers and their performance, and the Board sets each year’s spending rate. The Investment Committee is assisted by an independent investment consulting firm. The assets of the Balanced Plus Pool include not only global stock investments, but participation in private equity, venture capital, real assets (real estate, timber and energy) and flexible capital strategies. Diversification among multiple

INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE: as of June 30, 2017 1 YEAR

3 YEARS

5 YEARS

10 YEARS

Balanced Plus Pool

12.7%

4.3%

7.8%

4.2%

Balanced Pool (established 2/1/11)

10.2%

2.7%

6.7%

n/a

Short-Term Pool (established 1/1/10)

0.45%

0.26%

0.19%

n/a

65% MSCI A.C. World/35% Citigroup World Bond Index

10.3%

2.9%

6.8%

4.0%

MSCI All Country World Stock Index

18.8%

4.8%

10.5%

3.7%

S & P 500 Stock Index

17.9%

9.6%

14.6%

7.2%

Citigroup World Bond Index

-4.1%

-1.0%

-0.2%

3.5%

Fund for 21st Century Investment Options:

Benchmarks:

56


asset classes should help to reduce the volatility of the Foundation’s investment returns.

THE SPENDING POLICY By using a spending policy, the Foundation helps to ensure that the charitable funds will be protected for the future, while continuing to have the most impact today. The 2017 spending rate was 6.4% for its permanently restricted discretionary funds. For Fiscal Year 2018, the Board approved a spending rate of 6.0% for its discretionary endowment. The Foundation uses a smoothing mechanism that helps balance the current endowment market value and the previous level of spending. Spending is equal to 70% of spending from the previous year, adjusted for inflation, plus 30% of the 6.0% spending rate applied to the current market value. The approved spending policy rate for designated endowment funds is 5.0% for Fiscal Year 2018. THE PHILANTHROPIC INITIATIVE The Philanthropic Initiative, Inc. (TPI) is a significant business unit of the Foundation. TPI designs, carries out and evaluates philanthropic programs for individual donors, families, foundations and corporations.

The experience and reputation of TPI significantly expands the range of philanthropic services the Foundation offers. During Fiscal Year 2017, the operations of TPI added $2.5 million of service fee income to the operations of the Foundation.

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS Total assets of the Boston Foundation increased from $968 million to $1.1 billion at June 30, 2017. For the year, net investment returns for the Balanced Plus Pool were 12.7%. During this same period, the Foundation received $194 million in contributions and paid $135 million in grants. Expenditures for program support and operating expenses totaled $22.0 million, thus explaining the change in total assets. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS The Foundation’s financial statements are prepared under policies and procedures overseen by the Foundation’s independent Audit Committee and the Board of Directors. A summary of the financial statements is shown on page 58. The statements and Form 990 are available on our website at www.tbf.org.

ASSET ALLOCATION Balanced Plus Pool

Global Equity 46% Flexible Capital 24% Private Equity 11% Real Assets 9% U.S. Treasuries 10%

Balanced Pool

Global Equity 41% Flexible Capital 25% Real Assets 9% U.S. Treasuries 25%

57


2016 and 2017 Summary Financial Statements (in thousands)

2 017

ASSETS : Investments

$ 1,072,982

Cash Equivalents U.S. Treasury Notes Receivables & Other

2 016 $

5,499 20,891 15,914

Total Assets

927,453 5,500 23,132 11,653

$ 1,115,286

$

967,738

$

$

5,876

LIABILITIES & NET ASSETS : Accounts Payable and Other Liabilities Grants Payable Net Assets Total Liabilities & Net Assets

7,210 2,167

1,220

1,105,909

960,642

$ 1,115,286

$

967,738

$

$

107,169

REVENUES : Contributions Service Fee Income

193,765 2,048

1,582

Net Investment Return

108,541

(10,664)

Total Revenues

304,354

98,087

137,247 (134) 5,461

101,862 68 5,742

16,513

15,464

159,087

123,136

145,267 960,642

(25,049) 985,691

GRANTS & EXPENSES : Grants Change in Split Interest Trusts Program Support Operating Expenses Total Grants & Expenses Change in Net Assets Net Assets Beginning of Year Net Assets End of Year

$ 1,105,909

$

960,642

The financial statements include all funds held by the Foundation, including the Fund for the 21st Century.

58


Board of Directors The Boston Foundation is overseen by a distinguished Board of Directors, selected to represent the broad diversity of our community’s interests and needs. All grants from the Foundation are approved by the Board, which also sets policy and guides the Foundation as it fulfills its mission.

Zamawa Arenas

Andrew G. Arnott

Brian J. Conway

Sandra M. Edgerley

Michael R. Eisenson

Grace Fey

Founder and CEO Flowetik

President and CEO John Hancock Investments

Chairman and Managing Partner TA Associates

Trustee Edgerley Family Foundation

Co-Chairman Charlesbank Capital Partners, LLC

President Grace Fey Advisors

Paul C. Gannon

Rev. Dr. Gregory G. Groover, Sr.

Paul W. Lee

Linda A. Mason

J. Keith Motley

Of Counsel Goodwin Procter LLP

Chair and Co-Founder Bright Horizons

Former Chancellor UMass Boston

Scott E. Squillace, Esq.

Former Partner and Chief Operating Officer Baupost

Pastor Historic Charles Street A.M.E. Church

Peter Nessen

Ronald O’Hanley

Greg Shell

Founder and President Nessen Associates

Chief Executive Officer State Street Global Advisors

Managing Director, Double Impact Fund Bain Capital

Officers: Sandra M. Edgerley Chair

Linda A. Mason Vice Chair

C.A. Webb

Principal Founder, 50:50 Squillace & Associates, P.C. Interim Executive Director Kendall Square Association

Alfred F. Van Ranst, Jr. Treasurer

Dr. Myechia Minter-Jordon President and CEO The Dimock Center

Paul S. Grogan President and CEO The Boston Foundation Ex Officio

Timothy B. Gassert Secretary

59


Staff OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Paul S. Grogan, President & CEO Nancy Howley, Executive Assistant to the CEO Max Heninger, Special Assistant COMMUNICATIONS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS Keith Mahoney, Vice President Barbara Hindley, Senior Director of Publications and Marketing Timothy B. Gassert, Director of Web Communications and Corporate Secretary Ted McEnroe, Director of External Relations Sandra Kendall, Communications Manager Rosemarie Corcoran, Senior Public Affairs Associate STRATEGY AND OPERATIONS Stephen Chan, Vice President Maura J. Fogarty, Executive Assistant to the Vice President Jane Dixon, Associate Vice President of Human Resources Luc Schuster, Director, Boston Indicators Lauren C. Baker, Senior Manager of Facility & Event Operations Anise Vance, Manager of Research in Race & Equity, Boston Indicators Michelle Hinkle, Manager of Forums and Convenings Donna Morrison, Human Resources Manager ZoĂŤ Reiches, Senior Human Resources Generalist Peter Ciurczak, Research Associate, Boston Indicators Celia LeBlanc, Operations Associate Andrew Marceau, Human Resources Assistant Ruth Cormier, Operations Coordinator FINANCE Alfred F. Van Ranst Jr., Chief Financial Officer George C. Wilson, Chief Investment Officer Rosalyn Bonaventure, Controller Steven Nichols, Senior Director of Information Technology Stephen Forest, Director of Investment Accounting Wendy Staggs, Finance Director Schlonge Farrow, Fund Administration Manager Stacey Coplin King, Financial Operations Manager Harrison Bush, Staff Accountant Pallavi Chidgopkar, Staff Accountant John Rielly, Senior Information Systems Analyst Caroline Wood, Senior Fund Administration Coordinator Judelsy Gonzalez, Senior Fund Administration Coordinator Romuald Noelsaint, Accounting Assistant Zaymaris Pagan, Finance Assistant PROGRAMS Orlando C. Watkins, Vice President Jordan M. Biggers, Special Assistant to the Vice President Jennifer W. Aronson, Associate Vice President for Programs Elizabeth A. Pauley, Senior Director, Education to Career Damon Cox, Senior Director, Jobs and Economic Development Allyson Esposito, Senior Director, Arts and Culture Nineequa Blanding, Director, Health and Wellness Marybeth Campbell, Executive Director, SkillWorks Natanja Craig, Director, Grassroots Programs Corey L. Davis, Director, Grants Management

60

Eric Esteves, Director, Social Innovation Fund Stephanie Guidry, Program Officer, Nonprofit Effectiveness Antoniya Owens, Program Officer, Education to Career Amanda Holm, Manager, Nonprofit Effectiveness Leigh Handschuh, Senior Program Associate, Nonprofit Effectiveness Kaitlyn Bean, Senior Program Associate, SkillWorks Alina Arutyunyan, Senior Grants Administration Associate Laura Chandler, Grants Administration Associate John Griffin, Program Associate, Social Innovation Fund AimĂŠe Scorziello, Program Associate, Arts and Culture Corean Reynolds, Program Associate, Jobs and Economic Development Mira Kahn, Program Associate, Health and Wellness Dee Moore, Program Associate, Grassroots Programs Gabrielle Sims, Program Associate, Neighborhoods and Housing Heather Buffo, Program Associate, Education to Career Andrea Madu, Program Associate, Nonprofit Effectiveness

PHILANTHROPY Kate Guedj, Vice President and Chief Philanthropy Officer Heather Kemp, Executive Assistant to the Vice President Laura McConaghy, Director of Philanthropy Operations Colleen George, Senior Manager of Philanthropy Operations DEVELOPMENT AND DONOR SERVICES Laura Godine, Senior Director of Professional Advisor Relations Pamela Hurd, Senior Director of Leadership Giving Daniel Sherman, Senior Director of Donor Partnerships Tim Smith, Senior Director of Innovation Partnerships & Pledge 1% Boston Julie Smith-Bartoloni, Senior Director of Donor Relations Emma Penick, Director of Estate & Gift Planning Thomas Bentley, Leadership Giving Officer Megan Hathaway, Professional Advisor Relations Manager Carmen Savarino, Assistant Donor Services Officer Vivian Foung, Senior Donor Services Associate Ritika Kumar, Philanthropic Partnerships Associate Dan McConvey, Development & Partnerships Associate Rebekah Stratton, Leadership Giving Associate THE PHILANTHROPIC INITIATIVE Leslie Pine, Managing Partner Ellen Remmer, Senior Partner Maggi Alexander, Partner and Director, Center for Global Philanthropy Lisa Spalding, Partner Kristen Whelan, Senior Philanthropic Advisor Katherine Linder, Philanthropic Advisor Dominique Maffei, Philanthropic Advisor Rebecca Miller, Global Philanthropic Advisor Jennifer Montone, Senior Marketing Manager Robin Baird, Senior Program Associate Alexandra Carley, Senior Program Associate Suzy Dolan, Program/Marketing Associate Laura Hechtman, Program Associate Ben Koller, Program Associate HAITI DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE Pierre Noel, Director Jacky Poteau, Coordinator NEW ENGLAND INTERNATIONAL DONORS Ina Breuer, Executive Director Odette Ponce, Program Associate


Acknowledgments Writers: Barbara Hindley and Sandy Kendall Editor: Barbara Hindley Designer: Kate Canfield, Canfield Design Photographer: Richard Howard

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